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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 15, 1962)
War Bill Act Protested Manila -JOT- About 20 tu-,4:30 p.m. only about 20 stu dent pickets staged a "massijenls had arrived. demonstration" outside the U.S. Embassy today protest ing Congress' failure to ap prove ihe $73 million Philip pine war claims bill. A student organization had called for a mass turnout for 2:30 p.m. but nobody showed up until after 3 p.m. As late as About a dozen policemen stood'oy, watching the picket line. There were no disorders. A Filipino senator said de feat of the bill had plunged U.S. relations with the Philip pines and other Asian nations to It lowest point. "Asians will consider the Regional Edition Medford Page 2A MTRIBUNE MEDFORD, OREGON. TUESDAY. MAY 15, 1062 DOWNTOWN N MEOfORO LAUNDROMAT ""SsSTEWAfcT a I iv- r fact Jhat the Philippines Is the staunchest ally of the United States in this part of the world and yet it does not receive treatment as such," said Sen. Loreitzo Sumulong, chairman of the Senate For eign Relations Comnijjtee. "They ewill doubt if it pays to be close to the United States." Philippine President Dios dado Macapagal's decision to postpone his trip to the Unit ed States next month won some powerful support. Macapagal, who announced his decision Monday over a nationwide radio - television hookup said his reason for not going through with the trip was the rejection of the war damage bill. General of the Army Doug las MacArthur in New York, asked by UPI to comment on the rejection, replied: "I refer you to my public statement on my return from the Philip pines last July." MacArthur said then that the United Slates should give more aid to the Philippines 10 repair war damages. He said the Philippines had "not received adequate compensa tion, especially when com pared with Ihe lavish grants made to nations proclaiming neutrality and even to the former enemy nations of Ger many and Japan." Grange News Central Point Grange Central Point Grange will meet Friday, May 18. The chaplain, Mrs. Dee Hendrick- son will conduct a memorial service for members who died during the past year. Mem bers wishing to take the de gree of Pomona may obtain necessary Information at the meeting. Miami - IUPII - Fire fed by magnesium and paint swept a warehouse at Miami Inter national Airport Monday, de stroying IS airplane engines and a pickup truck. Damage was estimated by Airmotive Suppliers Inc., at about $430,-000. IV BECAUSE: WHY Return Our Incumbent Si-ate Senator L. W. (Lynn) NEWBRY TO THE SENATE? X Senator Newbry worked hard (or the Laboring Man. X Senator Newbry worked hard for the small businessman. X Senator Newbry worked hard for the agriculture industry. X Sonator Nev bry worked hard to help make Rogue Valley Manor a success. X Senator Newbry worked hard to maintain the rights of local government and preserve our Constitution. Senator Newbry worked hard for the Timber Industry. Senator Newbry wevked hard to prevent tax increases. Senator Newbry worked hard for the trucking industry. Senator Newbry worked hard to prevent unfair reapportion ment of representative government. X Senator Newbry worked hard for improved water and air pollution laws. X Senator Newbry worl.ed hard to keep our road systems growing. X Senator Newbry worked hard to become one of the outstanding legislators in the Senate. X Senator Newbry was named to five important senate committees. X Senator Newbry was appointed to two important interim committees. X Senator Newbry exercised courage, integrity, intelligence and tenacity. X Senator Newbry is endorsed by the Senate president, Harry Boivin. X Senator Newbry has worked year round for the people of Jackson County and the State of Oregon. Senator Newbry believes in the freedom and dignity of each individual. Senator Newbry believes an elee'ed public official MUST .cflect the will of the voters. X Senator Newbry has represented ALL of the People Jackson County ALL of the time. of VOTE L. W. (LYHB) REtiBBV Our Proven State Senator Pd Pol Adv. by Neighbor! for NewSiy Comm., Chel Hubbord, Chmn,, Medford, Ore. Ml t Blistering Pace Pushes Slock Prices Ahead New York OIPD - - Stocks Politics: Duncan Will Support Veterans By Unitad Prm International Oregon House Speaker Rob ert B. Duncan, candidate for the Democratic nomination for Congress from the fourth dis trict, told members of the pulled ahead sharply a trad, J 'supr, 1 lation equalizing their post ing on the exchange continu ed at a blistering pace today. Among the blue chips, American Telephone and Du Pont were up around 2 points each along with Westlnghouse and Procter & Gamble. Gains of up to a point were com mon among the leading steels, motors, chemicals and oils. Electronics and aircraft also moved up sharply featuring IBM with a gain of around 8 at its high. Stocks Monday went through the wildest gyrations yet this year, first declining sharply and then staging a strong recovery which carried them considerably higher on the day. DOW JONES AVERAGES Dow Jones final stock av- iig ill 30 Industrials 646.20. up 5.57; 20 railroads 134.22. off 0.02; 15 utilities 119.67. up 0.66, and 65 stocks 221.99, up 1.10. Sales Monday were about 5.99 million shares compared with 4.51 million shares Friday. Monday'! hocks: prices on selected Allied Chemical s4. Alum Co Am , Sh'.a American Air Lines .' I!H American Can 43 American Motors 16 AT&T 117 11 American Tobacco 37U Anaconda Copper 45 Arinco !W',3 Bendlx Corp B2 Bethlehem Steel 37 ':, Boeing Air 44l,i Brunswick .13 Vm Caterpillar Corp 36', Chrysler Corp SOU Coca Cola Bfi CB.S 311 Continental Can 42 Crown Zellerhach SO Crucible Steel 1714 Curtlsa Wright 17 Dow Chemical Sl3.4 Du Pont SID Eastman Kodak 1061.1 Firestone 40!B Ford 1)3 General Electric 6934 General Food RO General Motors a 1 14 Georgia Paclllc 44J.i Greyhound 26 'i Gulf Oil 39 Homestake 50 Idaho Power 31', lnt Paper 31 f Johns Manvllle 4B? Kennecott Copper 73 U Lockheed Aircraft 431 Martin Co 21', Merck B4 Montana Power 3fi'i Montgomery Ward 3:1 U I Nat'l Biscuit 41 i New York Centra 13'i Northern Pacific 37 Pac Gas Elec 30' Penney, J. C 47 t Penn RR 15 ',4 Perma Cement 16? Phillips !, Procter Ac Gamble 76-li Radio Corporation 56 ' Richfield Oil 37 Safeway - 4B Sears 7A4 Shell Oil se'.'t Socony Mobil Oil 49 ',4 Southern Co 30 Southern Pacific 2514 Sperry Rand ... IB Standard California SB'4 Standard Indiana 4fl?t Standard N. J 32'4 Sun Mines 74 Texas Co 534 Texas Gult Sulfur 174s Texas Pacific Land Trust IB Thlokol 30 Trans-Amcrlca 41 Trans World Air li TrI-Continental 43?4 Union Carbide lOO'.a Union Pacific 31 United Aircraft (xdl 46 United Air Lines 30 U. S. Plvwood 44 U. S Rubber 411 11. S Steel 57 West Bank Corp 3Hii WeAtlnghouse 32 Youngslown 89 tion in regard to veterans benefits as compared to Span ish American, World War II and Korean War veterans. Duncan noted that World War I veterans had received virtually no recognition of their service except when dis abled and the bonus received VOTE ON WAGE OFFER Saarbruecken, Germany -IUPU - About 45,000 striking coal miners scheduled a vote today on whether to accept an 8 per cent pay raise agreed to by the federal and Saar land governments. RADIO STATION SOLD New York - (UPD - Radio Sta tion KEX In Portland, Ore., has been sold to Golden West Broadcasters by the Westing house Broadcasting Co., it was announced today. as the result of the march on Washington during the de pression. As time began to run out for the candidates in the count down to Friday's primary. Duncan flew to Eugene Mon day, Lebanon and Springfield today and back to Medford to night. State Sen. Robert Straub, also seeking the fourth dis trict Democratic congression al nomination, said in I letter to Edward P. Cliff of the United States National Firest, that he is concerned about the recently announced plan for Waldo lake recreation area. Straub said the plan leaves too much unsaid and is too vague. If elected, Straub said, he will work for more appropriations and increased recognition for outdoor recreation and wilder ness areas. In Roseburg Straub blasted the proposed northwest power Intertle with California. He said there are no preference safeguards for the northwest, which is In danger of having its power drained off to California. In Corvallis Monday night, Foreign Briefs RECORD EXPENDITURE ANNOUNCED Geneva-IIIPD-The World Health organisation spent a record S3I.8 million during 1961, assistant manager General Milton P. Siegel announced here Monday. TOM DOOLEY'S HOSPITAL CLOSED IN LAOS Bangkok, Thailand-IOPD-A second hospital set up by the late iunqle doctor Tom Dooley has been closed down in Laos, it was reported today. Dr. Carl Wiedermann and his assistant. Albert Harries, were reported packing equipment to be transported across the Mekong rirer to Thailand from Banhouel Sat. ULBRICHT MEETS CZECH PRESIDENT Vienna-IUPD-Easi German Communist chief Walter Ul bricht met Csech President Antonin Nirltny in Prague Mon day. according to radio Prague. In a broadcast monitored here, the radio said ihe two leaders discussed "an Intensification of the friendly relations between the two countries. PLANE DRAWS WARNING SHOTS IN FRANCE Tulle, France-WPl-Anii-aircraft guns fired warning shots Monday night at a small plane which circled low oyer the jail where ex-Gens. Maurice Hall and Andrew-Marie Zeller are imprisoned. Police sources said it was the second time In two days a plane had passed low over the tail. Halle and Zeller are serving 15-year terms for their roles in the April, 1981, generals' rerolt in Algiers. U.S. Senate candidate R. F. Cook flailed one of his five opponents for the Republican nomination, Sig Unander of Portland, for repeated declar ations that Oregon needs more military and defense bases. Unander has said he will work to secure more such bases for Oregon if he is elected. Cook said a senator "should have a higher calling than that of a mere grabber of patronage and pork." He added that bases should be placed in proper strategic locations as fixed by military officials - not located by con gressional pressure. Republican senatorial hope ful Sig Unander declared in a Eugene speech today the United States cannot continue indefinitely to be "police man, banker and Santa Claus to the entire free world while taxes and the national debt go higher and higher." Unander said "the most regreattable fact is that Ore gon's vote in the United States Senate, that is cast by our present senior senator, has consistently sup ported ex travagance and waste." In Salem today, GOP Sen ate Candidate Harold Living ston, Corvallis, complained that the Senate race has "be come a battle of billboards in stead of a battle for ideas." "Billboards will not beat Sen. Morse in November," Livingston declared. The Republican candidate for Congress in the fourth district, Carl Fisher of Eu gene, said in Creswell Mon day nigh that Congress must resist the "creeping growth of government b y administra tor." Charles O. Porter, opposing Duncan and Straub in the primaries, said in Eugene that after a 14,590 mile tour, of the fourth district he found the "time mess" was over whelmingly the number one issue. "Of the 4,783 people I personally met . . . the one issue that was mentioned re peatedly and heatedly had to do with the 1961 legislature'! daylight time bill." Porter criticized Duncan, whom he said as House speak er could have had the bill killed, and Straub who voted for it. GRADUATION CARDS When you care enough lo send Ihe very beit Swem's 217 E. Main Medford Elmo Stevenson and Edd Rountrei Suggest: Run county affairs at home, Not in Salem ,iE RULE -YES! Pd. Pol. d. CITIZENS COMMITTEE FOR HOME RULE, R. E. Collins, Chmn., 235 So. Oakdale, Medford, Oregon ' la s aii 1 1 iK V -mei la I k. , uti 4 if MmmmJk Mr. and Mrs. William H, Manning, Son Bill and Daughter Marcia Vote for William H. "Bill" Manning, Republican PL,.nlp- "A man who wants a sound, dependable FOR SHERIFF Sheriff's department for his family ond yours in Jackson County." Pd. Adv. Manning (or Sheriff Comm., 6. A. Cotringham, Chmn., 1329 Queen Anne, Medford Search Suspended For Missing Boaters Newport Beach. Calif .-IUPU A Coast Guard air-sca search for three men miss-ing and presumed drowned in a boat ing tragedy thai claimc" the lives of six other men was suspended Monday night. The bodies of six of the nine men aboard the fishing boat Happy Jack, which ap parently sank in heavy seas last week end, were recov- ed. But a two-day search for the remaining three fisher men aboard the ill-fated craft failed to turn up a thing The Orange county coroner reported Monday thai all six of Ihe men whose bodies were found Saturday died of drown ing before scavenging sharks or barracuda mutilated five of the bodies. kw." ifsewB?w-awa Litf iti (Republican) David S. BLAIR for Jackson County CimmissiiMr Ei per if net , background and determination to do I tint clan job! 9 Pol. Aiiv paid tor by D.tvhJ S. B'air. PO. Box 306. Roaut River, Ore. Here are the facts about on-time dependability from United Air Lines Everyone who traveled last winter knows that the weather was severe, everywhere. In terms of airline operations, it was the most disruptive in history. But during this period, United found solutions to a number of problems which stood in the way of achiev ing a consistently high level of on-time performance. As a result, we can now say with assurance that our dependability record has improved greatly. In certain areas, we're more dependable than we have ever been in our history. In fact, during the month of April, we set new per formance records. We believe that when records for the month for all airlines are available, United's accomplish ments will be unsurpassed. Here they are : Unlfd tltw fa. MX ot mil If 40.79S tchtdulad pat tngr dtparlurt: This means that less than 2 of all our scheduled departures were cancelled for weather or any other reason. Our arrival, en ffme within 13 mlnutai, raached J.J X all over our 18.000 mile system ... our highest since May, 1958. This means that, during April, we completed 33,449 schedules on time and delivered nearly one million passengers on time. This record of 83.5 exceeded the goal of 75 suggested by the Civil Aeronautics Board for the industry. It should be recognized that 100 on-time perform ance has never been attained by any form of transpor tation, and will probably never be achieved by an airline. Variables such as winds aloft, traffic control delays not possible to foresee at the start of a flight, and other unavoidable conditions, may be a source of delay. But consistent with safety and passenger comfort which are the considerations that always come first with United Air Lines -our objective will be to reach and maintain the highest standards of on-time dependability possible. We are by no means satisfied with the present high levels of performance. We are working, and taking Extra Care in everything we do, to improve this record for you in the months to come. UNITED CTZ7 WORLD'S LAKOCST JCT FLCCT THE EXTRA CARE AIRLINE e t