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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 22, 1962)
tfeaay- Challenges Business To Prove Higher Profits Etoan tfgpi? Jobo GnQffto 5 Key Franklin, Tex. (UPD learn of medical experts began an autopsy today on the body of a farm official Secretary of Agriculture Oreille Free- Leads to Dkharg Washington (UPD James L. Kunen, a part-time consultant to the Office of Emergency planning, was fired Monday because he was involved in an "apparent conflict of interest" in 195S and 1956. The action was announced by Edward A. McDermott, di rector of the Office of Emer gency planning, which super vises the nation's stockpile of strategic goods. McDermott said in a state ment that "evidence in my possession indicates that Mr. Kunen, while employed as a consultant to the Office of De fense Mobilization in 1955 and 1956, involved himself In an apparent conflict of Interest relating to a company that had a matter pending for dis position before the Office of Defense Mobilization." This office was the prede cessor to the Office of Emer gency Planning. YOU CAN BUY JAYS GUERNSEY MILK At any of the following Markets! MEDFORD BIG "Y" North Pacific Highway GROCETERIA 200 Weit 6th Street TUIIKincPRIDD I'villa Hwu & Lazier Lane 80AKDALE 401 South Oakdale WOODLAND HEIGHTS 1501 Prune Street 24 FLAVORS 1105 West Main Street CHUCK'S MARKET 838 West McAndrewi Rd. GRANDVIEW 2330 Crater Lake Ave. EASTSIDE 608 East Main Street KIMMY'S KORNER 630 Crater Lake Ave. O.K. MARKET 1202 North Riverside OREGON FOOD STORE 523 So. Central ONLY B. and H 827 North Central ELK CITY MARKET Opp. Elk Lbr., Highway 99 CENTRAL POINT JACKSONVILLE FABER'S THRIFT MARKET 350 E. Pine PAULSEN'S JACKSONVILLE 126 E. Pine MARKET GOLD HILL COGSWELL'S MARKET GAIL'S MARKET VAN HORN MARKET AT THE RANCH Highway 99 No., Opp. Gold Hill MO ' J "L x T' xTsr ! .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiil'llTITiniiiiTiri 1 f'l .1. . m. 1 1. n.i i,.u.u J I You can't Ho it. no mnltor how hard you try ! Th 'K2 Mi-n-ury Comi-t is tlie compact with roil class li has that unhcntnlli romhination of low price, nunmny of oioration nna) hislnst nivilr value. All Uu's is in addition to big car room (t'oim t holds nix adults comlnrluhly) and plejant, finrcir Mvlinn. Dog in Autopsy Figure in Estes man said took secre'.. of the. Billie Sol Estes empire with Washington) who have any him to the grave. first-hand knowledge about The body of Henry H. Mar-' Marshall's death. We are con shall, 52, was taken from a I tinuing to check. If any names sealed vault at a small ceme- "re found we will advise you, tery Monday several hours as we want you to have our after a blue-ribbon grand jury fuU( cooperation in this mat launched an investigation into ter." his mysterious death almost a ; year ago. The question to be resolved is whether Marshall shot him self five times with a single shot rifle - or whether he was killed by someone else. A chemist, a ballistics ex pert and a pathologist from the Texas Department of Pub lic Safety said they world try to have a report by this after noon. Orders Exhumation Dist. Judge John M. Barron ordered the body exhumed with permission from Mar shall's widow. "The disinterment could be the most important thing in this investigation," Barron said. "It will provide the first accurate information about the course of the bullets and other factors." Dist. Atty, Bryan Kuss said today it is "rather unique" that Freeman has declined an invitation to come before the grand Jury and testify He re ceived a telegram from Free man Monday which said: 'numvi'fs, r. 1 .--sr ZS. 1 -Ji you can't lick MEDFORD MOTORS, Inc. 225 South Riverside "We know of none here (in closes! To Cast Marshall was the chief ad-1 ministrator and investigator into cotton allotments in Texas. The transfer of cotton allotments is a big issue in the Estes investigation. Free man had said earlier that Marshall was the only man who could answer some of the questions regarding Estes' cotton allotment transfers. Justice of the Peace Lee Farmer ruled that Marshall had shot himself. Sheriff Howard Stcgall agreed, al though he admitted that Mar shall would have to put, an other shell Into the chamber after each shot. Rogue Valley Edition MEDFORD, OREGON. TUESDAY, MAY 22, 19B2 Foreign PHINCE OF KENT MAKES FIRST SOLO FLIGHT Waltham, England-WII-Prince Michael of Kent made hit first solo flight at a Royal Air Force base near here last Sunday, it was learned Monday. The Prince's father, the Duke of Kent, was killed in an airplane crash in 1942. 1,243 AFRICANS IN KENYA GOVERNMENT Nairobi, Kenya-ltlPII-It was announced Monday thai 1.243 Africans now are employed In government poili here. The number is a one-third increaie over last year, the announce ment said. BRITISH TEAM TOURS SCENE OF RIOT DAMAGE Georgetown, British Guiana-IIPIt-A three-man British commonwealth team investigating last February's riots here Monday toured the parts of Georgetown that ware damaged by the fighting and firei. The learn was headed by Sir Henry Parry. PATRIARCH OF RUSSIA ON TOUR OF BALKINS Moscow-WPIi-Alexiui. the Russian Orthodox Patriarch of Moscow and all Russia, left Monday to visit Yugoslavia, Bulgaria and Romania, according to the Soviet news agency Tass. Tass quoted Alexius as saying he would discuss "the question of peace" with church leaders. It quoted him as saying "our churches cannot remain indifferent toward the U. S. nuclear tests." RUSSIAN SUBMARINES TO Tel Aviv- HI'luAn Israeli Soviet-built submarines soon will be added to the United Arab Republic's fleet of nine subs. The newspaper Yediot Aharonot said the subs were en route to join the UAH fleet participating in exercises in the Eastern Mediterranean. fflrnrraf iff a. this bargain 7 ' 1? J Here's a car with plenty of snap at the stop signs ami on the lulls hut still squeezes an unMiralir numlier o( miles from each gallon of gas Take a quii k trip to your Moivuiy IValei 's showroom snd look into this beautiful and eoinomical t'omet hargain. It hasn't Iwn liikeil vet! e on Body Scandal Russ said that he hopes the autopsy will be able to de termine the position in which the gun was held by the angle that the bullets entered the body. This, he said, could well be "a prize piece of state evi dence" in the case. ! Goa H VOfefS n .i r:i tJ..i City Budget Gold Hill - Voters here Monday turned down the city's proposal for a budget of $3,998.90 in excess of the $12,153.10 tax base. The vote was 74 to 25 against the bud get. The city council had urged approval of the budget, stating that the city's tax base, ap proved by the voters in 1954, was no longer sufficient to provide monies for all munici pal general fund operations because of increasing costs. Page 2A Tribune Briefs JOIN UAR FLEET newspaper said Monday three ; 40-Hour Week Reduction Topic At Conference Washingtoei -WPU- AFL-CIO President George Meany to day challenged business to prove that higher profits would mean more jobs, and not just bonuses for execu tives. Meany told the National As sociation of Manufacturers at the White House Conference on National Economic Issues that he did not care how high profits went as long as they meant lower unemployment. Earlier, government, busi ness, and labor spokesmen clashed over whether the 40 hour week should be cut as an antidote to automation. Said Wrong Road Commerce Secretary Lu ther H. Hodges said the short er work week was the wrong road to full employment. Charles R. Sligh Jr., execu tive vice president of the NAM, said shortening the work week was about the worst plan for dealing with the problem. Meany's outburst came aft Averages Reach Years New Low New York-IUPII-A barrage of late selling on the stock market today threw the pop ular indicators for one of their worst setbacks of the year. A drop of more than 4 in Du Pont and at least 1 each In American Telephone, An aconda, Chrysler, Eastman Kodak, General Electric, Gen eral Foods, General Motors, Goodyear, U.S. Steel, Inter national Harvester, Wool worth, Procter & Gamble, United Aircraft, Standard Oil of California, and Union Car bide sent the Dow Jones in dustrial average staggering to a new low for the year. DOW JONES AVERAGES New York-tt!PI-Dow Jones final stock averages: 30 in dustrials 636.34, off 12.25: 20 railroads 134.73. off 1.48; 15 utilities 120.59. off 1.58, and 65 stocks 220.63, off 3.55. Sales today were about 3.64 million shares compar ed with 2.26 million shares Monday. Todav's prlrefi on elected storks: Allied Chemical 40' Alum Co Am American Air Lines American Can American Motors AT&T American Tohacco . Anaconda Copper ... Armco Bonclix Corp Bethlehem Steel BneinR Ail Brunswick xti Caterpillar Corp Chrysler Corp Caen Coin C.B.S. ixril Continental Can ... Crown Zrllerbach . Crucible Siocl Curtiss WriRhl Dow Chemical Du Ponl Eastman Kodak Ford General Electric General Ford General Motors Georgia Pacific Grevhound Gulf Oil Homestake Idaho Power IBM. Int Paper Johns Manville Kennecntt Copper Lot-kheed Aircraft MHrtin Co Merck Montana Power .... Nai l Biscuit . . New York Central Northern Pacific .. Par Gas Elec Penney J. C De Gaulle Death Weapons Seized Pnris-il'PP - Weapons found in the possession of the 15 Secret Army commandos who were planning to kill Presi dent Charles de Gaulle includ-; ed a bazooka and a quantity of dynamite, police sources said today. I A rifle with a telescopic siRht and a silencer, several revolvers, bazooka ammuni tion and other rockets, acid detonators for high explosive and plastic explosive of the type used by the OAS for its terror bombs also were found by security police in a Paris apartment rented by a member of the gang. Tlie members of the gang, including a woman, have been under interrogation for the j past 48 hours at security po , lice headquarters here. ; The gang leader was identt ; tied as Jcan-Loup Blanchy. a I native of France but a long I time resident of Algerfa. The woman was said to be his ti i ancee. Vania Pcrclti. I Security police in Algiers ' got w ind of the plot while grilling Francois Fanfau Leca. an OAS man arrested and charged with a series of kill ings. I'nder questioning, l.eca ! told police a so-called ''delta commando" of OAS desper adoes had left Algenes for I France early this monih uGlcr orders In kill De Gaulle, l.eca lideniitied Blanchy as heal, of the gang. i er an official of NAM de clared that a profit squeeze must be eased to encourage job-producing investments. Meany said the NAM, other business groups and organized labor must join to find solu tions to problems and not rely on the law of the jungle to solve them. "Most Americans think profits are too high," Meany said. "I don't care how high profits go if you tell us how they will be translated into jobs and not higher salaries for executives or stock options-legalized larceny prac ticed by some of these corpo rations." Detailed Outline Promised Sligh promised to send Meany a detailed NAM out line of how increasing profits would spur investment and enlarge job opportunities. Sligh said profits now aver age below 5 per cent of sales and polls indicate that most Americans believe this is too low a percentage. Penn RR 14 t Perma Cement iv i Phillip t)34 i Procter A Gamble 7r34 ! Radio Corporation SM4 Richfield Oil Safeway 40 i4 I Sears 80a I Shell Oil nfi Soeony Mobil Oil .52 4 j Southern Co ,51 ' , Southern Pacific 2fi1j Sperry Rand 17', I Standard California ,5R Standard Indiana (xd) 4R I Sinndard N. 1 52' Sun Mines 7-'4 Tcxai Co M3 I Texas Gulf Sulfur Usj ; Texas Pacific Land Trust IS Thiokol 2R',i Trans-America - 41 Trans World Air IO'b Tri-Contlnental 43 Union Carbide flfi'i ; Union Pacific 31 l4 United Aircraft 47 United Air Lines 2!'W U. S. Plywood 4.'1 n U. S. Rubber Al U. S. 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Dunlop, chairman of Harvard's Economics De partment said industries which suffer from chronic high unemployment will not be able to resist pressure for a work hours cut much longer. Labor Secretary Arthur J. Goldberg said previously that business, labor and public I leaders will be called to addi- tional "summit" talks on wage -price and bargaining problems. furnitur: Highway 99 Central Point o New Building New Stock No Shop Worn ... No Obsolete Stock BETTER WAIT! Watch For Our Opening Ad! Thankt . . To all my friends who supported me and worked so hard on my behalf . . .and to all who gave me their vote of confidence. 1PEE3 SK! CWW: I TILL 9 M RHiHJS jrU SUN. TILL 7 R5tRVI0 in . 'De' Leigh i.ilH:;Hl:l PRESCRIPTIONS ARE OUR MOST IMPORTANT BUSINESS! o o o o 0