Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, September 12, 1962, Image 2

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    Late Senator's Widow,
Governor Defeated in
New Hampshire Voting
By United Presi International
The defeat of a veteran
governor and
widow have
mark's in nine states, the last
big batch of preliminaries to
the November elections.
Tuesday's primaries were
highlighted by New Hamp
shire, where Republican Gov
fort, defeated veteran poli
tician David Hamil in the
a senator's ' GOP gubernatorial primary,
marked pri-1 William B. Chenoweth, 41,
son of GOP Rep. J. Ldgar
Chenoweth, won a Republican
nomination for Congress. His
father was unopposed.
Minnesota: Rep. H. Carl
Andersen, looking for his 12th
Wiley, the dean of GOP sen
ators, won easy renomination.
Phillip Kuehn won a stiff
fight for the GOP nomination
to run against Atty. Gen.
Reynolds for the governorship.
Wesley Powell failed in his I term, lost in his GOP Drimarv
bid for an unprecedented I battle against car dealer Rob-
jnird term, r-oweii iosi iu ert j odegard. Andersen
John Plllsbury, majority lead
er of the state legislature.
- Also in New Hampshire,
Rep. Perkins Bass won by a
thousand votes in the GOP
primary for senator over Mrs.
Doloris Bridges, widow of
Sen. Styles Bridges.
; Other primaries were held
in Vermont, Arizona, Colo
rado, Minnesota, Rhode Is
land, Utah, Washington and
Wisconsin. The results:
Vermont! Political novice
W; Robert Johnson upset
former Rep. William H.
Meyer for the Democratic
nomination to face Sen.
George D. Aiken in the No
vember senatorial election.
. Ariiona: Carl Hayden, the
Senate's senior Democrat,
won renomination handily. In
November, he will run
against State Sen. Evan Me
cham, who beat Stephen
Shadcgg by 10.000 votes.
Shadegg was Sen.'Barry Gold
water's campaign manager.
Colorado: John A. Love,
making his first political el-
stock deal with Billie Sol
Estes cost him the party's en
dorsement. Lt. Gov. Karl
Rolvaag won the Democratic
nomination for governor. He
will face Incumbent Gov. El
rr.cr L. Anderson. Rep. Walter
H. Judd (R-Minn.) easily de
tailed his opponent in the
GOP congressional primary.
Rhode Island: Democratic
Gov. John A. Notte came
from behind to win renomina
tion over Woonsocket Mayor
Kevin K. Coleman.
Utah: Sen. Wallace Bennett
won the GOP renomination
easily over Salt Lake City
Mayor J. Bracken Lee. Rep
David King ran away with the
Democratic n o m i nation to
face Bennett.
Washington: Sen. Warren
G. Magnuson had no trouble
winning the Democratic
rcnominution over bearded
eccentric John Patrlc. He will
run against Lutheran Minis
ter Richard G. Christcnsen
in November.
Wisconsin:
Alexander
; Regional Edition
Page 2-A
T T
MEDFORDiJTRIBUNE
MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1962
Foreign Briefs
ITALIAN COMMUIST LEADER CONFINED
Rome-fUPH-Italian Communist Leader Palmiro Togliatli,
69, was admitted to a Roma clinic Tuesday. A spokesman
would say only that he was "under observation.
COSMONAUT, WIFE VISIT IN YUGOSLAVIA
Belgrade-fllPli-Soviet Cosmonaut Gherman Tllov and his
yrile arrived by plane Tuesday for a ten-day visit to Yugo
lavia, according to the Tanjug News Agency.
RUSSIAN DELAYS NUCLEAR TEST BAN PARLEY ..
Geneva-llPlt-A meeting of the three-power nuclear test
ban subcommittee that had bean tcheduld for today will be
held Friday, according to the U. S. delegation here.
' A spokesman said American, British and Russian negoti
ators agreed to postpone the meeting because Soviet Deputy
Foreign Minister Semyon Tsarapkin had not arrived from
Moscow.
Wfl1 X'
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urr.L'!
Lane County Gets
Grant (or Rural
Juvenile Study
Washington-UIPD - The gov
ernment today authorized the
first federal grant to a rural
area to help solve basic social
ills that threaten farm youths
with "the double dangers of
unemployment and delinquen
cy." Health, Education and Wel
fare Secretary Anthony J.
Celebreeze announced award
of a $129,579 grant from the
President's Committee on Ju
venile Delinquency to support
a coordinated program in
Lane County, Oregon.
"Much attention has been
given to delinquency in large
cities," Cclebrezze said. "But
we know too little about the
causes of rural delinquency
or what can be done to meet
them."
Cclebrezze said rural delin
quency was a growing prob
lem and that cases nearly
doubled between 1955 and
1959.
The funds will be used bv
tne Lane County Youth Study
Board which will develop a
county-wide approach with
coordinated programs in such
fields as education, employ
ment, recreation, law enforce
ment and social services.
The Rev. Wesley G. Nichol
son, president of the grouD.
said the first phase of the pro
gram was designed to gather
information on the extent of
delinquency in rural and
small city areas of the county.
tne county has a population
about 160,000 distributed
over 4,573 square miles, an
rea about the size of the
state of Connecticut.
Growth Issues
Feature Firm
Stock Market
New York - ffiPU - Growth
stocks, electronics and finance
shares today featured a firm
stock market.
Xerox and Polaroid, two re
cent favorites, added about 1
apiece. Among the electronics,
Beckman and IBM rose 2 or
more followed by Schuluin
berger, up about Wi. In the
strong finance section, Fi
nancial Federation, First
Charter and United Financial
added at least 1 apiece,
Parmelee Transporta tion
rose roughly a point in an
otherwise narrowly mixed
auto group. Chemicals were
irregularly higher and Con
tinental slipped nearly 1 in an
erratic steel sector.
Oils were narrowly mixed
but some utilities, oils and
aircrafts moved higher. A few
Southern Negroes Declared Arming;
Leader Fears 'Retaliatory Violence'
Atlanta -(DPI- Negro leader
Martin Luther King Jr. warn
ed President Kennedy Tues
day night that many Negroes
are arming themselves and
may turn to "retaliatory vio
lence" unless the federal gov
ernment acts to stop a "reign
of terror" in the South.
"I will continue to urge
my people to be nonviolent
in the face of o p p o s i
tion, but I feel my counsel
will fall on deaf ears if the
federal government does not
take decisive action," King
said in a telegram to the
President.
The Baptist minister who
heads the integrationist South
ern Christian Leadership Con
ference said he was "gravely
disturbed by the rash of in-
Senate-House Conferees Near Agreement on Key Part of Farm Bil
Washington-iUPB-A Senate-
House conference committee
was near agreement today on
a compromise that would sal
vage a key part of President
Kennedy's farm bill.
The proposal being revived . growers at a lower price for
would establish a permanent
new program for controlling
wheat, beginning in 1964. Un
der the new program, wheat
surplus would be marketed by
livestock feed.
Kennedy's program was
killed by the House earlier
this year. Republican farm
leaders vowed an all-out fight.
human developments across ,
the South." j
He referred to the wound
ing of two Negro girls active
in Negro voter registration
at Ruleville, Miss., Monday
night, the burning of three
Negro churches in Lee and
Terrell Counties, Ga., and the
"armed attack on Negro
homes" in Leesburg and Les
lie, Ga. King sa'd these acts
are "evidence of a pattern
of unAmerican resistance to
the Negro's efforts to register
and vote."
For Fait,
Efficient Service-
&k . Ship It
' to or from
Oakland, San
Francisco, Lot Angeles
I and Other California
Call
Jack Fitzgerald
773-7761
op
DOW-JONES AVERAGES
New York LII) Dow
Jones final stock averages:
30 industrials 603.99, up
1.96; 20 railroads 12.14. off
0.91; 15 utilises 121.34. off
0.02. and 65 stocks 210.08.
up 0.06. Sales Tuesday
were about 3.04 million
shares compared with 2.52
million shares Monday.
r , VM Iff'
"J M
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Negro Judge Gets
Sendk Approval
Washington -IUPII- The Sen
te Tuesday approved, 54-16,
the Judgeship nomination of
Negro leader Thurgood Mar
shall, 54.
The Senate had to wait al
most a year to confirm the
nomination of the former gen
eral counsel for the National
Association for the Advance
ment of Colored People.
Marshall hns been serving
under a recess appointment to
the 2nd Circuit Court of Ap
peals in New York.
Sens. James O. Eastland
(D-Miss.), Olin D. Johnston
(D-S.C), Strom Thurmond (D
S.C.) and John C. Slcnnis (D-
Miss.) made a vain attempt to
block Senate floor action.
Eastland and Thurmond de
nounced Marshall for his
former membership in the Na
tional Lawyers Guild and the
International Juridical Asso
ciation, both cited as Cummu-
nist fronts.
Marshall's supporters
charged he was the victim of
racial discrimination and had
been "subjected to all the har
assment and humiliation
which prejudice anil pettiness
can inflict, . ."
OITIo school now... hut what about coIIcko?
We are helping many parents save to meet
the costs of college educations for their chil
dren. Start now... open a college savings
account with us. Excellent earnings.'
v ..v.;-. JJ
and LOAN ASSOCIATION
201 West 6th
Fret Customer Parking in Our lol
Robert F. Kyle, Mgr.
m If! li
uM MM L
Tuesday's
xtocki:
Allied Chemical
Alum Co Atn
American Air Llnea ..
American Can
American Mutora
AT&T.
American Tobacco ....
Anaconda Copper ....
Arnico
Bendlx Co:p
Bethlehem steel
Boeing Air
Brunswick
Caterpillar Corp
Chrysler Corp
Coca Cola txd)
CBS
Columbia Gas
Continental Can
Crown Zellcrhach
Crucible Steel xd)
Curltai Wright
Du Pont
Eastman Kodak
Firestone
Ford
General Electric
General Foods
General Motors
Georala Pacific
Greyhound
Gulf Oil ...
Homestake
Idaho l-ower
IBM
Int. Paper
Johna Manville
Kennecotl Copper
Lockheed Aircraft
Martin
Merck -
Montana Power
Montgomery Ward .. .
National Biscuit Ixd)
New York Central ....
Northern Pacific
Pac Gas Elec
Penney J. C
Penn RR
Pcrma Cement
Phillips
Procter Si Gamble ....
Radio Corporation ....
mcntieia un ,
Safeway
Santa Fe ....
Sears
Shell Oil
Socony Mobil Oil
Southern Co
Sperry Rand
Standard California ...
Standard Indiana
Standard N J
Stokeley Van Camp ...
Sun Mines
Texas Co
Texas Gulf Sulfur
Texas Pac Land Trust
Thlokol
Trana America
Trans World Air
Trl-Contlnental
Union Carbide
Union Pacific
United Aircraft
United Airlines
U. S. Plywood
U. S. Rubber
U. S. Steel
West Bank Corp
Westinghouse
prices on selected
.... 37!,
.... S9!
.... 18!,
.... 44',,
.... 17
...111 ,
.... 30-,
.... 38',
.... 45 .,
.... 30',
... 41',,
.... 20,
.. 33!,
... iS'.t
.... .,
.... 37 i
... 4 I 't
... 431,
.- 13!,
... IB?,
...303't
...1UO-,
... 30
... W,
... 6T,
... ior.
... ,
... .17
... 7i
... 311
.. 34 H
... 31,
...3112
.. 2ti
... -101,
.. 6CI
.. J3".i
.. S7
.. 32',
.. 28'.',
- W
. 14 'i
.. 33 '
. 20',,
. 44
. 4(1 Si,
. 671',
. 40
, 40
. 38
. 21
, 721,
. 33
, SM.
48',
13'!
59 5.
17'.',
101,
.14
30!',
39
10'.
37 .
90',
3d J,
481,
, 32".
43',
40',
43',
2n a,
. 21
Probe of Soblen
Case Demanded
London -IliPH- Several Brit
ish newspapers and members
of Parliament today demand
ed a thorough investigation,
by Parliament, if necessary,
into the handling of the case
of fugitive spy Dr. Robert A.
Soblen, til.
The Lithuanian - born psy
chiatrist died in a London hos
pital Tuesday, possibly with
out knowing that his brother
and fellow espionage agent,
Jack Soble, had been released
from a U.S. federal prison 11
days before.
Soble, the chief government
witness at Soblen s trial, was
let out of the Federal Correc
tional Institute at Danbury,
Conn., Aug. 31 alter serving
five years of a seven-year
term for conspiring to steal
defense secrets for Hussta.
The J u s t i c e Department
made the disclosure in Wash-1
ington Tuesday night when ;
newsmen asked about him fol- j
lowing Soblen's death here.
There was no indication ,
whether anyone had told Sob
len about his brother in the
seven days between the re-
lease and the time Soblen took
a massive overdose of barbil-1
urates last Thursday.
Soblen had been sentenced
to life imprisonment for his
part In the spy conspiracy and
it was his desperate attempts
to escape this that led to his
death.
sMIatotrbll
MISSING - John Ilarnes, an
Englishman working for
Newsweek Magizinr, is one of
four foreign correspondents
lisled as "missing " .'icr
leaving Havana to visit near
by North Coast Soviet en
campments. Bitrnes, along
with another Britisher and
two Cubans, left Havana dur
ing the past week end and has
not been heard from since. In
the past swell "disappearan
ces'' have meant arrest and
detention by Cuban intelll-
THEY'RE
at
The
TOWER
U06 N. Rivsnid.
II M
mmu
' aaC MM H M aai
6th & Central, Your Bargain Corner
ifi fi
t kHJ irl
V 1
1 i ' i
4 'it'
I ' " JtaifoiiSst!!aWfi!!lial ' il
titv it
i
COMPARE THESE PRICES!
Extra Size Foam-Backed
VISCOSE TWEED RUGS
Thick viscose rayon cut pile in smart tweed weave, backed with
latex to lock in the tuffs, plus thick foam rubber backing for luxury
under foot, longer wear, prevents slipping. Brown, Black and
Green Tweeds.
ftlvrimMr wumuaiB a i ft mi
twice the
price or morel
Solid Maple
Cricket Rocker
9x12'
Reg. 29.95
88
21
12x12'
Reg. 39.9S
188
29'
12x15'
Reg. 49.95
'88
35'
12x18'
Reg. 59.95
88
41
Imagine getting so much'
charm and real comfort at this
low Newberry pricel Famous
make cricket style rocker, with
solid maple frame. Plumply
padded back and seat in print
ed chintz brown, red, green
or gold.
P88
SOLID
MAPLE TABLES
J88
Copies of tables
selling at double our
price, and more.
Made roi Ncwbcr
rys by a high li3
manufact u r c r
copies of tine Col
onial style tables
selling at more
than double our
low price. All care
fully selected, ktln
dried solid rock
maple . . . expert
ly crafted, rich an
tique finish , . ,
trimmed with an
tique design hard
w a r e. Matching
coffee, lamp and
step styles
Similar to illustration
i TTuc O Qfi I
Charge It!
Full Size Crib and Mattress
Special Purchase! 30x54" crib
has drop side, plastic teething
rail on 4 sides, link spring ad
justs to 4 positions. Birch mist,
white enamel.
1Q"
.aM jtf tea.
Ncwberrys
SIXTH AND CENTRAL
6-TRANSISTOR
POCKET RADIO
9.97
Comp. value 15.95
With leather case, ear
phone, battery. Powerful
speaker, lovely tone.
39c e.
Reg.
Assorted
HOUSE PLANTS
4 for $7
A selection of the most
wanted green-growing house
plants philodendrons, san
leveria, nephthytis, othen.
In 2,i" plastic pots.
'IYDIA
TISSUE
GREY
10 roll,
88c
Usually 1.19
Super-soft facial quality. 10
rolls in utility bag. White,
blue, yellow or pink. Stock
up now and save.
SAVE 1.32 On Famous G.E. ELECTRIC
ALARM CLOCK
Reg.
3.98
2.66
You get famous G-E quality in smart
brown plastic case 4x3 Vi". Accurate,
dependable. Alarm sounds for 45 min
utes unless shut off. Charge it.
3.47 Value
2 liN M&P Chenille
for Bedspread
First Quality. Exciting selection,
chenille many fringed. Styles
twin sizes. Decorator colors.
all thick, lush cotton
for every decor. Full,
mi
' - m. Ti.i
HIGH QUALITY
HARD-TO-BEAT
LOW PRICE
1
You'll be amazed jt our huge
assortments . . . single tools, even
sets at our low price. For exam
ple: 8-oz. steel rubber-grip Ham
mer ... 10" Stillson type Wrench
. . . Set of 3 rubber-grip temper
ed steel Screw Drivers . . . 3
piece all-purpose Plier Kit . . .
15-piece Mechanic's Tool Set . , .
;i3&4 '2-piece Wood Carving Set . . .
and many more. COME, seel
Original values to 1.49 ea.
Open Friday Nites Mil 9