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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 19, 1962)
Ted Kennedy Swamps Opponent in Massachusetts Election Stocks Drift Lower With Du Pont Gaining Around 2 New York - IUPD - Stocks drifted a bit lower today. Among the blue chips Du Pont gained around 2 aa chemicals held firm. Motors were static and International oils and steels a bit easier along with the metal sector in which International Nickel gave up a point. American Telephone was active and up a fraction on Its plans for a $250 million de benture offering. High priced glamor issues shuffled around nervously, after developing losses of 1 to 5 points. DOW JONES AVERAGES New York - fUPB - Dow Jonn final stock averages: 30 industrials 607.09, un changed) 20 railroads 119.24, off 0.96) IS utilities 122.48, up 0.27, and 65 stocks 210.41, off 0.22. Sales today war about 2.95 mil lion shares compared with 3.69 million shares Tuesday. Today's prlcea on selected stocks: Alum Co Am 37 American Air Lines 16 American Can 43 American Motors lBTs AT&T 111 '4 American Tobacco 30 Anaconda Copper 37si Progress Reports To Be Presented Progress reports on various parks in Medford will be pre sented at a meeting of the Medford parks and recreation commission at 7:30 o'clock to night. The meeting will be held In the city council cham bers and is open to the public. Hatfield To Hold News Conference Snlem-UPD-Gov. Mark Hat field said today he will hold a news conference here in his office at 10:30 a.m. PST next Wednesday. Armco Bethlehem Steel Boeing Air Brunswick Caterpillar Corp Chryiler Corp Coca Cola CBS. ... Columbia Gas ConUnantal Can ..... Crown 2ellertjach . Crucible Steel Curtlii Wrlsht Dow Chemical Du Pont Eastman Kodak Ford General Electric General Foods General Motors Georgia Pacific Greyhound Guir on Homestake Idaho Power IBM. . Int Paper Johns Manvllle Kennecott Copper .. Lockheed Aircraft .. Martin .. Merck .. Montana Power Montgomery Ward National Biscuit .... New York Central .. Northern Pacific .... Pac Gas Elcc Penney J. C Penn RR Perma Cement ........ Phillips Procter St Gamble .. Radio Corp Richfield Oil Safeway Santa Fa Sears ... Shell Oil . 431', . i. ... 40 's ... 18', ... 33". ... S7',s ... 82 'j ... 37 s, ... 25 ',4 ... 4 Ms ... 424, ... 15 . 18'. ... 53 .209'. .100".4 ... 43',, ... 67 ... 73 ' ... 84 V, ... 38 ... 37 ... 36 ... 52 32', ...3B6 .... 26 .... 41 .... 04 .... 53 .... 23 .... 00 .... 32 .... 28 .... 40 .... 13 31 .... 26 .... 45 .... 11 .... 14 .... 48 .... 7 ... 40 .... 40 .... 38 .... 21 .... 74 .... 32 Trial Scheduled Ocf.lForRyles A Jury trial has been set for Oct. 1 for a transient who is charged with setting fire to a box car in August and seriously burning another transient. Robert Lee Ryles, 27, the transient, pleaded innocent yesterday in Jackson county circuit court to charges of as sault and battery by means of force likely to produce bodily Injury. Ho is accused specif ically of setting fire to the box car In which Clair Almon Camp, 51, Lebanon, Kans. was sleeping. Socony Mobil OH 33 Southern Co 47 Stanoard California 611 '. Standard Indiana - 45 Standard NJ 53 Minea 11 55', 12', . 31 10' 37 Texas Co. Texas Gulf Sulfur Texas Pac Land Trust Thiokol Trans America Trans World Air Trt-Contlnental Union Carbide 02 union racnic 30 United Aircraft 49 United Airlines 31 U.S. Plywood 43 U.S. Rubber 3fl U.S. Steel 41 West Bank Corp 29 Westing-house 28 Youngstown 73 Rogue Valley Edition MEDFORDf Page 2-A Tribune MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1962 Held Over by Popular Demand 3 Days Only Thursday, Friday, Saturday Large 11 x 14-in. Portrait Plus Same Picture on a 1963 Calendar -Il 1 . ti ii.iijsjis.ii ss a , sia i -iar . 99 Bust Yii'in'lte Crins 50e for handling. wrapping, Photos Taken by Skilled Pictxireland Studios Photographers Teull always, tee hint just as lie looked that aWyt Although the years will pass, this lovely treasure will last . . , an enriching, valuable re membrance ill at will be yours forever! Sorry Limit 1 Photo Per Child 2 Photos Per Family Age 5 Weeks to 12 Years Family Groups Also Taken at 99 Per Subject PTA Delegates Approve Program Roseburg - (UPD - The con vention of the Oregon Con gress of Parents and Teachers continued today after the dele gates Tuesday passed a hefty legislative program in a busy session. , The convention called for encouragement of school dis trict reorganization and for an increase In the state's share of public school costs to 50 per cent. The delegates urged state wide educational television, more summer work camps for boys, and tougher sentences for convicted sex criminals. The convention said lnter mediate education units should be maintained at the county or regional level. The delegates also urged adequate special programs for talented, handicapped and mi grant children, and better le gal procedures - such as fam ily courts - to deal with chil dren and youth. The only provision rejected by the delegates would have allowed school boards to use tax funds to inform citizens about their programs and needs. About 1,000 delegated at tended the convention the first day. Opposition Noted To Junior Colleges Further develop m e n t of junior college programs in Oregon is receiving strong op position, County School Su perintendent Alf B. Mekvold told a meeting of the Jackson County Superintendents association. A study committee consist ing of school board members, key local citizens, representa tives of the secondary princi pal's group, Dr. Leonard B. Mayfield, Medford school su perintendent, and Glenn D. Hale, Eagle Point, have been making a thorough study of a proposed Junior college pro gram in this area, Mekvold explained. The study, initiated by the Jackson County School Board association, is aimed at the vocational technical level, it was reported to the superin tendents. Some representa tives of Josephine county have also attended the study com mittee meetings. Recent state legislation gave considerable state support to the program, Mekvold said, but added that meetings of the legislative interim committee and the state board of higher education indicate some opposition. Dedication Friday For New Grandstand Short dedication ceremonies will be held at the new Med ford High school grandstand prior to the opening home football gHme Friday night with Marshfield. More than 800 reserve tick ets have been sold to finance construction of the new 4.000 sent capacity grandstand which replaces a wooden structure. Dedication ceremonies will start at 8 p.m. Friduy, when a deed for the structure will be presented to Keith Hooker smith, chairman of the school board, by Garner llaupert. president of tile Associated Student Body Finishing touches Bre being put on the grandstand tins week, and will be ready for Friday night's game with the exception of a section of the roof which will not be com pleted. With the new grandstand, facilities at the stadium will seat about 6.500 people under cover. Lodge Will Be Republican Foe In November Boston - (UPt - Ted Kennedy predicted confidently today he would move into the Senate seat his brother vacated to be come president of the United States. His Republican oppo nent in November will be George Cabot Lodge. The election battle will be a renewal of a feud between two political dynasties that has stretched over almost five decades. The youngest member of the Kennedy clan, taking his first plunge into national politics at the age of 30, set in motion a tidal wave of votes that swamped Edward J. McCormack, his opponent for the Democratic senatorial nomination. The tide was run ning so strongly against Mc Cormack that he conceded de feat Tuesday night when re turns were In from only one fifth of the state's 1,988 pre cincts. 'The crusher came when Teddy carried Eddie's own home ward in Boston. A few moments later Ken nedy, In a voice that sounds remarkably like that of the President of the United States, paid a neat tribute to Mc Cormack and then predicted: "We will carry the battle for ward to victory in Novem ber." Lodge, son of Henry Cabot Lodge, defeated Congressman Laurence Curtis for the Re publican senatorial nom 1 n a tion. Complete returns gave Ken nedy, 556,206; McCormack, 246,542; Lodge, 226,414; Cur tis, 184,181. The Kennedys and the Lodges have been tangling at the polls since 1916. Lodge's great grandfather defeated Ted's grandfather, John 1 F. Fitzgerald, for the Senate. President Kennedy defeated Lodge's father, Henry Cabot Lodge, for the U.S. Senate in 1952. The President won another victory over the same Lodge, who ran for vice presi dent on the Republican ticket in 1960. The issue of youth and in experience also is dead. Lodge Is 35 years old and his ex perience consists of being an assistant secretary of labor in the Eisenhower administra t i o n. Kennedy's experience consists of being an assistant district attorney of Suffolk County, Mass. Both of them are over six feet tail with movie star profiles, and many women in Massachusetts are going to have cardiac flutters when faced with the cruel decision between them in November. Lodge had an uphill road to victory. He fell behind Curtis early in the evening, then went 100 votes ahead and around midnight began to pull steadily in front. Morse Assured Trade Bill Not To Hurt Lumber Efforts Washington - HTD - Sen Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) was as sured Tuesday that President Kennedy's trade bill would not significantly affect the U.S. lumber industry's efforts to gain relief from Canadian competition. Morse gained the assurance on the Senate floor during questioning of Senate Finance Committee Chairman Harry F. Byrd (D-Va.). Byrd agreed it "would be unfair to change the rules Local Lawyers To Attend Meeting Several lawyers from this area plan to be in Coos Bay- North Bend Coquille area Wednesday for the 28th an nual meeting of the Oregon State bar. Guest speakers will be James R. Browning, judge of the United States court of ap peals for the ninth circuit, and Felix F. Stumpf, administra tor, continuing education of tho bar for California. William M. Dale Jr., Port land, vice president of the group, will preside for the first business meeting with G W. Kellington, Medford, act ing as his parliamentarian. Friday's meetings are under the leadership of Edward N. Fadeley, Eugene, and Glenn R. Jack, Oregon City, with John R. Dellenback, Medford, and Clarence A. Barton, Co quille, parliamentarians. The annual golf tournament will be held in the Coos Coun try club in Coos Bay. Activ ities for wives include a fash ion show Thursday and bridge Friday, and an open house Saturday on one of the ships In harbor. A beach breakfast Sunday morning will conclude the session. Woman Who Bore Stigmata Dies Waldsassen, Germany-IUPD- Therese Neaumann, 64, who was said to bear the stigmata of Christ each year on Good Friday, died Tuesday. It was during Holy Week 36 years ago that blood first oozed from wounds in the palms, feet, forehead and side of Miss Neumann, the Roman Catholic daughter of a poor Bavarian tailor. Every year since then, the wounds reappeared. Thou sands of pilgrims filing past i her bedside reported they saw ; the frail woman lying in a trance with blood coming from the wounds and occa-1 slonally from her eyes. While the church never has taken a formal position on her mysterious wounds, a Vatican source said in 1956 that her case was being ex amined "benevolently." significantly" while the lum ber industry's appeal to the U.S. Tariff Commission is pending. Morse said representatives of the West Coast lumber in dustry have asked the Tariff Commission for relief from the "disastrous" impact of in creasing imports of Canadian softwood lumber. Byrd assured him that the trade bill would make no changes in present law regard ing the economic factors to be considered by the Tariff Com mission in determining the ex tent to which the U.S. lumber industry was being hurt by Canadian exports. Morse said the Tariff Com mission had asked lumber companies to supply needed economic information by Sept. 28. Spokesmen for the hard pressed West Coast lumber in dustry have long complained that they cannot compete with British Columbia producers in the marketing of lumber on U.S. East Coast markets. Vancouver, B.C.-llIPD-Mem- bers of the International Woodworkers of America on both sides of the border were urged Tuesday to fight against the proposed reduction of Ca nadian lumber sales to the United States. The call came from Jack Moore, president of the West ern Canada region of the IWA at the opening of four days of union talks. Moore told 200 delegates. "We can't afford to sit on our fannies while powerful. interlocking lumber corpora tions rig the narket to get higher prices and bigger prof its at the expense of our Jobs." He said British Columbia lumber workers would be the main victims if the United States curbed lumber Imports from Canada. Moore said IWA members in the United States should back the Canadian union. He said curbs against Canada would weaken the union and cut employment in Canada while failing to increase jobs in the United States. He said increasing mechanization in the Pacific Northwest rules out any chance that more pro duction would mean more jobs. Moore said talks on quotas against Canadian lumber were being supported in Washington, D.C., by a pow erful U.S. lumber lobby. "Since the United States is our best customer," he added, "we well know what will happen to our jobs if lumber exports are cut back. .... I For Fait, kijt&- I Efficient Service f"to or from rJ, Oakland, jQOl . i Francisco, Lc San Los Angeles and Other California Points Call Jack Fitzgerald 773-7761 selects GOVERNOR HATFIELD as one of the hundred most important young men and women in the United States Life Magazine. September 14 issue, specified the hundred had to meet a rigid set of criteria: 1. tough, self-imposed stand ards of individual excel lence 2. a zest for hard work 3. a dedication to something larger than private success 4. the courage to act against old problems 5. the boldness to try out new ideas 6. a hardbitten, undaunted hopefulness about man Say Lite (about Mark Hatfield) "As Oregon governor, he has gained wide respect for organization and planning and successful mediation be tween labor and management..." The selection of the "hundred best" by LIFE breathes confidence in America's future. It is re assuring to have our own governor, and a candi date for re-election, included in LIFE Magazine's careful selection of the hundred most important At election time, I urge you to vote for Mark Hatfield. He is important to Oregon's future. Paid sdnrtisiiMnt by Don Dswtoa, 23311 S. W. KsHmss. Portlsirf 1, Owoa. I 3D Foreign Briefs FEW GERMANS SAID SEEKING DIVORCE Wietbanden, Germany-IT1-The West German federal sla tislics office said today German couples married 35 years seldom seek divorce. The office said 15 per cent of German couplet were wed 35 years ago. Only seven-tenths of one per cent of tham statistically speaking are seeking divorce, the office explained. UNEMPLOYED COAL MINERS BECOMING MAILMEN Tokyo-ilTIi-Coal. miners are being turned into mailmen in Japan. The postal service ministry announced that 44 unemploy ed miners are now delivering letters and 60 more are sched uled to become postmen shortly. More than 70.000 miners have been dismissed since 1959 and many more are likely to be idled because of the con tinuing slump In the coal industry, officials said. MASTER AUTO KEYS MISSING IN LONDON London-il'PP-London police have lost the master keys that open and start almost every car in the British Isles, they reported today. Officers placed the 651 keys and their metal box on a curb while they dealt with a parked car blocking traffic in the Soho district Monda, night. When they looked again the box was gone. "They would be a gift from heaven to a professional car thief," a detective said. ENROLLMENT UP F.ogle Point - Eagle Point School District 9 enrolled 1, 3ti students on its first day of school Monday. This is an inomise of 141 students over last year. on CONTINENTAL TRAILWAYS you are a l&Gifa' Q J-i enjoying exclusive FIVESTAR LUXURY SERVICE HOSTESS ABOARD REFRESHMENTS REST ROOM OBSERVATION LOUNGE LOUNGE CHAIR SEATS PORTLAND, SEATTLE, SACRAMENTO SAN FRANCISCO, FRESNO, LOS ANGELES VISIT THE U. S. A.I Only $99 . . . circle-tour or round-trip . . . anywhere on Continental Trailwayj system! . . . (Effective Sept 10th) 5th and Bartlett Phone 773-1853 Values of the Decade! FAMILY-SIZE REFRIGERATOR BUDGET PRICE This 12.6 cubic foot, two-door refrigerator has giant capacity. Spacious top-mounted freezer holds a big 103 pounds. Handy butter and cheese compartment. Plenty of storage spaca in the door. All shelves are full-width, full-depth. Originally $319.95 NOW GOLDEN C VALUE Even LESS With Trade GOLDEN faA NEW LAUNDROMAT 3 AUTOMATIC WASHER VALUI ;..r j LCC-DCC THE WASHER THAT SAVES YOU Vi ON DETERGENT AND BLEACH Easily Holds a 12-Pound loadl Every washday you save with Westinghouse because the Laundromat uses only one-hsif the amount of de tergent and bleach that other washers have to use, and saves on hot water, too! Its tumble-action tub lifts clothes up through the suds . . . then gravity drops them down for another dousing. Your clothes coma out completely clean. Come in! See a demonstration! Only 228 00 Originally $239.95 Metchin Electric Drver has three drviner limwi. tures. Dryer shuts off automatically when clothes are ory. naj nanay Lint collector. c s Q Q qq Only UU Originally $289.95 You can be sure... if it's Westinghouse -te Trowbridge Electric main and fir street 773-6241