Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, September 24, 1962, Image 2

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    engine President Firmly Supported .by Armed Forces
Kennedy Makes TV Appeal
To Restore Foreign Aid Cut
Washington - tin - Presi- (lhe Amateur Athletic Union I settle their feud "our Olympic
dent Kennedy has made a na-land the National Collegiate team could be wrecked before
tion-wlde television anDeal fur 'Athletic Aaaociation do not lit ii even assembled."
Congress to
restore the $1.1
billion House cut In his for
eign aid program.
In a filmed interview the
President sought public sup
port Sunday for his fight
against the deep slash in his
$4.7 billion program.
, He declared that the aid to
other nations was "the best,
the cheapest, the safest" way
to prevent the spread of com
munism around the world.
But Rep. Otto E. Passman
(D-La.), appearing on the same
program, called the aid pro
gram "a giveaway ... a bot
tomless pit" that was "spend
ing this nation into destruc
tion." Passman, chairman of the
appropriations subcommittee
that initiated the slash, said
U.S. funds were going to 101
of 113 nations in the world, in
ciuaing "communist countries
dictatorships and the so-called
neutrals." He said he saw no
evidence that it was holding
oacK communism.
Kennedy got support from
House Democratic Whip Halo
Boggs (La.) and Gon. Maxwell
Taylor, chairman - designate
o: me joint Chiefs of Staff.
who also appeared on the pro
gram.
Boggs cited the strong re
covery oj European nations
under the Marshall Plan as
proof of the aid program's ef
fectiveness. Ho said the pro
gram -saved Europe from
communism."
Taylor said the aid program
was "vital to our security."
He said it was particularly
Important to give economic
assistance to nations in the
Far East threatened by Red
China.
Other congressional news:
Alhleiicii Assistant Demo
cratic Leader Hubert H.
Humphry called on the war
ring factions of amateur ath
letics in the United States to
ask the While House to me
diate their dispute. The Min
nesota Democrat said that If
Foreign Briefs
PRAYEH URGED FOR GERMAN CHRISTIANS
York, England - OIPI) - Dr. Donald Coggan. Archbishop
oi Torn, appealed Sunday for "sustained and persistant" pray
r for in Christians in East and Wast Germany.
Dr. Coggan, writing in the York Diocasan Leaflet after
a visit to West Berlin and East Germany, urged prayer "for
those who cannot en)oy the privileges which are ours in so
full a measure.
SALAN'S BROTHER FAILS IN FRENCH ELECTION
Paris - il Hi - Georges Salan, brother of ex-Gen. Raoul
Salan, France s onetime public enemy number one, failed in
a Did lor a senate seat Sunday as the French "electoral col
lege voted for one-third ot Perlimeni'i upper house.
FREE CHINA U2 PLANE CRASH REPORTED
Taipei. Formosa - IIIPD - One of the two U2 reconnali
sance planes owned by Nationalist China crashed on For
mosa a week before the second plane was downed iniida
communist China, informed sources said Sunday.
The sources said the pilot was killed and the plane ex
lensiveiy aemagea.
The lots of the first U2 had been reoorted earlier hv
Taipei newspaper but the Nationalist Chinese defense mln
istry denied the report.
GERMAN ROCKET EXPERT BELIEVED KIDNAPED
Munich. Germany - IUPIU Dr. Helns Kuro. German rock
i expert wno was reported missing here recently, "most
probably was kidnaped by Egyptian intelligence agents, In
international ronce Agency (Interpol said Sunday.
Krug, 48. was head of the International Trad Oman.
iiaiion in Munich and formerly had acted as business men.
agar oi me nesearcn institute for Physics and Jet Propul
ion.
Traffic Accidents
Kill Four in State
By United Press Internetional
Four persons were killed in
traffic accidents in Oregon
during the week end.
Ihe victims were Curtis
Larsen, 85, and Joseph Tay-
52, both of Portland:
Clark McMohan, 48, Yachats,
and Coy Hall, Klamath Falls.
Larson was killed Sunday
night when he was struck by
car on U.Sj. Highway 30 near
Rainbow lake in Multnomah
county.
' Taylor died early Sunday in I
a two-car accident on U.S.
Highway 28 near Alder creek
on Mt. Hood.
McMahan and the Hall boy
aiea Saturday.
McMahan was run over by
nis own truck near Waldport.
State police said he apparent
ly stopped the truck to get a
drink from a spring alongside
a Lincoln county road.
the Hall boy lost his life
when he was struck by a car
on a Klamath county road
near Klamath Kails.
MM
o
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Pledge of Early
General Voting
Made by Leader
Buenos Aires -IOT- Presi
dent Jose M. Guido named
new war and navy secretar
ies today to back up his
pledge to give this strife-torn
nation early general elections.
The embattled president,
firmly backed by a majority
of Argentina s armed forces,
moved swiftly to return nor
malcy to the country. In a na
tion-wide radio and television
speech to the people Sunday
night, reporting on the violent
week end which saw a major
shift in the leadership of the
armed forces, Guido warned
sternly against any resump
tion of armed violence.
Tells Appointment
The president reported
early today the appointment
of Lt. Gen. Benjamin Rattem
bach and Rear Adm. Carlos
A. Kolugia to be secretaries of
war and navy, respectively.
Guido said the two men would
be sworn into their new posts
immediately.
The weekend of violence,
pitting rival army factions
against each other in a do-or
die struggle tor power, was
Argentina's first intramural
conflict in the armed forces
in more than two years.
The fighting was brief but
vicious. When the smoke
cleared, downtown Buenos
Aires was scarred with ma
chine gun bullets and tank
shells. At least 10 persons
were reported dead' and 70
wounded. But Guido had
emerged with a clear-cut vic
tory and apparently stronger
than ever.
Military winner in the fac
tional struggle was Gen. Juan
Carlos Ongania, named new
army commander by the president.
The former army command
er, Gen. Juan Carlos Lorio,
and his chief of staff, Gen.
Bernadrino Labayru, were
among 77 army officers under
rrcsl.
A communique from the
president's office this morn
ing said the president had ac
cepted the resignation of the
navy secretary, Rear Adm.
Gaston Clement. The navy
had announced its opposition
Guido and Gen. Ongania
t one point during the crisis.
but naval forces kept out of
the fighting.
The president - also urged
ear Adm. Augustln Penas,
chief of naval operations, to
retract or take responsibility
for a communique issued by
high naval officials over the
weekend and charging the
president with causing the
fight among army factions.
Experts Prepare To Remove Chlorine
Gas From Sunken Mississippi Barge
Natchez, Miss-fllPlt- Experts
studied scale models of a
sunken barge today to plan
the delicate task of raising
more than two million pounds
of deadly chlorine which
menaces about 80,000 persons
aiong me Mississippi river
near here.
ine raising, scheduled to
begin next Monday, will be
a touchy one. If one of the
four 73-foot chlorine cylin
ders springs a leak, the liquid
would combine with water to
generate poisonous chlorine
gas.
A . team of salvage experts
from the New England, Naval
and Maritime museum in
Newport, R.I., left there to
day for Natchez to attempt
recovery of the cylinders.
They included Jackson Jenks,
director of the museum;
Ralph Mercier, Hartford,
Conn., and Walter Hendricks,
Windsor Locks, Conn., divers
expert In handling fragile
materials.
Jenks said he was told that
the operation would be dan
gerous because visibility in
the river near Natchez is
zero.
The Red Cross already has
prepare more than 200 shel
ters for use in case residents
along the river have to be
evacuated.
About 165,000 cots and 190
tons of bedding have been
flown into areas near the
threatened section and Missis
sippi Gov. Ross Barnett Sun.
day asked President Kennedy
to declare "an extreme na.
tional emergency" in the
area.
Chief sections threatened
by the gas are six counties
along the river-three in Mis
sissippi and three in Louisiana.
The barge Eastern, carry
ing 1,100 tons of the chlorine,
sank in the river a year and
a half ago. Kennedy last
week ordered the Corps of
Engineers to raise the wreck
age which is located about
Regional Edition
Medford
Page 2-A
Tribune
seven and a half miles down.
stream from here.
The engineers Sunday used
suction hoses to draw off an
accumulation of Mississippi
river silt and said they found
the barge was buckled in the
middle.
The four tanks, construct
ed independently of one an
other and apart from the
barge, were not bent and ap
peared in good shape.
A scale model of the East
ern has been made to help
plan its removal.
; for Fast,
itW IMleient Service
Ship It
ffegLASME
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wiggiy.
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ESTABLISHED 1896
GREEN
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mmm
OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
Shop in Air Conditioned Comfort!
MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1962
Vatican City Police
Seeking Bomb Clues
Vatican City - (UPD - Police
prowled through Vatican City
today during the preparations
for the Ecumenical Council.
ond since July, made no
change in Pope John XXIII's
schedule.
He spent more than an hour
searching for clue, to the mys- i 0f hi,' predecessors in the
terlous bomber of St. Peter's
Basilica
Two crude incendiary
bombs were left in the Ba
silica Saturday. Neither ex
ploded. But one was found
dangerously close the large
wooden bleachers set up for
the 3,000 delegates to the
council that opens Oct. 11.
The bomb attempt, the sec-
Stocks Descend
On Selling Wave
New York -IUPD- A barrage
of selling hit stocks today
pushing the majority of
groups considerably lower.
Electronics, chemicals and
motors reeled under the sell
ing pressure. IBM tumbled
more than 6, Fairchild Cam
era, Beckman, Motorola, Lit
ton and Texas Instruments at
least 2 apiece and RCA and
Raytheon about a point or
more. In the chemicals, Du
Pont .lost close to 3 and Her
cules Powder and Thiokol a
point or better.
Chrysler tumbled more
than 1 in the autos and steels
weakened. Foods, Finance
shares, rails, drugs, metals,
entertainments, airlines, air
crafts and cosmetics were all
hard hit.
In the oils. Kern County
lost more than 2, while Rich
field and Champlin fell at
least 1 apiece. Helenc Curtis,
Rcvlon. Bristol Myers, Air
Products. Armour, and Singer
Manufacturing were among
the heavier losers. Polaroid
paced the decline with a loss
of about 4.
Red Cross To Seek
Blood in Alaska
Washington . (UPD - The
American Red Cross announc
ed Sunday that for the first
time in its history it will con
duct a drive for blood dona
tions in Alaska.
The organization said that
an Alaskan Air National
Guard plane will fly bloodmo
bile equipment and personnel
Tuesday from Yakima, Wash.,
to Anchorage. The eight-day
drive will begin Friday and
will take place in Anchorage
and two military installations
Elmendorf Air Force Base
and the Army's Fort Richard
son. The Red Cross explained
that the blood center at Yak
ima sent about 1,000 pints of
blood to U.S. Public Health
Service and military hospitals
last year.
"The bloodmobile visit will
be part of a Civil Defense ex
ercise planned to combine
training of volunteers in mass
blood collection techniques
with giving Alaskans the op
portunity to replace the 1.000
pints," a Red Cross statement
said.
grottoes under the basilica.
The pontiff later gave his
Sunday blessing to a crowd of
20,000 gathered in St. Peter's
Square.
Early in the evening, the
pontiff led thousands of Ro
mans in prayer for the success
of the Ecumenical Council at
the Church of Christ the King
in downtown Rome.
Extra guards and fire ex
tinguishers, plus the unobtru
sive police, were the only out
ward signs of anxiety in St.
Peter's. Work continued in
preparations for . the council.
But there was concern in
Vatican circles that the bomb
er might try to strike again.
un baturday. July 14. a
bomb went off at the base of
the monument to Pope Clem
ent X. It slightly damaged
the marble rim over the
monument and the organ
above.
The bombs planted this
week end were discovered be
fore they went off.
Police theorized both bomb
attempts were the work of the
same person.
B 4 K
LUNCHEON
MEAT
12-oi. Tin Regular 49c
3-W
DERBY
VIENNA
SAUSAGE
4-oi. Tin -Regular 25c
51"
o
o
EARLY MORNING
tSWBLISHED 1896
GREEN
STAMPS
Coffee
Limit 6 lbs.
2 - 79e
Assorted Flavors
o
o
Jello
Reg. 3 pkgs. 32c - SAVE 25c
6 ,k- 39c
Thick vitcoie rayen cut pile la mart t.t.d w, t,,ty,4 wit. I.... 0a j ,K.
tuff., plu. rhict foam rubb.r back.n, lor !,,, d hBtf . ,
ping. Brown, Black and Green Twatdi.
Newberrys Downtown
Open Friday
Nights Till 9
Renoir Painting
Found in Street
London - WPP - A missing
$14,000 Renoir painting was
turned In to police Sunday by
two bu drivers who said they
found it in the street and at
first kicked it Into the gut
ter as rubbish.
The painting, a landscape,
was lost Sept. 16 when it ap
parently fell from the trunk
of a car driven by Peter Wil-
son, head of Sotheby's Auction
J, House. He was taking it to his
! country home in Kent.
! The bus drivers, Martin i
Qulnlan and Arthur Baskctt, I
were on their way home In
Quinlan's car on the night
the painting was lost when
they felt the wheels pass over
an object. They stopped tin
car and found the painting j
with its frame smashed. I
"To me it was just a heap
of rubbish, and could easily
Promoter Sues
Partner for Loss
Portland - (UPI) - A Port
land man, James H. Malarkcy,
has filed suit in Multnomah
County Circuit Court to col
lect half of the money lost
In a professional football pro
motion at Spokane, Wash.,
Aug. 19, 1961.
Malarkey is asking $6,670
from Donald Ostensoe, Port
land, a copromotcr. Malarkev
contends the two men had an
oral agreement to share the
profit or loss from promotion
of an American Football
league exhibition game be
tween the Denver Broncos
and the Oakland Raiders.
The promotion lost J13.340.
PEARLS IN DEMAND
New York -H'PB- More than
$55 million worth of cultured
pearl jewelry was sold bv re-
tall jewelers in the United
States during 1961. accordlnir
to the Cultured Pearl associa
tion of America and Japan.
MacLaren Escapee
Sought by Police
Oregon City - IUPD - An es
capee from MacLaren School
for Boys, said by police to be
armed, was the subject of a
search In this area today.
Sought was James Rogers,
16. of Dead wood.
Rogers and a companion,
Dale Lee Williams, 17, of
Springfield, fled from the
school for Juvenile offenders
Saturday.
Williams was caught Sat
urday night after officers "saw
the pair walking near Can
by. The boys fled on foot. Po
lice found Williams hiding un
der a railway boxcar.
Police said Williams was
carrying a gun and, told them
Rogers was armed with a ri
fle. Williams told officers the
two boys had broken into sev
eral houses and showed po
lice a cache of rifles and ex-
tra clothing the boys had hid- !
den.
NALLEY'S IXL
Chicken Raviola
15-oz. Tin or
IXL Beef Raviola
No. 300 Tin
5 "l
00
SACRAMENTO Grade A Fancy
TOMATO
JUICE
10V4-OI. Tins -Limit Please
12 - a00
A
O
O
fSlABllSHtO 1896 f
I GREEN
(STAMPS,
o
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3
Jorgensen's Premium Fiesta - Assorted Flavors
Ice Cream-"' '29ai:69
Reg. 39c Nalley's
Chili
CON CARNE
lS-Oi. Tins...
4 j
$100
Navy Educational
Programs Available
The U.S. Navy encourages
young men and women to
complete their education, ac
cording to Chief Ron Vetkos,
Navy recruiter in Medford.
Navy training now empha
sizes technical and scientific
lines for operation of the wide
variety oi advanced equip
ment, the recruiter said.
Vetkos said the personnel
in his office at the Medford
Post office will discuss Navy
educational programs with In
terested young people.
Fresh Frosted Cot Up Swift's Oriole
FRYERS Sliced Bacon
391 I 591
Fillet of Sole 59
NATURAL GAS
EQUIPMENT COMPANY
On Display the la.otst sltioo of gas healing equip
ment in So. Ore.
COLEMAN Space Floor Unit forced Air
Uotlow Don Flow Horuonial Wall Furnacei
Hot Wnir Htatirs.
Ill West Main Phone 772-2322
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Local Grown Iowa Chief
Sweet Corn
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35
local Vine Ripe Slicing Six
Tomatoes ..
lb.
HO
local Crisp New Crop
Apples Red Delicious er Jonathan
2 "" 25
Stewart & King
Prices Effective Mon., Tues., & Wed., Sept.
24, 25 and 26. limit Rights Reserved.
nth Aai'ttitfhWtiirAtfcffiriffifrriH-fiM'a
have been destroyed," Atln
Ian said.
tBuieWliL
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