Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 20, 1962, Image 2

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    national
eceives Tinge
usiness
Picture
of
Optimism
Personal Income,
Faclory Orders
Thow Increase
Washington fUPH Govern
lent reports showing good
lins in personal income and
actory orders in October put
tinge of optimism in the
isiness picture today.
The reports diminished the
kelihood of an economic re
pssion early in 1963 and en
anced the possibility the
conomy would continue to
xpand. There remained the
nance it would merely level
-.ff.
Labor Secretary W. Willard
.Virtz and President Ken
nedy's Labor-Management
Advisory committee called for
a prompt $10 billion tax cut
in 1963. They said it was
needed both to give the econ
omy a short-run lift and to
put it on the long-run track
to faster growth.
Two members of the 21
man committee favored limit
ing a tax reduction to $4 bil
lion to $5 billion. Several
members of the majority felt
the $10 billion cut should be
spread over two or three
years, presumably to mini
mize a federal budget deficit.
A $10 billion tax slash would
mean "appreciable deficits,"
the committee said.
New Orders Rise
Of three reports from the
Commerce Department, one
citing a 3 per cent spurt in
new orders placed with manu
facturers of durable goods
gave most encouragement to
government economists. The
gain, a strong one for one
month, also was spread among
most major Industries.
It raised the possibility that
industrial production, which
leveled off from July through
October, might resume ex
panding. That probably would
mean overtime work for those
employed and perhaps some
new factory jobs.
Another brightencr in the
business situation was a siz
able S2.1 billion advance in
personal income from Septem
ber to October. Although
partly due to some special,
non-recurring fuctors, it meant
extra purchasing power for
the Christmas shopping sea
son. A third report showed
housing starts rebounding
from a September dip. Al
though welcome news, it was
not considered particularly
significant. The decline and
the recovery were attributed
chiefly to differences in the
number of working days in
September and October.
Strong in Steel
The widespread advance in
factory orders was especially
strong in iron and steel. One
expert expressed the view
that steel users had begun
rebuilding depicted inventor
ies, a development for which
the Industry long had waited.
Autos and elertrical and
non-electrical machinery also
posted unusually good one
month gains. Also up were
furniture and ceramic prod
ucts. A rise in orders for elec
tronics and communications
equipment was attributed to
Defense Department buying.
Aircraft was the only major
industry reporting a dip in
orders. It may have been
merely a letdown from a good
September performance. Fab
ricated metals orders were un
changed. fire
jenerlohle
Recount Petition
Oieqon City - HTi Slite
Sen. Richard Grucncr (D-Mil-waukie)
said he would file a
petition in Salem today for a
recount of Hie Nov. 6 Vote in
which he lost his Senate seat
M He). Thomas Monnghnn (D
Mihvatikio). (iroener said .he did not file
Monday because he had to
finish compiling Ihe list of
contributors to (he $2,200 cash
bond needed for a recount.
Monachal! had 22.104 voles
to Crooner's 22.047 in the of
ficial count certified by Co, in
ly Clerk Robert Schumacher.
OSU Enrollment
rom Varied Areas
Corvallis - ilTl - Oregon
'tale university says its slu
lent population this year rco
escnts all 38 Oregon conn
ics, -1 (i states, and ;i foreign
'omit rics.
OSU said of 10.032 enrolled, j !
...io in- iiuiii I'li-goi), ...HI
Irom other states, and :U5
from other counlries,
NATURAL GAS
EQUIPMENT COMPANY
Co DkpI.'v the largest selection of g.ts tic, d og c.iu j
ment in So. Ore.
COI.CVAN Space Floor Unit Fc.ce.l Air
Ul'ti Down Flow Horitontal Wall Furo.icei
Met Water Hrjter,
1 1 1 West Main
32
Mil.,! ' i'wVAi
1 , i i f ,t
DONATES BLANKET Swami Ram Nihal Singh,
blind "holy man ' from Benares, India, gives his
blanket to Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru at New Delhi
for the defense effort. He requested that the blanket be
Foreign
MONK DEMANDS ISRAELI CITIZENSHIP
Jerusalem, IsraeMUI'll-A Roman Catholic monk has de
manded Israeli citizenship before Israel's high court, claim
ing hit Jewish parentage automatically entitles him lo
citizenship.
Father Daniel, 40, formerly Oswald Rufolsen, sought an
order forcing the interior minister to show cause why he
should not be granted automatic citizenship under Israel's
law of return, "
KENYA PRESSS1NG FOR INDEPENDENCE
Kampala, Uganda-UI'li-Britain faces the possibility of an
"Algeria" because of Kenya's delayed independence. Pre
mier Milton Oboto warned today.
He said his nation's million people will not be "pushed
about," and said he was going to lead an assault on Britain's
tardiness in granting Konya and Tanganyika independence.
TSHOMBE MEETS WITH RHODESIAN LEADERS
Kitwe, Northern Rhodesia-illl'li-Kalanga President Moise
Tshombe mot here today with
political parlies of Northern Rhodesia in the roll of con
ciliator. Tshombe first met with Kenneth Kaunda, head of the
United National Independence party, who reportedly told
him he resented Tshombe's aid lo his rival, Harry Nkumbula,
of the African National Congress.
Electronics Higher
Foiling Report
Of Defense Budget
New York - H'Pli
Stocks
held steady today.
Electronics moved higher
following news that the ad
ministration will send a new
defense budget lo Congress
calling for a $2 lo $3 billion
increase over this year's
spending rate. IBM tucked on
2'- followed by Beckman up
1 1 j .
Diamond Alkali lost rough
ly 1 1 -i in a lower chemical
sector anil f'lirvsler adrle.t
more than a point in a steady
motor iM'out). Steels were nar-1
rowly mixed. Amerada jump- j
cd more than 3 in the oils
while International Nickel
rose almost a point and Mag
ma Copper shed approximate-:
ly I in the metals.
Drugs and utilities weaken- '
cd, aitcratts were mixed and;
sonic cosmetics moved higher
DOW JONES AVERAGES
New York - ll'l' - Dov
Jones linnl stock averages:
30 industrials 626.21, oil
4.77: 20 railroads 131.50.
up 0.47: IS utilities 122.92,
up 0.13. and 65 slocks
216.50, oil 0.71. Sales Moll
day were about 3.41 million
shares compared with 4 mil
lion shares Friday.
Mondii.i "r prleei
Alum Co Anu'l ii a
Ainei u .in Air Lines
Amoiu-.iti Cm
Ameinan Motots
A T X I
Ainei n an
To
An.ieoiid;, Cocpcr
lli ndiv Col p
PrtlilelH in Steel
ll.ieint An
Caterpillar Coip
Chnsl.r Corp
Co, ., Cola
C II S
ri.iiii etlerhaill
uteil-le Stt el
Cuili.s Wiitht
!"',!
Che
,eal
ml
Phone 772-2322
left,
only
nets
leaders of the two Negro
Firestone
rnrd ..
Ci'tiiMiil KW't'tnc
(i-ni-ral Koods
(iciuMiii Mul'irs
Ccnruiii Pacllic
(Irevltnuiul
;uir nil
Homi'iitHkp ixdl
1 11 M
hit Paper I xil I
.lohtv. Manvtllr . .
l.oi-kheed Aircrall ..
Merck
Montana Power
Montgomery Ward
Nal lonal lllseinl
New York Central .
Northern Paeitic .
Pa
pj"" )n
Prntia cement
Phllhm
Procter A ;ainble
tl.ulio Corporation .
HiihOeld Oil
Salewav isdl
Santa Kc
Slirtl Oil
i Southern Co
Southern Paelllc . . ..
Sperrv tt.oiil
; Standard California .
Standiutt Indiana
i Standard N J
: Sun Mine
t esas I o
Tosu. Cull Sulfur
Teat I'm- Land Trust .
lluokol
Trans America
Trans World Air
Trl Continental
I'niou Carlnde
Ciuoii Paeltle
('tilled All lines
1' S Phwood
C S Itul'l.cr
I' S Slrel
We. I Hank Corp
Wevtintliouse
YouiiKstnwn
Four Persons Hurt
In Cily Accident
Knur Mrdford ivMili'ntj;
wnc iniutv.t, two of llirm hos
follmvtnn a two r.tr
'collision nlmut AiHi p.m. vs
trril.iy ut Central uvc. and
;.l;u kson st., aivonlinR to city
police
Taken to KoRiie Valley hos
pital (or treatment were Net
; tic Jane Walker, 22. of 2MCi
l ucky lane, and Leslie Lynn
Hair. N months. Both were re
ported in no,,d condition to
day. Also injured, hut not hos
pitalized, were Mrs. Judith
Ann Hat r. 22, of 301 Kastwood
dr. the diner, nnd her two-ye:u-old
son. Hrent Alan Barr.
Driver of the other c;ir in
Ml cd as Chiirlcs Joseph
Mooie, 4U. if 1441 Jasper !.
Mrs. Harr was cited for ilis
oIm viiik a traffic m;" K police
said.
' . w: z t. '
Nil "w.'' '
sent to Indian soldiers at the
Bomdila, key airbase town
Agency, has been captured
(UPI)
Regional Edition
MEDFORD, OREGON. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1962
'Instant' Rockets
En Montana Silos
Soon To Be Heady
Cape Canaveral, Fla. IUPH
Nuclcar - tipped Minuteman
"instant ICBM" rockets are on
station in the northern United
States and will he officially
declared wai'-reaiiy within a
few weeks, it was learned to
day. The new rockets, each capa
ble of pounding an enemy tar
get with destructive power
equivalent to about one mil
lion tons of TNT, are con
cealed in underground launch
ing silos in Montana, informed
sources said.
The Minuteman, America's
third family of intercontinent
al ballistic missiles, is expected
lo become formally opera
tional'' when one of the rock
ets makes a successful flight
from Vandenberg Air Force
Base. Calif.
The date of this milestone
shot has not been revealed.
But one spokesman said "it
could come before the end of
the" year."
The way for thai launching
was made by the successful
3.500-niile flight of a Minute
man on a "research and de
velopment" mission from
Cape Canaveral Monday.
Missie experts hoped the
success indicated problems
which had plagued the rocket
Logging Truck,
Train Collide
A loinn truck and freight
train collision ycsteilay re
sulted in no injuries, but
heavy damage to a Southern
Pacific locomotive and I h c
logtiiim truck Irailer. .state po
lice said.
James binder Krank, 20,
of route 4. box ;iT4. Mcdford,
was driving westbound on
kilenwood dr. and started to
cross the railroad tracks when
the saw the train coining. He
! speeded up. but the enume hit
the loaded trailer. The truck
a nd t ra i ler a re ow ned by
Steve Wd.-on Lumber compa
ny. White City.
j Minor damage occurred!
when a car It ft the road on
Corey rd and struck a camp ,
trailer parked m the driveway
at 277.1 Corey rd . state police 1
said. The driver, Clinton Ash- i
ivurd Kissinger. HI. of route j
i 2. box H7. Medlord. said ho I
: was momentarily distracted
by a rio(! on the seat besides
him.
! Cilenn Augustus Casey, 74.
fan employee at the White City ;
, Veterans Administration Pom- !
ieiliary. suffered minor abra
1 sions and bruises when the
outside rear-view mirror of a
passing ear struck his shoul
der as he was walking alont
Crater Lake highway.
The era. driven by Charles
Clifford McCastm. 52, Central
Tomt. as passing a lone mi;
truck when the aceidnt oc
curred Caey was treated at
the White Ci!v infirmary.
1
front. Nehru announced that
in the North East Frontier
by the Chinese Communists.
Page 2A
Tribune
had been cleared up.
Sources close to the pro
gram said there are "some
thing less than a dozen" nuclear-tipped
Minuteman rock
ets stored in the concrete-lined
silos in Montana.
These will be added lo a
U. S. long-range striking force
of at least 280 missiles, includ
ing 152 Atlas and Titan inter
continental ballistic rockets
and 128 Polaris ballistic rock
ets and 128 Polaris submarine
launched missiles. In addition,
America has 60 of the 1.700
mile Thor rockets in England,
30 Jupitcrs with a similar
range in Italy, and a like
number of Jupitcrs in Turkey.
Eventually, at least 800
Minuteman rockets-all stored
in well-protected underground
launching pits-will be on sta
tion witii nuclear warheads
throughout the United States.
The advent of the Minute
man as a war weapon adds a
new power to the U. S. global
striking force. Theoretically,
sources said, the rockets could
be launched on 52 seconds no
tice. It takes at least 15 min
utes warning lo fire the larg
er Atlas and Titan ICBMs.
"I WAS
BITTEN
BY A
KING COBRA
i
-AND LIVED!'
hy It illuim lliiast
M.tin pcoons h.ic been i.ikcd
b the I'dtii;. ol tins liitecMiakc,
btil only one of theni h.i Mir
xnoJ lo loll about it Wtlli.un
1.1 l.i.ivt. Duccior ol'ilic Mi.ihii
Sci pent. it mill, tolls Ins excitini;
slots rl i.iw ooiii.io.e .iiul the
r.ini.isiio oh.itK'o lie took
ao.uiisi the lat.il hie of ihe
ik'.iJ! oobi.t
Don't Miss I Ins
lruc-l ifc Athcimirc in the
Nt) KMItK.K 25th
Issue of
with our ei' ff tht
Medford Mail Tribune
111111
Ike Didn't Want Nixon on GOP Ticket
For Second Term,
New York -0IPII- Former
President Dwight D. Eisen
hower is quoted as telling an
aide at the 1956 GOP Nation
al Convention that he did not
consider his vice president,
Richard M. Nixon, as "presi
dential timber."
Emmet John Hughes, who
was Eisenhower's speech wri
ter at the time, reported in
the current issue of Look
magazine that Eisenhower
earlier in the year urged Nix
Official Canvass
Of Nov. 6 Votes
In County Noted
The following are the re
sults of the Nov. 6 general
election official vote canvass
in Jackson county.
U.S. Senator: Wayne Morse
13,833, Sig Unander 13,200.
Congressman, fourth dis
trict: Robert B. Duncan 14,
751, Carl Fisher 12,232.
Governor: Mark Hatfield
15,579, Robert Y. Thornton
10,775, and Robert H. Warn
pier 671.
Labor Commissioner: Al
fred (Pat) Blair 11,083, Nor
man O. Nilsen 14,393.
State Senator: L. W. (Lynn)
Newbry 17,549. Henry F.
Padghain Jr. 9,050.
State Representative: Alva
N. (Al) Bradford 11,870, Ed
ward Branchfield 14,328,
Charles W. Crary 8,968, John
R. Dellenback 16,778, Alex
ander A. Dumas 12,010, and
James A. Redden 12,231.
County Assessor: Thad V.
Hatten 15,529, Herb Hunter
10,049.
County Clerk: Bereth P.
Hopkins 9,788, E. M. Madden
16,627.
County Commissioner: Don
ald E. Faber 14,203, Larry
Sheehan 11,870.
County Judge: Ralph A.
James 11,377, Earl M. Miller
14,794.
County Sheriff: DeArmond
Leigh 14,436, Berle E. Ste
phens 11.903.
State Supreme Court, Po
py the a t rmm
pmZw "UTTEQ Wl! I i" If
"Sro-I id. 1 w. y
o jH "o
""Ni'" ",VE"lp jj C'iii!i
Piggyback Trailer Freight delivers your goods
slore-to-slore and door-to-door. Shipments
arrivt just as you packed them . . , ready (or
immediate delivery. Union Pacific's network
of rails and trailer freight service provide un
usually efficient, economical transportation.
On Union Pacific, automatic traffic controls,
and an electronic car reporting system, in
eluding Microwave, let you know where your
shipment is and when it will arrive all in i
matter ol minutes.
on to leave the national ticket
for a cabinet post so he "could
get some executive and ad
ministrative experience."
Hughes quoted the former
president as declaring during
the convention at San Fran
cisco: "The fact is. of course,
that I've watched Dick a long
time, and he just hasn't
grown. So I just haven't
honestly been able to believe
that he is presidential
timber."
sition One: William M. Mc
Allister, 20.248.
State Supreme Court, Posi
tion Six: Arno H. Denecke
18,310.
Oregon Tax Court: Peter
Gunnar 19,026.
District Court: L. L. Sawyer
19,184.
MEASURES
Reorganize state militia:
yes, 9,410; no 13,765.
Forest rehabilitation debt
limit amendment: yes, 14,934;
no, 7,004.
Permanent road debt limit
amendment: yes, 14,821; no,
6,949.
Power development debt
limit amendment: yes, 13,984;
no, 7,387.
State courts, creation and
jurisdiction: yes, 13,201; no,
7,680.
Daylight saving time: yes,
14,917; no, 11,360.
Constitutional six per cent
limitation amendment: yes,
12,942; no, 7,831.
Legislative apportionment:
yes, 11.532; no, 9,608.
Repeals school district re
organization law: yes, 7,881;
no, 14,837.
Zoning and Land use ordi
nance for southwest Phoenix
area: yes, 78; no, 200.
Fluoridation of water sup
ply, Ashland: yes, 761; no,
2,208.
Fluoridation of water sup
ply, Medford: yes, 3,115; no,
6.247.
U. P. Trailer Freight Service delivers
UNION
PACIFIC
Article Declares
The Eisenhower -Nixon
team was renominated Aug.
22. 1956.
Hughes, in an article en
titled "The Eisenhower I
Knew," said Eisenhower
"candidly acknowledged the
concern that lay beneath all
his signs of reticence" about
including Nixon on the GOP
ticket.
According to Hughes. Eisen
hower wanted former Minne
sota Gov. Harold Stassen as
his running mate. Stfrsen at
the time was making a pub
lic attempt to drive Nixon off
the ticket.
"I told Harold he should
feel entirely free, so long as
he did not purport to speak in
my name, and I meant it,"
Hughes quoted Eisenhower.
Eisenhower had suffered a
heart attack in 1955 and was
stricken in 1956 with an at
tack of ileitis. Hughes quoted
the former president as say
ing after Nixon had decided
to run again for the vice pres
idency: "The thing Dick may have
Edmund
Vice-President
PACIFIC
NORTHWEST CO.
Investment Securities
Since 1921
302-3 FLUHRER BLDG.
Central and Main
Phone 773-7319
Telephone 773-7319 to consult with Mr. Has.s on invest
ment and retirement programs using the securities of
utilities, banks, insurance, industrial, and Mutual Fund
shares.
Other offices in Portland, Salem, Eugene, Seattle, Spokane,
Tacoma, Aberdeen, Bellingham, Yakima, Wenatchee,
Walla Walla and Boise.
.Rcific Northwest Company
Tntiestment Securities
Members: Midwest Slock Exchange
Correspondents of . . .
KIDDER, PEABODY and COMPANY
Members: New York Stock Exchange
Augmenting U.P.'t Trailer Freight Serv
ice it a large flet tot Pacific Fruit Eioresi
Temoco-Van refrigerated trailers . . .
vtilti hundreds o new units in service, and
mora on order. P.F.E. is ;0!nt'v owned by
Un.nn Paec-Soutnem Paoc.
Wherever you are, there's t Union Pacific
help you solve any shipping problem. For
mation call: 773-5388.
figured was that 1960 didn't
matter too much, and in tho
event of my disablement, he'd
take over and at least have the
presidency for that long."
Hughes last week an
nounced his resignation as
speech writer for New York;
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller
and as public relations advi.
ser to the Rockefeller family.
The Look article represents
excerpts from a book by
Hughes, "Eisenhower: A Poli
tical Memoir," which will ba
published in February.
ship it mm
to or from Oakland, San Fran
cisco, Los Angeles and other
California points.
Call
Jack
Fitzgerald
ZZFSj 773-77 '61
E. Hass
the goods..,
traffic office nearby to
freight or travel infor
gill
'II
eL.