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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 7, 1963)
new Constitution Heads for Vote n Seriate By ANN H. PEARSON Salem -WPli- A new consti tution for Oregon, approved in a dramatic House vote Mon day, headed today lor the final fence It must clear to : reach the people: The Oregon Senate. Its champion In the upper . chamber, Sen. Walter Pear son (D-Portland), said nc is "hopeful" of Its passage. But Senate president Ben Musa (D-The Dalles), called It premature and ill-advised and said he will vote against it. Gov. Mark Hatfield said It "could be this session's great est legacy," and added, "1 hope the Senate senses its op portunity." Ona Volt To Spar The document cleared the House with one vote to spare, 41-10, after three hours of debate in a tense atmosphere of expectancy Monday. It needed a two-thirds majority. It needs yes votes from 20 of the 30 senators to go on to the people next May. Signs are its fate in the more conservative Senate will hang by one or two votes. Sen. Thomas Mahoney (D Portland) predicted it will get only 16 votes on the Senate floor. Pearson, chairman of the Stocks Narrowly Scrambled; Oils, Rails, Chemicals Dip New York - (tPL- Slocks were narrowly scrambled to day. International oils, many selling ex-dividend, were down fractionally along with most rails and chemicals. Utilities remained In the dol drums and tobaccos levelled out. Auto shares made fraction al progress except for Ford. General Motors featured with a gain of 34 to an all-lime high of 70 following declaration of a favorable $1 dividend pay ment after Monday's close. Steels continued narrow and cautious in the wake of the first drop in output in more than three months last week. Advertisement Husbands! Wives! GetPep,Vim;FeelYounger Thouundi of coupftj art wtk, tired, tHM-out, faulted bedui body Itcfci irwt. For t new jroonaw fee ling Alt AO, 50,60, tcy (him Tonic Tbltti. Con tain Iron for fltw ptf, vigor; alM luppltmtntiry doit Vitimlrt B. In lingl diy, Oltrex hjpplm u much irons 16 do. rwoyjtn, 4 Ibi. of Hvr, 16 Ibi. of txtf- Get Imv-CMt, 8-day fit now. Or buy EtMorrr tut nd hm $1.47, All 0wHlU. DOW JONES AVERAGES New York - HIPI) - Dow Jones final stock avragesi 30 industrials 713.77, off 4.31; 20 railroads 162.S2, off 1.81; 15 utilities 138.25, off 0.36. and 65 stocks 252.86. off 1.61, Sales Mon day war about 4.09 mil lun shares compared with 4.76 million shares Friday. Monday's prices on selected stock: Alum Co Am An American Air Lines 22 '.'j American Lan American Moton American Tobacco Anaconda Copper Armco Bendlx Corp ..... Bethlehem Steol Brunswick Caplerplllar Corp Chrysler Corp Coca Cola C.B.S Columbia Can Continental can Crown Zellerbach Crucible Steel Curtln Wrlsht Dow Chemical Du Pont Eastman Kodak Firestone Ford General Kle,-Tiu General Foods Genera Motors Georgia Pacillc ft I 34 Greyhound - - 42 'a uuir Oil 44-4 Homestake .. 4.H4 Idaho Power as3 ... in , . 32'. ... 31 '.; 5J-, ... 53',i ... 31 ... 14 ... 3B'.' ...102 ... 1)4 ... 54 ... 28 ... 4414 ... 84 ' i ... 20', ... 2 Hi ... (HI. ..2.12 ...113 ... 3fl'i 48 , nl ... 78 B M Int Paper Johns Manvllie Kennecott Copper - Lockheed Aircraft Martin .. Montana Power - Montgomery Ward ..... National Biscuit .... Northern Pacific .. Pac Gaa Elcc Penney J. C Penn BR Perma Cement ... Phillips . .. Procter & Gamble Radio CorporaUon Richfield Oil Safeway .. Santa Fe Sears . ... Shell Oil Socony Mobil Oil Southern Co Southern Pacific Sperry Rand Stokely Van camp Sun Mines Texas Co Texas Gulf Sulfur Texas Pacific Land Trust Thlokol Trans America Trans World Air Tri-Continentai Union Carbide Union Pacific United Air Lines ... U. S. Plywood U S. Rubber 438 'i 31 Ij . S8s . 201, . 37 S, . 3H' . 481. . 4.1 . 3.1 . 47 . l!'i . 13!, . S3 . 77 . 8.1", , 491, , 371, 21 83 41'., SJ!i SIP, , 33 , 14 18. , 23', , 33 'i ill . 301, , 37 . 46 li Senate Committee on Consti tutional Revision, said he hopes the Senate will "let the people decide." Pearson said he hopes his committee, and the Senate, will accept the house-passed measure as is, to avoid the need to iron out differences later. No 'Arm Twisting' Musa has the power to send the document to another com mittee instead of Pearson's to kill it. But Musa said "all Norwegians Start journey in Kayak Portland (UPU Two young Norwegians launched their kayak in the wind-swept Co lumbia and started an eight month cross-country trip that is scheduled to end eventually in New Orleans. Bjron Braaten, 22, and Kare Andersen, 23, both of usiu, expect to paddle up the Columbia to Pasco, Wash., some 250 miles to the east. From there the kayak will be transported overland to Great Falls, Mont., for the second part of the journey down the Missouri and Mis sissippi rivers. Braaten and Andersen ar rived in the United States March 9. Their specially-built kayak underwent tests on the Wil lamette river here for more than a week before the pair set out. They expect to reach Pasco in about a month. Regional Edition MEDF0RD? Page 2A IT SWTribune MEDFORD, OH XGON. TUESDAY, MAY 7, 1963 ZALE'S III OU COMH1TI Otrt SIUCTIOH HOW I NO MONEY DOWN NO PAYMENTS 'Til JULY jy'.iMWJUHHq' "'' 'ti;ill,lJilJljWI'JW.LIIIIIWt.l "II .. ' I U I ' I TJ ' "PJ I If " '.' ' "" " f I ' I ll ------f--- fgf-'WJfW.W9-Tnt MOTHER'S:! ; Q lUo pieces? - .TJ . for only Jj ; ; j ypg U Weekly ) mp cSZ, -SOK.STA.NUSS , . Xj.gP' onbr.okobi.p.iy-' I n Tl 1 2 PC. CANISTER SET v V it Ionu"r.'wo,m'.'J Weit Bnd Automatic 1 ; iv - jl msomrlng tcoapi. aCl..:.' PtrColotOf H, ' gZmmmm J Aj A w..rf.rM 8m id., for W,. J IVio'Zi I I Mother, or fh nw brtdt. 1 nwwi' rihind Miht, ttrtnt, I h: r . I p'"i y-Jkj: :;rr,ri'prl:;,v.. I tSv V,,,X,: STEEL TABLEWARE I M.ll I 3 - ll M H l'X , IV W' W ' JT V Ssr.Ua I., I I. ' I I ' S iUtUmI f 1 1 1 : Sa iv -v ( s - I JL Ai Mj jte MihK : nv vvvVr l:r JHX illLU . i x .1 1 m w . mm m am h. m i Aii i :rv"M ifnWi Ittlthttibl li-'YVrnTtligitii Mail and Phone Orders things being equal" it would go to the Constitutional Re vision Committee, which has been working on it all session along with the House commit tee. Tl vote against it and let it go at that," Musa said. There will be no arm twist ing." The House was attentive, and audiences filling the gal leries listened intently, during three hours of debate. Rep. John Dellenback (R Medford), chairman of the House Constitutional Revision committee, challenged mem bers to show the "same real vision and courage" to step Foreign Briefs ANOTHER CONQUEST OF EVEREST STARTED Katmandu, Nepal-fUPIUTwo Americans and 12 Nepalesa Sharpa guides today attempted another conquest of Mt. Ererail, the world's highest peak. The team set out from an advance base camp Monday. refreshed by several days of rest following participation in the first successful American summit assault May 1. The names of the two expedition members who conquered Mt. Everest May 1 have not bean disclosed. One was an American and the other a Sherpa. JORDAN SAID HEADED FOR UAR Cairo-WPU-Capi. Akram Zaki, Jordanian military attache in London who sought political asylum here, said Monday other officers in the Jordanian army planned to lead the nation into the new United Arab Republic of Syria, Iraq and Egypt, Zaki, who flew here from London, said, "There are Na tionalist officers in Jordan's army planning to rid Jordan of the black rule and enable it to join the U.A.R." Eastern Black Duck Migrates to Oregon Portland, Ore. - WPD - A black duck, a top hunting fowl of the east, was cauBht and banded In a chow-line at a game reserve near here, the game commission said. Ducks of many breeds are frequently found at the free food spots set up but the Black duck was 2,000 miles off his migration path. Only two other birds of that specie have ever been seen in Oregon. into the future as were shown by the drafters of Oregon's present constitution 10H years ago. Reading from records of 1857, Dellenback said drafters then recognized their consti tution would some day be re placed by "a better one." House Repaired, Patched "Oregon's present, constitu tion is a ho-ise in which Ore gon has lived for 106 years, which has been repaired and Ted Weems, Famed Band Leader, Dies Tulsa. Okla.-OIPD-Bandlead-er Ted Weems, who became famous during the 1930s and 40s with such hits as "Heart aches" and "The Martins and the Coys," died Monday night in a Tulsa hospital of a lung ailment. The 62-year-old orchestra leader, who helped such vocal ists as Perry Como along the road to sta.'dnm, had been hospitalized here for more than seven weeks with em physema, a lung - destroying disease. Weems' wife, who came here to be with her husband after he was stricken March 14 while attempting a come back from a previous attack, was notified at her hotel. Weems and his son, Ted Jr., in -recent years operated a booking agency in Dallas, where he maintained a home. patched 111 times," he said. "Now let us hold on to the constitution and design that are good, but make the changes that the changing times make necessary." The new constitution, less than half the length of the present one, sheds the obso lete, transfers many details to the statutes, modernizes lan guage, clears up ambiguities, and "takes care of inade quacies," Dellenback said. a marvelous variety of gifts to titillate her every whim. the Colonial Hpuse at Trowbridge Electric ' Main at Fir ei!iwpDaiiii!ini(!iw .." 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