Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 31, 1963, Image 2

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    Oregon Legislature
For Adjournment Tonight
Salem -HOT- The 1963 legis
lature plodded doggedly to
ward aimed-tor adjournment
tonight. Today was the 138th
day of the record-length ses
sion, A resolution calling for ad
journment line die at 8 p.m.
appeared in the Senate Thurs
day, but it could be amended.
The general mood was one
of weariness, discouragement
and disgust. None of the law
makers were happy about the
need to raise taxes, a need
they have had to think hard
about in the final days.
Most legislators wanted to
go home, but the usual spurt
at the finish was lacking.
TB Patients Discussed
For example, the big higher
education budget of $77,3 mil
lion was stalled in its final
stages Thursday when the
House split over what to do
about the state's some 160
tuberculosis patients.
' The House . voted 33-27
against emptying the Univer
sity TB hospital at Portland
and consolidating the patients
in the State hospital at Salem,
Roth bills were sent for re
view to the Health and Wel
far committee, which had nev
er seen them before.
A sign that time remained
also appeared In the suddenly
renewed efforui to get a
Outside While
House Paint
4 Brands 1.9B gal. up
Redwood Stains, 1.98 gal. up
Skyline Enamel 1.49 est.
4 Hour Enamel 44c Vt pt-
PORCH & DECK
ENAMEL gal.
ACRYLIC LATEX
HOUSE PAINT gal.
4 QT. PLASTIC PAIL
WITH HANDLE
Thompson WATER SEAL,
Reg. 5.32, Now gal.
4.89
4.99
29c
4.44
wisr- Crosby
VI SHAKE, SHINGLE
(I SIDING PAINT
DEFT WOOD FINISH
Reg. 7.80, Now t.12 gal.
4" PAINT BRUSH No. 201
Rog. 4.93, Now 1.44
Paint firu.hti ...18c up
7" ROLLER COVER
Sot of 2 52.
All Prices inactive Until June 10th
Malor Brand.
Paint Outlet
BRUCE
BAUER
LUMBER
COMPANY
745 So. Riverside
Madlotd
t?MANNING-MITCHEU
M OUTSIDE WHITS t
ft Single C55
Gallon ...J A
I 2 Gallon TJf
I skyline am
Single Gallon 4.44 M
VJ t Oollon for OJN-j
Oil Hv hl 1
Compart at 6.00
fJ0 Gallon
tiSJ'tt Sinfl, ti44
IdPrtffl'l Gollon
'three-way" workmen's com-
pensation bill through.
The Ways and Means Com
mittee just got the bill this
week, and two subcommittees
spent hours on it Wednesday
and Thursday and scheduled
more.
The Oregon AFL-CIO and
management finally have
lolned forces in seeking its
passage. Other labor groups
oppose it. It would completely
overhaul the program of in
surance for the injured work
er. Key Bills Pais
Several more key bills
finally cleared and went to
the governor. They included
one measure setting corpora
lion excise taxes on banks at
8 per cent, one broadening the
state program of medical as
sistance for the elderly, and
one requiring central report
ing of sex offenses.
The House yielded to pres
sures to restore $1.3 million
to a bill providing money to
improve salaries of college
teachers and state employees.
The restoration by the House
Education Committee gave the
bill a total of $6.4 million for
improvements over and above
regular built-in increases - $2
million of it for college facul
ty. The House passed the bill
43-19 and sent it to the Sen
ate. It was a bad beating for
the Ways and Means Commit
tee, which had trimmed the
budget earlier. Rep. Edward
Branchfield (R-Medford)
warned it vould encourage
other state agencies to use
similar pressures in the fu
ture. Commerce Department OK'd
A reorganization bill sud
denly took on strength that
could get 11 through if the
session dragged out. The
House passed a bill creating
Department of Commerce
and sent it to the Senate.
It would contain five di
visions: Banking, corporation,
insurance, real estate and
planning and development.
The big $243 million high
way budget went to the gov
ernor. The governor also got
a bill designed to recover lost
money by requiring state su
pervision of charitable trusts.
The House decided the "Pa
cific Wonderland" slogan
should be dropped from li
cense plates. Tile idea is to
Ability to
Prejudices
Audience
Ashland - "The ability to
give up one's prejudices and
hatreds and fearful suspic
ions will be vital in the awe
some pushbutton and comput
erized days that lie ahead. It
is never easy, moreover, to
open one's mind to new know
ledge and to new ways of
achieving results in world af
fairs. '
This is the Memorial Day
message brought to residents
of Ashland Thursday by Dr.
Vaughn Davis Hornet, chair
man of the division of social
sciences, Southern Oregon
college.
Speaking at observances,
staged near the Oregon gran
Ite memorial which honors
the city's war dead, Dr. Bor
net added: "Courage less than
indicated here will be a slur
on the memory of those who
showed raw physical courage
in earlier years of wartime
drama. Our motto might be,
'They also serve who only
stand and keep their heads.'
"For it Is a fact that time
and technological change
have destroyed all possibility
of winning our way in the
world with campaigns and
battles to be fought In the
manner of past wars. The pos
sibility and reality of limit
ed engagements in remote
Jungles docs not change the
central picture except to
throw it Into clearer focus.
Cannot Retreat
"We cannot retreat from
courage. We are the best
hope, the only real hope, the
world has for reaching the
distant goals of which man
has dreamed through the cen
turies." he said.
Earlier In his address, Dr.
Bornet, who served more
than four years in World War
II, issued a warning to his
listeners not to become frus
trated and angered as a re
sult of Inability to seek or
achieve vlclorv as on the bat
tlefields of World Wars I and
II.
"We may continue to turn
toward Invective, accusations,
and too great a simplicity in
analysis of problems and pres
entation of solutions. Unable
In a thermonuclear age to de
stroy the enemy we may tear
our society apart, instead,"
he rautloned.
"Those who fought to pre
serve the Republic, to make
the world sate for democracy,
and to further the Four Free
doms, would not thank us for
thoughtlessly tearing apart
their nation and ours with
violent invective, charges and
countercharges, falsification
.
Aiming
make the numsrals larger. It
rejected the Senate version
which called for reflcctorized
plates. The bill went back to
the Senate,
The Senate passed a meas
ure providing for sanitary In
spection! of vending ma
chines, Sen. Edward Fadelcy iD
Eugcnc) sounded a familiar
plaintive note, revised In tune
with the length of the session
to date. He complained his
lobbyists' registration bill has
been lying in the Senate State
and Federal Affairs Commit
tee for 126 days without cay
action.
Lumber Producers
Continue To Talk
Union Pay Scales
Portland UPI Another
round in the negotiations be
tween lumber producers and
two large unions was being
held today.
Representatives of the In
ternational Wood workers
Union met with six big North
west companies Wcyerhaeu-
s e r, International Paper,
Crown Zellcrbach, Rayonier,
U.S. Plywood and St. Regis
Paper.
The same six firms have
a session with Lumber and
Sawmills Workers Union ne
gotiators scheduled Monday,
Contracts of both unions
expire Saturday, but both
sides have agreed on an ex
tension until Monday. The
1WA is seeking a wage in
crease of 40 cents an hour,
while the LSW is asking 60
cents.
Three-Year Period
The wage hikes are sought
over a three-year period.
A spokesman for the IWA
said the union figured the
average base pay for the lum
ber industry, including
woods, sawmills and plywood
employees, as $2.92 an hour.
He said this was the figure
upn which it based calcula
tions regarding the value of
any percentage otter, un
skilled IWA employees re
rcice an average basic pay of
$2.10'i an hour with other
job classifications running
higher, a spokesman said.
Give Up
Is Vital,
Is Told
of the record to serve imme
diate ends, and advocacy of
action whose consequences
lie largely beyond our con
trol," the speaker declared.
"We may miss opportuni
ties for great achievement in
world affairs because we fail
to recognize the opportunity
or because we arc unwilling
to use methods little known
to those who lived in a sim
pler d a y," Dr. Bornet ven
tured. "There arc among us only
a few whose knowledge of
modern weapons or whose
awareness of changing pat
terns in political geography
and International negotiation,
qualify them to lead our peo
ple into this new age. But
there are many among our
people who stand ready to
remind us all that our history
is something special in the
world," the speaker, who is
author, professor, commander
in the Naval Reserve and for
mer staff member of Rand
Corporation, non profit re
search organization, summar
ized his appraisal of present
day America.
"It Is a problem for the
1060s to find a way to chan
nel the decent and praise
worthy emotion of patriotism
into channels that will help,
and not hurt, the United
Stales as it lives on In a New
World," the Memoria. Day
speaker said.
Parts of Texas
Battered, Flooded
By Unllod Pros. International
Heavy thunderstorms, high
winds and tornadoes left parts
of Texas torn and under wat
er today.
Rainston,,5 drubbed the
wheat belt and tog shrouded
highways across Pennsylva
nia and western New York.
More than one inch of rain
soaked the Oklahoma Pan
handle and central South Da
kota in six hours during the
night.
An estimated 10 Inches of
rain fell near Wellman, Tex.,
Thursday night. U.S. 62 was
under four tret of water be
tween Wellman and Sea
graves. Police helped some rcsi
dents of Brownfield, Tex.,
from their homes when the
deluge backed up drains and
flooded streets.
The Weather Bureau re
ported 7 inches of rainfall
south ol Abilene, Tex., and
amounts ranging from 4'i to
S inches in Abilene itself.
Regional Edition
MEDFORDf
MEDFORD, OREGON,
Foreign
POLARIS SUBMARINES TO
Taipei - IIIPII - The United
submarines operating in tho
Commander in chief of U.S.
INSULTS BRING 30-DAY JAIL TERM
Sollngon, Germay - IIIPII - A civil court sentenced Lo
rens Knorr, an official of the leftist German Peace Union,
to a 30-day jail sentence or $75 fin Thursday lor insult,
ing several West German generals.
JAPAN'S PROTESTANT CHURCHES GAIN
Tokyo - Wll - Japan's Protestant Christian churches
registered a three par cent gain in membership during 1962
for a total of 407,232, the Japan National Christian Council
raporlod today.
ENGLISH TOWN STOPS HIRING COLORED PEOPLE
Walsall, England - IIIPI) - The transport committee of
this textile town announced today it plans lo stop employ
ing colored persons on bus crews, but denied it is applying
a color bar,
"One of tho difficulties with colored people is that
you never know when they are going back lo their own
country again," Town Councilor L. B, Parkes said.
Failure of Bracero
Program Prompts
California Solons
Sacramento lUPH Legisla
tor! today were busy revising
a number of farm labor bills
that didn't have a chance of
passage before congress de
cided not to renew the Mexi
can bracero program.
With the time running out
In the 1963 session, one group
of lawmakers was working on
passage of bills to give Cali
fornia farm workers increased
benefits, while another hur
ried to revive resolutions ask
ing congress to change its
mind.
Lower Elevation
Roads, Camps
Open in Forest
Klamath Falls - The warm
weather has opened up many
roads and recreation areas on
the Winema National forest.
On the Klamath district,
Ranger Asa D. Twombly re
ports that Forest service roads
are In good condition and have
been graded. The only ques
tionable roads are at the high
er elevations.
Fourmilc Lake rd. is open
to the lake, as is the Fish Lake
rd. between Lake of the
Woods and Fish lake. Forest
travelers are cautioned that
both roads arc rough, but
passable. 'i'he camping area at
Fourmile Lake is limited due
to fallen trees.
Most trails in the high coun
try are closed by snow and
some of the lakes are still
frozen.
In the Lake of the Woods
area Aspen Point campground
Is closed to the public due to
construction activity. The boat
launching ramp is open.
Rainbow campground is
open for public use, and the
resort is open. Fishing is im
proving at the lake, it was re
ported, with catches of rain
bow and kokancc.
On the Chiloquin district,
Ranger Homer G. Faulkner
reports all roads are passable
with a few exceptions in the
Swan lake area.
Williamson campground is
open to the public and in good
condition for camping.
Fishing in the Sycan river
is reported slow. Sprague riv
er above Chiloquin is reported
as improving and some good
catches of rainbow have been
reported on the Upper Wil
liamson near Deep creek.
Roads Drying Out
Most roads are drying out
on the Chemult district also
and are in the process of being
maintained. Among roads still
under snow, is the upper part
ol the road to Miller lake.
The trail to Maidu lake Is
under snow, but some fisher
men hiked to the lake the past
week end and made some
catches. Miller Lake camp
ground is covered with snow,
but it is melting rapidly.
Fire danger has continued
to increase on the forest with
the warm dry weather of the
past week, and travelers
should use rare with fire.
Subscribers
To rrport Improper or non
delivery of the Mil Tribunt In
Mrdfortt, phone 772-flHl; Ah
land call 41ft Bridge st , or
phone 4 8 2 300 J; YrekY phone
victory 2-alftiift before 6 4A p m.
daily and 10 Jo mm. Sunday.
If regular delivery errtvee
shortly alter ou call please
notify office, thus eliminating
special meuenier service.
TREE PRUNER
For RENT at
A to Z Rental
1 213 N. Kiterside m-1474
Page 2A
Tribune
FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1963
Briefs
OPERATE IN PACIFIC
States will soon hsvo Po'-arii
Pacific, Adm. Harry D. Felt,
forces in the Pacific, said today.
Gov. Edmund G. Brown
said Thursday he would sup
port efforts to get a new bill
extending the program, which
expires Dec. 31.
Must Proceed
But he said the stale must
proceed "as though the issue
is settled once and for all and
it is futile to hope for a re
versal in congress."
One farmer-legislator didn't
agree. Assemblyman Victor V.
Veysey (R-Brawlcy) said 100
members of the House of Rep
resentatives didn't vote on the
bill Wednesday but the meas
ure to extend the program
lost by only 24 votes.
"I feel that somehow this
will be reconsidered," Veysey
said.
He said he would try to
speed up a new congressional
attempt by pushing resolu
tions which have been sitting
in the assembly and the sen
ate pending congressional ac
tion. The measures ask con
gress to renew the program.
To Invigorate Efforts
Assemblyman A 1 f r e d H.
Song (D-Montcrey Park), who
a few days ago was resigned
to sending his farm labor
placement bill to interim com
mittee, said the congressional
action "is going to invigorate
my efforts."
The bill is patterned closely
after Public Law 78, under
which Mexican Nationals
were brought into the United
States for farm work. It
would provide American farm
labor with housing, transpor
tation and guaranteed work
periods similar to what is pro
vided for braccros.
Electronics Pace
Higher Stock Market
New York - WPIt - Electron
ics paced a higher stock mar
ket today.
Gains of more than 2 in
IBM, Texas Instruments, and
Beckman featured the section.
Youngstown paced a firm
steel group with a gain of
l'.-4 while Chrysler moved up
nearly a point in a steady mo
tors section.
Chemicals were a mixed af
fair with Du Pont and Ameri
can Agricultural Chemical
the only outstanding issues
rising l'i apiece. Internation
al oils were mixed and sugars
firm.
Among the individual issues
to show early strength were
Polaroid, Kern County Land,
International Harvester, Perk
in Elmer, and Tennessee Corp.
FAMILY of S f w
1 J Pieces Chicken 1 f Ybj I ' VV
I 1 Pt. Coleslaw If I VS LsT 1
I Gajlle Bread I I 1
Soviet Delegates Asked To Talk Sense
Demands on U.S.
For Disarmament
Called Illogical
Geneva - WPD - The United
Stales appealed to Communist
disarmament negotiators to
day to talk sense instead of
demanding one-sided conces
sions from the West.
U. S. negotiator Charles C.
Stelle told the 17-nation dis
armament conference Soviet
demands that the United
States remove nuclear arms
from foreign bases and de
nuclearize the Mediterranean
Sea are unfair and illogical.
He said the Russians "seek
in unilateral fashion to harass
and obstruct Western defen
sive moves taken to keep
NATO modern and up to date
in the face of the mammoth
Soviet military effort."
"We can just imagine the
reaction of the Soviet Union
if we were to propose ... a
nuclear free zone comprising
the full territory of all states
bordering on the Caspian
Sea," Stelle said.
West Sensible
"Each side can think up
such unbalanced schemes, but
we in the West are sensible
and responsible enough not to
burden our conference and
the world public with such
nonsense.
"Let us get on with realistic
measures that have some
chance of general accept-
How lo see more
in San Francisco
Step aboard a Gray Line sight-seeing
bus. Start with the Deluxe City Tour.
For just $3.80 it takes you to historic
Mission Dolores, world-famous Clilf
House above the Pacific, the Golden
Gate Bridge, the spectacular view
from Twin Peaks, the Presidio, the
Palace of Fine Arts, Golden Gate Park,
exclusive residential areas, and
much, much more! Then choose from
a host of other colorful Bay Area
tours. Tickets and reservations at
your travel agency, hotel, motel or
Gray Line Depot: 44 Fourth Street.
Mail the coupon below 4pfr
for free color folder. mailHp
the Gray Line,44 -4th St., Sin Francisco 7.
Pleas, sand me fr.a c.lor folder cn
San Francisco tours.
Mr. A.B.C. " He
PC acEon
SAN FRANCISCO
Four weeks of things to do and sights to see in
San Francisco, the eventful city.
TUB ATDC "stP ,he World I Want to Get Off," a
I II C n I n C "new-style musical" starring Joel Grey
and Julie Newmar, opens June 5 at the Geary. Three
Civic Light Opera productions can be seen in June.
"Carousal" with John Raitt and Jan Clayton at the
Curran through the 8th. Opening June 10 at the Curran
is "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying"
with Dick Kailman and Willard Waterman. "Camelot"
with Kathryn Grayson, Louis Hayward and Arthur
Treacher opens June 1 7 at the Opera House. The Actor's
Workshop presents G. B. Shaw's "Major Barbara" at the
Marines' Memorial through June 8; and "Twelfth Night"
beginning June 12. "Cleopatra" opens June 26 at the
Alexandria Theatre. Pacific Ballet can be seen at the
Veteran's Auditorium June 21 & 22. Ballet Celeste con
cludes its ;iason with performances June 1 & 9 at the
Harding Theatre. The summer company of the S. F.
Ballet presents "Ballet '6J" Friday and Saturday nighti
beginning June 7 at the S. F. Ballet School Theatre. The
Lamplighters production of "The Mikado" can be seen
Friday and Saturday nights at the Harding Theatre.
anT "Treasures of Versailles" is the outstanding exhibition at the California Palace
nil I of the Legion of Honor. This magnificent collection of paintings, sculpture,
tapestries, furniture and objects of art covers 300 years of French history. The San
Francisco Museum of Art is holding an Emit Nolde Exhibition through June 23. Other
shows include "Interaction of Colon A Presentation of Paintings and the Color Theory of
Josef Atbers" opening June 7 and the "New Accessions, 1962-1963" opening June 14.
De Young Museum presents "100 Books of the Grabhorn Press" through June 9.
CDfiDTC San Francisco
OrUrllO Giants vs.
Chicago Cubs June 12 413;
vs Houston Colts June 14,
15 & 16; vs Los Angeles
Dodgers June 17, 18 & 19;
vs Cincinnati Reds June 28,
29 & 30. All games at Can
dlestick Park, Soccer S. F.
United Team plays Mexico
Select Team June 2, and
Wolverhampton Wanderers,
a touring team from Eng
land, June 9. Both matches
at Balboa Stadium, San Jose
and Ocean Avenues. Polo
games can be seen at
Golden Gate Park Stadium,
Sundays at 1 p. m. except
June 23. Wrestling matches
will be held June 8 & 29 at
the Cow Palace. Roller
Derby-June 22 Cow Palace.
. Arrangements
can
h
, i
( i
M
n
Meet
lonj an o tmn aotm sn lqidiiiqj ana. I
SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS iVsV'i'JSn".'
June 19 at Winterland.Concours d'Elegance 150 sport,
vintage, antique and classic cars will be on display June
23, 10 a.m. -4 p.m., at the Golden Gate Park Stadium.
The Polack Brothers Circus will be at Kezar Pavilion, G.
G. Park, June 14, 15 & 16. Tenth Annual Upper Grant
Avenue Street Fair will be held June 15 & 16 along
Grant Avenue from Vatlejo to Union Street. Golden Gate
Kennel Club Summer Show will be held June 30 at
Brooks Hall, Civic Center. "Under the Southern Cross"
is the new program at the Planetarium, G. G. Park,
opening June 4. Venetian Room, Fairmont Hotel, fea
tures Jack Carter through June 5, Allan Sherman June
6 to 26, and Music made famous by Glenn Miller with
Tex Beneke, Ray Eberle, the Modernaires and the Glenn
Miller Band opening June 27. Dick Gregory appears at
the hungry I through June 15. New Fack's features
Buddy Greco through June 13. with Count Basie open
ing June 14. The Mary Kaye Trio can be heard at the
Off Broadway June 716. George Shearing andCalTjader
are this month's featured entertainers at the Black Hawk,
for group activities made without charge. Write:
Hinin.Mfi UKrrnn. nmvM m&
1375 Market Street, San Francisco 3,
Works for our
He is one of the experienced circulation auditors on the staff
of the Audit Bureau of Circulations." Just as a bank examiner
makes a periodic check of the records of your bank so does
Mr. A.B.C. visit our office at regular intervals to make an
exacting inspection and audit of our circulation records. The
circulation facts thus obtained are condensed in casy-to-read
audit reports which tell our advertisers: How much circu
lation we have; where it goes; how it was obtained; and many
other FACTS that tell advertisers what they get for their
money when they advertise in this newspaper.
Advertisers
of our Idlest
MedfordJw?Tribune
MUSIC SS,rnngFr0anV.'.c0o
concludes its season with a
double program on June 4,
and "Madame Butterfly" at
8 p.m. June 8, Opera House.
S, F. Opera Debut Auditions
will be held June 23 at the
Opera House. The 25th Mid
summer Music Festival
takes place 2 p.m. Sundays
at Sigmund Stern Grove.
"Carnival in San Francisco"
featuring S. F. school chil
dren can be seen June 9,
the San Francisco Sym
phony with Jan Peerce June
23, and the California Youth
Symphony June 30. Band
concerts 2 p.m. every
Sunday, Music Concourse
Golden Gate Park.
California
f. 41,.
Advertisers
ore inviled lo oslt for o copy
A.B.C. report.
The Audit Bureau of Grcufct
tioni, of which this newspaper
is a member, is a cooperative,
nonprofit association of nearly
4,000 advertisers, advertising
agencies and publishers. Or
Soniied in 1914, A.I.C
brought order out of advertising
chaos by establishing: A def
inition for paid circulation; rules
and standards for auditing and
reporting the circulations of
newspapers and periodicals.
r l