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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 17, 1963)
hi Ba n rsKB n Jl. rvn airam m til v v u ap- n aw sanas it sto u aar ee. h u a d ira tw m 1 ik7 sir. n mi m m u sr n iru it l h .. m m tr m iui ik. ' Electronics Continue To Lead Narrow Stock Market New York -OJPII- Electron ics continued to outperform a narrowly mixed stock mar ket today. Texas Instruments, RCA, Motorola, Electronic Associ ates, IBM, and Control Data rose a point or more in the electronic section. Inland and Youngstown Sheet each tack ed on a large fraction but Continental lost about a point m the steels. White Motor and Chrysler rose roughly 1 in a higher auto sector. Eastman Kodak featured the chemicals, up about 1. Singer Co. toppled around 2 after announcing it will acquire Friden for $175 million of stock. Friden did not open during the first hour because of an accumulation of buy orders. Polaroid, which will soon introduce a new camera, rose more than 2. Xerox rose about 3. DOW JONES AVERAGES New York-dl'lt-Dow Jones final slock averages 30 in dustrials 702.12, off 1.16; 20 railroads 172.66, off 0.33; 15 utilities 138.14, off 0.53, and 65 slocks 253.46, off 0.54. Sales Tuesday were about 3 million shares compared with 3.29 million shares Monday, T'mday'a prices on selected stocks: Allied Chemical .... 40 Atum Co Am (14 American . Air Lines an1' American Can ...., 4!Hi American Motors 1 7 7a AT&T 120H, American Tobacco 28 'a Anaconda Copper .. . 4B', Armco as American Standard 17 Bendlx Corp 51 'j Bethlehem Steel Boeing Air Brunswick ... Caterpillar Corp Ixril Chrysler Corp Coca Cola C US Columbia Can (xdl Continental Can Crown Zellerbach Crucible Steel Curtisn Wright Dow Chemical Du Pont Eastman Kodak Firestone Ford General Dynamic General Electronics General Forma ... General Motors General Portland Cement Georgia Pacilc ..... Greyhound Gulf Oil ... Homestake Idaho Power I.B.M Int Paper . . Johns Mnnville Kennecolt Copper IX)ckhced Aircraft Martin Merck Montana Power Montgomery Ward Nat'l Biscuit New York Central Northern Natural Gas Northern Pacific Pac Gas Elec Penney J. C Penn FIR ... Pcrinancnto Cement Phillips Procter Gamble (xdl Radio Corporation Richfield Oil Safeway Santa Fe Sears Shell Oil Socnny Mnlill Oil Southern Co . Southern Pacific Spcrry Rand Standard California Standard Indiana Standard N. J Sun Mines . Texas Co Texas Gulf Sulfur .... Texas Pacific Land Trust ... Thiokol Trans America Trans World Air Tri-Conltncntal Union Carbide Union Pacific United Aircraft , United Air Lines U. S. Plywood U. S. Rubber . ao'l . 33 U . 14'. ... H3'i ... Itl4 ... 211'. ... 47 ... 411 ... 21 ... 21', . liU'i .. 240 .. 108 ... :i2'i ... S(J?i ... 241, ... 711 ... 8l',i ... (! ... 20, ... 411 .. 40 ' ... 47H4 ... 51 , ... 34?; ....435 U ... 28 i, ... 47!, ... 7.'i W ... Ill III ' ... 37 ... 38 ... 5 Mi ... 21',, ... 48 'i ... 45 i ... 31 ... 41 ... I"',. ... 10 ... SI i, ... 711 1., ... n r, 1-t 1 ... 58 ... 211", ... Bill, ... w. ... Ill) ... 53', ... 311 ... I4i, ... 05 ... 5fl'i ... (Ill ... 1H, ... 70 1 j ... Hi ... 21 ... 22 'i .. ! . mi ... 40 'i .104!, .. 41 .. 47 .. 37', .. 57', .. 45 II. S. Steel United Utilities . West Bank Lorp . Wcstinghousc . 311 ' liii Rocky, Goldwafer Debate Proposed New York - IUPII - Gov. Nel son A. Rockefeller and Sen. Barry Goldwalcr (R-Ariz.) have been invited by the Co lumbia Broadcasting Systemlto exchange their views in a tele vision debate. Richard S. Salant, president of CBS News, sent telegrams to the two Republicans Tues day, offering them an hour of air time on July 24, Aug. 7 or Aug. 21. A spokesman said today the network has not received re plies from either Rockefeller or Goldwater. In extending the Invitation, Salant suggested the debate center on "appropriate poli cies and directions for the Re publican party in 1964." Simmering dissension with in the GOP burst to the sur face last Sunday when Rocke feller warned that the "radical right lunatic branch" might all but destroy the party. Ho aslo expressed the fear that Goldwater, a leading can didate for the 1964 presides tial nomination, will become a "captive" candidate of the extreme right wing factions. The Arizona conservative's supporters promptly retorted that the attack was Rockefel ler's way of declaring his own candidacy for the nomination. Two-Spotted Mites Subject of Report Logan, Utah-UPI)-A pair of two-spotted mites, kept in 80-dcgrce temperatures for 30 days, will produce 13 mil lion descendant, a report from Utah State university notes. Nature keeps a balance, though, because they have natural enemies to thin out the number. Cold weather also kills millions. mL IL DOWNTOWN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Central mvm TOS(SE BUS TEE These Price Effective 9 a.m. July 18 through July 20 uaksa ri&si FIESTA COTTON Pre-shrunk, washable colors, 36-in. wide. Solids and prints. Check this low, low price. . $1100 Cotton Upholstery Fine decorator fabrics for ill your upholstery needs. Solidi, checks, bold muted itripei, tex tured weaves. Some nylon Cotton Prints Assorted, good selection. 1 to 10 vd., 36 to 45 in. width. Florals, stripes, geometries, novelties etc. Look at this value! Unbleached Muslin Here Is the buy you've been waitine. for. 38 in. vide, 1 to 10 yds. 80 sq., 100 cotton v. , 555 p Union President Sees Sufficient Jobs as Remedy Washington -IUPII- AFL-CIO President George Meany asked Congress today to help the Negro find the same job opportunities on the assem bly line that he now enjoys on the baseball field. , In testimony prepared for the House Judiciary Commit tee, Meany supported the ad ministration s request for stat utory authority for the Presi dent's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity. But, he said, the best way to end job discrimination is to provide enough jobs for everyone. "Equal opportunity is mean ingless without full opportun ity," Meany said. "The real remedy is jobs for all." Criticizes Employers Meany criticized employers, and some Negroes, for their approach to the civil rights problem. He said he could not accept some Negro demands for pref erential hiring treatment, or "super seniority," as a way of getting more jobs. This, he suid, shows "they are not thinking clearly," for more experienced white workers could be punished if job sen iority was ignored. As for employers, Meany said, they "are in most cases responsible for job discrimin ation in the first place." Me accused management of op posing equal job opportunity legislation and union-supported fair employment policies at local plants. Urges Legislation The AFL-CIO chief urged legislation that would attack discriminatory hiring prac tices by unions and manage ment with equal harshness. He criticized the "slap-on-the-wrist" approach to employers in past legislation. 'Surely every American is entitled to bo judged on his own, on the basis of his abil ity," Meaney told the com mittee. "He ought to have the same rights on the assem bly line, in apprenticeship training or anywhere else that he now enjoys on the ball field. "Wc lost the best of Satchel Paige to ghetto baseball," Meany added. "We need ev ery Willie Mays we can find." Basball Commissioner Ford Frick told Congress that the major leagues are now al most totally Integrated both on the playing field and in the stands. And he said this was done without any of the "tragedies" that had been predicted. 'Paid a Price' Frick said baseball "paid a price" for Integration with the loss of several minor leaaue clubs in the South. But overall, it has worked oui to the satisfaction 01 ainiosi everyone concerned, he said. Frick testified beiore me Senate Commerce Committee on the Kennedy administra tion's proposal to ban dis crimination in private accom moditions open to the public. Some members of (he com mittee said the results achiev ed in baseball could be achiev ed without violence In vir tually every other area of American society. The commissioners of the two major professional foot ball leagues told the commit tee that segregation was no problem in pro football -either among players or seat ing in stadiums. wifi41i!)'ii'lHiiiww)iyii iwqjiiyptiisMiimMnii 'V'.S.. Y':'lf . EYE DAMAGE POSSIBLE A graphic illustration of what can happen to a viewer's eyes during the eclipse of the sun Saturday is shown in this combo-photo. The sun, top, (photo graphed through a filter made of over-exposed and over developed film), burned the filter to a crisp in the brief moment of exposure and viewing. The filter was situated between the lens and the camera in its normal filter holder. Health authorities have warned that extreme caution should be used in viewing the eclipse in order to avoid serious eye damage. (UPI) Saturday Eclipse Of Sun Brings Back Old Superstitions Washington - IUPII - There's going to be an eclipse of the sun Saturday, and a lot of honest and decent people are going to blame it on (he moon. Inasmuch as these people (they're called astronomers) can foretell an eclipse to a fraction of a second, they may be right about what causes it. But in times not too far past large bodies of opinion have supported other theories. Mankind has always been aware that now and then something gets to nibbling on the sun. Sun Disappears Occasionally, in broad day light, the sun disappears al together for a brief period as though, like Jonah, it had been swallowed, but not per manently. The moon theory is not par ticularly modern. The early Arawak people of British Guiana used to say, whenever an eclipse occurred, that "the sun and moon are fighting." But other peoples proposed other sun-eating agents - gi gantic frogs, huge cod fish, great black squirrels, enchant ed jaguars, werewolves, mam moth serpents, and, of course, dragons. Still others saw In solar t; t 1- c eclipses lumu, ui mi- wua, j prophetic warnings, me evil workings of witchcraft, and portents of the world's end. One scandalous notion was that the sun and moon were lovers, under the most illicit of circumstances, who seized the opportunity of an eclipse to do what they shouldn't have. Notions Killed Modern science, of course, has killed all these notions. As far back as 1820 a scholar ly textbook was assuring U.S. school children that al- Special California Session May Continue Indefinitely Sacramento -lUPIfc- A senate deadlock over Gov. Edmund G. Brown's $84.9 million budget augmentation bill threatened today to extend a summer special session of the legislature indefinitely. No compromise was in sight. Although the deadlock came when Republicans held firmly against the spending program, the budget .wasn't even the major issue. ' The key problem was Brown's insistence on accel eration of the state bank and corporation tax, starting in June 1965. But the 12 GOP senators, even united, could not hold back that bill, which edged out of the lower cham ber Tuesday, 22-14. By unanimous 37-0 votes, the senate also approved bills to eliminate installment priv ilege for personal income taxes, accelerate the gross in surance premium tax and transfer revenue from the sur plus line brokers tax from the insurance fund to the general fund. Commercial Banks Report New Accounts New York (UPI) The New York State Bankers associa tion reports that more than 331,000 new accounts were opened in commercial banks in New York state last year. This included 130,000 special checking accounts, 110,000 savings accounts and 90,000 regular checking accounts. Total savings in commer cial banks, savings banks and savings and loan associations reached a record of $34.4 billion. though eclipses could be fore told, they couldn't foretell anything. Nobody, it was suggested, could dependably base fore casts of flood, famine, war, pestilence, and general doom on eclipses of the sun. There have been a lot of eclipses since 1820, and a lot of floods, famines, wars - but don't let's get superstitious at this late date. But the spending program boosting the coat of running state government during the fiscal year beginning July 1 to $3,229,309,000 needed 27 votes - two thirds of the mem bership of the senate-to move along to the assembly. When the vote came, short. ly after noon, the senate Re publicans voted as a bloc against the budget augmenta tion, leaving it three votes short of passage. The Republi cans said they will continue to block it until the bank and corporation bill is defeated. Regional Edition Medford Page 2A Tribune MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, 1963 MUFFLERS INSTALLED WHILE-IMYAIT NO DELAY 3 HOISTS ALSO . . . Tail Pipes lak Plugs Shocks Seat Belts OPEN SUNDAYS The Store With 10,000 Items THRIFT AUTO SUPPLY Medford, 101 N. Rlvtrsid Grints Pass, 529 S.I. 6th I SAVINGS CARNIVAL! 1 FAVORITE TOILETRIES Plus Tax 89c Cream Dcordoranr, n . 09. 2-oi. jar 'or aSC 89c Roll-on Deodorant, O , Os 1 V, ot. jar C W OtfC 298 Rosemary Bath Oil Perles, f 1.00 Rosemary Castile ) ". "" 1 AA Shampoo pint fc for I sliU 1.69 Rosemary Hair Spray, A t CA 14 oi. aerosol tor I sOO 49c Rosemary Nail Enamel A , JIA. Remover, 4 oi for SSC McKESSON 2 for 1 SALE EVERYDAY NEEDS 59c Rubbing Alcohol A . EA. Compound pint ,or 39C 1.18 Aspirin Twins, Adults (S gt.) 2 100's 37c Boric Acid Ointment 1 ox. tube 63c Denture Adhesive, 1 ah ox. tube 59c 2 for 37c 2 for 63c 63c Denture Cleanser, A - fit). 6', ox C for DtiC 89c Room Deodorant & Air A - QAj Sanitixer, tVi ox t ,or O'OC 89c Solution No. 59 A , M. Antiseptic Mouthwash, pint ,ar "3C 59c Special Formula for A t CA. Upset Stomach, 4 oi ,or 03C 49c Glycerin A , flA- Suppositories st tor If gG 98c Surin Ointment, A . AO 1 Vt ox. tube tSforSOC 69c Witch Haxel, A , A. pint I for DSC SUMMERTIME SPECIALS 69c Athlete's Foot Powder, A , COas 2'4 0.c.n L 0r 09C 1.39 Athlete's Foot Spray, A , 4 A A 5 ox. aerosol tor I stJ0 1.00 Burntone, Improved, A , 4 Ajf 1 ox. tube L for 1 ,UU 1.49 Maya Insect Killer, New 14'i ox. aerosol 75c Mosquito Lotion, In sect Repellent, 1 Va ex 1.19 Moiqurtone Spray, 5 oi. aerosol 1.00 Poison Ivy Cream, 1 oi. tube 99c 2 for 75c 79c 2 for 1,00 pfr;.or,n...Lip 2 35c FIRST AID FEATURES iV. wbt" Scra,eh c,"m' 2 for 69c 39e Iodine Tincture, m Jjgc 49c Merthiolete (Tincture) jQr 40Q MEN'S TOILETRIES 2 for 1.00 2 for 89c 89c Super Foam Shave, O for 89C 6'4 ! W" 1.00 After Shave Lotion, 3.9 ox plus tax 89c Bay Rum Pint plus tax 3 16 For eign Onefs AGREEMENT ON MINDSZENTY'S FUTURE DENIED Budapest, Hungary-iU'l-Hungarian official sources today . denied reports that enrcement is near on the future of Hun-j garian Catholic Primate Jossof Cardinal Mindstenty. They I said there was no foundation to reports that he would leave' Hungary within the next few weeks. j INFANTRY VETERANS ARRIVE IN NORMANDY Caen. France-ilTI-Ninoty veterans of the 94th U.S. Infan- try division which landed in Normandy on D-day in 1945 arrived here Tuesday night to visit the beaches and American, cemeteries. this beautiful ! new I (jtnhUffi fir S sOUVUOUXVvV PATTERN S Sept! StilnlHt !M O Santo Fx w 4 ToMpooftf. I fettiUd fnne)f Kmvt Ef . 4 CNfrWf lorfct 4 ScMsp Spoon g toethilj CtjnM Hinttti Muti tau4 St Me CantrM tarty THE INTERNATIONAL SILVER COMPANY :STp Curtain Remnants jJy' 5 ' pattern and lolidt to chooit from. ww i rtviiei wnij . .... Pettipoint Aitert. colors jnd print . Border printt, blck nd whitt, ttowtrd detigm, 36 In, to 45 In. wide. Hurry! Newberry's DOWNTOWN 5? 13 in mi ssi h. CUBAN TEACHERS FIRED FOR IMMORAL CONDUCT ' Havana-ill'li-Forty school teachers in Las Villas province have been fired for "immoral conduct contrary to the high-' est Ideals of the fatherland." it was reported today. Details of the alleged Immorality were not made public. HOI KiHSl CLOWN RING mc TOSS frQ.U t our t" Ourini tut McKitton 2 tor 1 Salt KnH at Puj . Gs- "t let, : T W-, .-"wttl (ism fMm m m th Mtxi 'nun n se i e sr ar asryr asiv V f sacoufM MsKmON - YLVANIA SYLVANIA ouuxi STEREO HitH nDiirrv phonosmph WITH AMFM 0I0 Ctm h Surlni rh MeRsnts 3 Ht 1 Ssl ftr ISHf FREC ENTRY SUNK VITAMINS AND TONICS 1.98 BEEF IRON I WINE tonic pint 2 for 1.98 2.59 VITAMIN A Caps. 25,000 units 100's 2 for 2.59 4.98 VITAMIN A Caps. 50,000 units 100's 2 for 4.98 2.50 VITAMIN B-l 50 mg 100's 2 for 2.50 NIACIN TABLETS, 4 n.!-- All Sites and Potencies '2 I lICB Vitamin B-2 Vitamin B-l 6 Vitamin B-l 2 6 Transistor POCKET RADIO 9.99 SWIMMING POOL FOR PARLIAMENT ASKED London-lPl-Labor member of Parliament John Rankin said today he will ask the Minister of Public Buildings and Works to install a heated swimming pool in the Parliament buildings for use durinn the summer recess. St, Regis FOLDING SYRINGE Excellent Quality 1.77 Men's HANDKERCHIEFS Pkg. of 10 88c finesse FOOTSOCKS Reo. 75c. Pkg. of 2 prs. 59c Evereadv TRANSISTOR RADIO BATTERY Reg. 69c 2 -or 1,00 St. Regis ALARM CLOCK (Made by Westclox) 2.98 The SALVATION ARMY Can use your discards- CLOTHING RAGS APPLIANCES YOUR USABLE FURNITURE Pick-ups on Tuesday and Friday PLEASE CALL 773-7335 CALL 826-9481 COMPLETE Service R ASCADi LHIAIMACY Cascade Shopping Center, White City