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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 24, 1963)
12 B Ruch-Applegale Prefair Friday The Ruch - Applegate 4-H club prefair will be held Fri day, July 26, at the Ruch school. Swine showmanship and Judging will start at 10 a.m. Sheep classes will follow with dairy and beef classes to be held after lunch. There will also be a special round-robin showmanship contest for the winners of each of the classes to compete. Darrell Shepard, Future Farmers of America instruct or at Crater High school, will be the judge. A cooking exhibit and judg. ing class are also being plan' ned. Lunch will be served at noon for a nominal charge, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24. 1963 MEDFOHD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON TheyH Do It Every Time - By Jimmy Hatlo Smokey Say it ..IF VOO PLANT BUT ONLV y ONE TREE, IN POSTERITY wntmbef fine dethoy yargaadlingpn ... Worth protecting! Nursing a blue-ribbon bangovep-it took ah act of con6pess to get lushwell to his dental date But, lush well NOU MUST VOU BAH OUT ON HIM LIST WEEK GET UP AND GET GOING HES ALWAYS BUSY POOBABLY ONLY BE A I K FEW MINUTES r- . rr OU-DU-DENTAL APPOINTMENT? A K MY GOSUN-NO-I 2 COULDNT. CU'CU- Jf Q. CALL HIM UP AN' J( A Oe.LVIE D-WAUER, 7' - But what was that about tme wokst is yet to come ? give a listen to the happy molar man- R& WE LUSHWELL-HA-nA-Ha MY r BOY, YOU'RE IN LUCK HAD TWO CANCELLATIONS" WA""A THAT US TWO HOURS TO WORK ON THE EROSION AND THE CAVITIES IN THOSE Bicuspids GIVES US TWO HOURS TO WORK , A - ' I A 1 f i "t ifc -via l 1 1 :. Int.. IMS. Wofl'TTTcTu (iriH. " " N if) Win fMluoi Bymlkjl Examination Opens To FH Feeera Posf New examinations to fill federal civil service positions for apprentice in the electrical crafts have been announced by the Civil Service commis sion. Receipt of appll cations must be prior to Aug. 2. Additional information and applications are avail able from L. B. Nelson, examiner, at the U.S. post office here. The port of New York has 650 miles of waterfront. African Groups May Have Conflict By NEIL SMITH Johannesburg IUPD South Africa may be facing a pe riod in which rival African terrorist groups divide, their time between striking at the whites and fighting each other. There are growing indica tions that the rise of promi nence of a terrorist taction called Poqo has upset Afri cans who are Bitterly op posed to Poqo's political af- DP Emm row wow SALE DAYS THURS., FRI., and SAT. ONLY BE SURE AND SEE THE INDIANSl SEAMLESS NYLONS NT First quality, luxurious looking seamless mesh stockings are made to wear with low-cut and openwork shoes. Rosetone or Suntone shades. Sizes 8Vi to 11. SSI Bright and Pretty ACCENT PILLOWS Knife edged cushions feature a smart center button. IS" size, kapok filled. In many handsome colors, fabrics and patterns. Use them on couches, beds, chairs wherever a touch of drama is needed. Tt iim CANNON bath time cotton terries SAVf 38c 22x44" Bath Towels Regularly 89c ei. 2 (or 1.00 SAVt 80c 12" Sq. Wash Cloths Ri(nlirly 15c m. 12 for 1.00 4-lB. JAR PURE STRAWBERRY PRESERVES Deeply absorbent and long wearing ... soft to your skin. White, pink, yellow, green solids or stripes. A wonderful chance for smart housekeepers to stock up on big, jumbo jars of everybody's favorite strawberry jam. Store Hours: 9:30 am to 3:30 pm your Movers worth mokcat WOOL-WORTH'S FOR A TASTY SNACK - AN APPETIZING MEAl - THINK OP US Corner 6th and Central filiate, the banned Pan-Afri can Congress (PAC). . Poqo, with Its emphasis on brutality and murder, has stolen the -South ' African headlines for the past six months. This has tended to ob scure the fact that It repre sents the terror wing of only one of the two major African political organizations in the republic. Outlawed Both these organizations, the PAC and the African Na tional Congress. (ANC) have been outlawed, but are said to be active underground. Before their banning, in tensive rivalry between them already had led to violence. Now there are signs that further fighting may be on the way this time between supporters of the PAC- spawned Poqo and its ANC equivalent, Umkonto We Sizwe (Spear of the Nation)- Umkonto We Sizwe dates to the end of 1961. Unlike Poqo, it claims that its ranks include people of all races. When Umkonto first intro duced Itself to the South Afri can public with a clandestine I pamphlet, it emphasized this multi-racial aspect At that time, Umkonto claimed links with no other African political body. But at the Moshi Afro-Asian solidar ity conference in Tanganyika earlier this year, delegates of the African National Con gress announced that Um konto had placed Its forces at the ANC's disposal. Dangerous Sphere This in itself was enough to move the former political rivalry between PAC and ANC into the more danger ous sphere of the new terror ist offshoots. Umkonto has been active for many months and is said to be responsible for a wave of sabotage against railway and communications Jinks in South Africa. As far as is known, Umkonto's activities have caused some Inconveni ence but no loss of life. Its white supporters and plan ners are. believed to Include former members of the banned Communist party of South Africa.. Certainly, Umkonto's sabo tage attempts, while often clumsy, show a discipline and planning that contrasts with the Mau Mau-like mum bo jumbo and acts of gross brutality associated with Poqo, Reports from the African townships on the edge of Jo hannesburg say a behind-the- scenes struggle already b in progress with the two rival terrorist organizations vying for support of key township residents. Fear Activities The brutality of Poqo is producing a reaction among those Africans who, whl'.c milltantly opposed to the white South African govern ment, are not opposed to whites as such. Some of them fear Poqo's activities will create a bad tn.ago for Afri can nationalism abroad, in much the same way as Mau Mau stained the Image of na tionalism in Kenya. Others believe that In a country with a 25 per cent minority of whites, there Is no future for an ideology based purely on anti-whitlsm- In recent weeks, a series of meetings have taken place in the Johannesburg African townships In an effort to check the growing influence of Poqo. Poqo reportedly has retaliated by threatening the traitors ' with violence Figthing between rival Af rican terrorist groups will do nothing to aid the cause of African nationalists In the re public. If anything, It will place the whie man still more firmly In the saddle. K Many Public Officials Caught in Rights Disputes By AL KUETTNER UPI Correspondent With the integration prob lem breaking out all over the country, some non-Southern public officials are finding themselves increasing on the firing line of the civil rights controversy. Two key attack points In recent weeks have been New York, with a Negro popula tion ten times the total pop ulation of Montgomery, Ala., and Chicago which has li times more Negroes than all residents of Jackson, Miss. Mayor Robert Wagner of New York has walked through crowds of pickets to reach his office and Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley has been vir tually routed from one of his city's parks and booed off a convention platform. Both New York and Chica go have long been havens for Negroes who decided to leave the South. Both cities- long have had their share of racial incidents. But only in recent months has the integration campaign there been stepped up to its current- hot pitch. Two Big Problems Jobs and housing are the two biggest issues in both New York and Chicago as they are in most of the non Southern areas where alleged racial discrimination was an issue, Just as a 48-hour hunger strike ended at the New York City Hall Sunday night, the Congress of Racial Equality sent fresh recruits to the of fice of the mayor. Also in New York more than 200 integration pickets were arrested in a single day at construction sites where hiring discrimination 'was charged, Chicago integration groups attempted to storm to the up. per floors of the Chicago Board of Education building but were turned back. Many pickets have been dragged to paddy wagons by police. "Republicans are to blame!" Daley pleaded as he retreated from a July 4 freedom rally at a public park. But the GOP, which for years has written off Chicago to the Democrats, said it wasn't so. Integration leaders, who BRANDO RELEASED Santa Monica, Calif. - (UPD -Actor Marlon Brando, 39, home today after six days in a hospital for treatment of a kidney ailment, planned to talk with Negro leaders to make new arrangements for his participation in civil rights demonstrations in the South. had gone fairly easy on the Democratic organization com manded by Daley, began beat ing a path to his door this summer. He has been con fronted by as many as 500 pickets demanding such things as a bi-racial committee. He has worked with Negro lead ers in granting some demands, Fears White Exodus Integrationists claim that Daley has dragged his feet 'on moving Negro pupils into white schools for fear of a great white exodus from the city. The move to sub urbia cost Chicago more than 100,000 population in the 1950s. At the same time, the Negro population shot up ward. While playing the tense sit uation with caution, Daley has been firm on one point of confrontation with demon strators: "If a public office is to be used for public busi ness, taking over of the of fice by anyone is not proper and interferes with public business." Wagner, referring to the nationwide civil rights strug gle as "pent - up protests against 100 years of discrim ination and indignity," asked for a special New York leg islative session to enact laws to promote desegregation. .-I j '-i.J MARITAL KNOT TIED-Newlywed film actor Robert Wagner and his bride, the former Marion Marshall Donen of Los An geles, embrace on the steps of the Bronx Supreme Court building in The Bronx, N. Y., following their marriage. (UPI) ... ff m3D S li Right at your fingertips . . . hundreds of decorator- , correct color schemes with Broyhill Premier's handy ColoRuIe ColorWheel. If s the perfect answer to perfect color coordination. Why don't you come in and get your ColorWheel today? 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