Foreign Briefs
CASTRO WARNS AGAINST OVERTHROW ATTEMPT
Havana OJPtl - Premier Tidal Caitro iaid Uit night
all Latin Amariea would tUa againit tha Unitad Statai
if it triad to overthrow hii Cuban regime. Ha iaid Cuba
hat given "tha pirata ot Yankaa imparialiim" a good
lauon.
INTERPOL HUNTS FOR TRAIN GANG
Maxieo City - (DPI) - Newspapers hara laid today tha
International Potlca Organixation hat aiked authorities in
Mexico and other Latin American countriai to be on tha
lookout for memben al tha gang that itaged Britain'
"great train robbery." Thara wai no oflicial confirmation
NATIONALISTS ALERT OUEMOY GARRISON
Tapiei, Formoia - IUPII - Tha Nationalitt Chinese gov
ernment putt its garrison on Quamoy on special alert to
day on tha fifth anniversary of the Communist Chinese
(helling of the island.
COURT RULES ON JIMENEZ TRIAL
Caracas, Veneiuela - tyPli - Tha Vaneiuelan Supreme
Court rulad yesterday that the government must bring
ousted ex-Presidant Marcos Pares Jimenei to Caracas to
stand trial. Tha court said it has no intention of commut
ing to San Juan Da Los Morros prison. 90 miles south'
west of here, for tha months tha trial is expected to last,
Truman Says Slim
Chance Russians
Won't Break Treaty
New York -IUPII- Former
President Harry S. Truman
said today the chances of the
Russians not violating the re
cently signed test ban treaty
were "very slim.
"I don't trust them across
the street," he commented in
an impromptu interview dur
ing his morning stroll. "They
broke 32 agreements with me
at Potsdam, and 48 altogether,
including the ones signed by
President Roosevelt at Yalta,
"You can't blame me for
being a little skeptical,
They're no good," he added,
again referring to the Rus-sians.
Nevertheless, Truman said
the treaty, still subject to Sen
ate ratification, had his full
backing. "I'm for it, and I
wrote President Kennedy and
told him so.
May Change
"The idea is to get a start
on those things and you can
always amend them. After all,
they, the Russians, may
change and keep the agree-
mcnt. That's the chance
you've got to take."
Truman, still jaunty for his
79 years, would not hazard a
guess on how long it would
be before the treaty ts broken
"I'm no prophet, and I
don't intend to be, but it's a
step in the right direction," he
commented
When asked about the oppo
sition of Dr. Edward Teller,
"father of the H-bomb," to the
treaty, Truman said, "he's a
good scientist, but he doesn't
know anything about poll
tics." Teller this week appeared
before the Senate foreign re
lations defense and atomic en
ergy committees to oppose the
agreement which bans nucle
ar testing in the atmosphere
on the ground and In the sea
Impede Development
Teller argued that the ban
on atmospheric testing would
impede development of an
anti-ballistic missile system
on which he said America's
second-strike, or retaliatory,
missile force largely depend
ed.
He said that Russia, as the
result of its long test series
in 1961-62, was ahead of the
United States in constructing
an anti-ballistic missile.
However, other scientists
have expressed doubt that
Russia has been able to dc
velop an anti-ballistic missile
Appling's Father
Dies in Beaverton
Bcaverton - IUPII - Howell
Appling Sr., 65, the father of
Oregon s secretary of stole,
died Thursday night in a local
nursing home where he was
confined after suffering
stroke earlier this summer.
He owned the Redwood
Cleaners here.
Appling Is survived by his
widow, Bernlce; his son,
Howell Jr., of Salem; two
brothers, John of Bcnumont
Tex., and Richard of Houston,
Tex., and a sister, Mrs. Temple
Wall of Pharr, Tex.
Funeral service is scheduled
at 1 p.m. Saturday here. Bur
ial will be at Carthage, Tex.
NOW YOU KNOW
Australia is the only notion
to occupy an entire continent,
according to the National
Geographic Atlas of the
World.
BTSURE
OF YOUR
J WATER L
" f ' tW el IfJ . U
AWAIT NEXT MOVE-Drlll operators Sal low ground where two miners are trapped.
Jumpetcr, left, and Paul Matrishion await Shortly afterwards they were told a new
next move Thursday after 60-inch drill hole is to be started. (UPI)
missed coal mine chamber 331 feet be-
Trapped Miners Joke, Laugh,
Sing Songs, Enter 11th Day
By H. D. QUIGG
United Press International
"From this valley they
say you are going . . ."
Eleven days under, and
the entombed men are sing
ing. Two of them.
"I miss your bright eyes
and sweet smile . . ."
Joking, laughing at death.
"Ask Gene, did I get any
traffic tickets." i
The third man down
there in the caved-in coal
mine . . . well, he's trapped
1 n another compartment
and nothing has been heard
from him since Tuesday.
The rescuers and the rela
tives and the well-wishers
and the morbidly curious
on the surface, 330 feet
above, seem to have quietly
agreed to stop talking about
him.
But David Fcllin, 58, and
Henry Throne, 28, are fight
ing the good fight - as are
their kinfolk on the sur
face, the way veteran mine
families always do in the
tragedies of man's fight to
tap the earth.
Throne sings "Red River
Valley." Fellin is a "Penn
sylvania Polka" man. His
wife, Anna, 47, sad-eyed but
composed, has watched at
the surface every day.
"They'll get Davey out
-I know they will," she
says.
Face Long Odds
But Fcllin's brother,
Joseph, 61 and Just retired,
says he figures there is
about a 100-to-l chance and
he adds: "We both should
have given up mining years
ago - only reason you don't
is that it's the only place
to go."
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Graham Speaks at
LA Youth Meeting
Los Angeles - lliril - Evan
gelist Billy Graham used the
Biblical story of Samson at a
youth meeting Thursday night
to illustrate the need ot par
ental guidance.
Speaking at the seventh ses
sion of his 21-day Los An
geles crusade, Graham also
said that sometimes "over
privileged" children cause
more trouble than those from
slum areas.
The evangelist told 47,655
persons - the largest crowd
to date - that Samson had "a
parental problem," explain
ing: "Samson s parents tried to
advise him and guide him,
but Samson was determined
to have his own way, to go
against his parents' advice.
"Even good parents present
a problem to many teen-agers
who want to go their own
way and live their own lives
without any interference or
advice. The Bible teaches
plainly that we are to honor
our father and mother. The
Scripture says: 'Children,
obey your parents in the
Lord, for this is right.' "
Helicopter Crew
Recovers Body
Mount Shasta. Calif. - iWD -A
helicopter crew Thursday 1
recovered the body of a U.S.
Forest Service employee who
fell 300 feet to his death down
a glacier near the top of 14,-161-foot
Mt. Shasta.
Die body of Bill Mikm of
Glenwalk, N.J., was brought
to the Ml. Shasla Ski Bowl
at 7,700 (ret by a turbojet
'copter of the lljerlai;er Heli
copter Service at nearby Etna.
Mikm fell Wednesday while
climbing with Stephen Toll
man. Both were employed at
the Lassen National Forest in
northeast California.
PROPOSES NEW SYMBOL
Pratt, Kan. - iVPli - Stale
Democratic Chairman Jack
G laves said Thursday night
the Democrats of Kansas
should exchange their tradi
tional donkey for a coyote.
"All we Democrats have been
doing," Glaves said, "is sit
ting on our rear ends and
howling at the moon."
An expert on the surface,
Lt. Richard Anderson of the
Naval Research Institute,
says he thinks they can hold
out a long time.
"It's a tribute to their
guts that they haven't given
up by now. That's always
the worry. But these are
pretty tough characters."
You drive out along a dirt
road to the outskirts of the
village of Sheppton, Pa.,
through the anthracite coun
try, wooded, hillyi with a
scattering of dirty shacks.
You stop about 300 yards
from the mine shaft where
the cave-In trapped the men
11 days ago.
As you walk to the roped
off area where the high
speed drills have been prob
ing to find the trapped men
with rescue shafts, you
notice fine gray dust afloat
and spread around. This is
the pulverized stone from
below, dug up and shot out
as the drill works. The res
cue workers are masked to
protect their lungs.
Dust Piled High
Some workers shovel it
away from the machinery;
it's three to four feet deep
in some places.
The drills make a pound
ing clanking noise. Near
dusk Thursday, in order to
lower radioactive cobalt to
see if the two could use a
gciger counter to detect how
close a misscd-mark shaft
was, the big drill suddenly
stopped. Dead silence. The
observers looked stunned
for a moment. You could
hear birds twittering far off.
It might have been some
kind of irony. Because a ra
dio station man had sent a
query down the long line to
Fellin, 331 feet away.
"Hey, Davey, what kind
of music do you like?" he
spoke into the mike.
"I want to hear the
birdies sing," came Fellin's
voice grating out of the two
loudspeakers at the shaft
top.
Then he broke again Into
"Pennsylvania Polka."
"How's that announcer
they had to take to the
hospital?" Fellin asked an
nouncer Elwood Tito, at the
top.
Tito: "He's fine. He went
to the hospital because he
wanted to see the nurses."
Throne: "I tell you, we
made a lot of trouble for a
lot of people, didn't we?"
Tito: "That's okay, Dave."
Throne: "No, this is
Hank."
Tito: "Did your voice
change?"
Hank: "No, I'm just get
ting a little older."
Hank: "Any candy bars
coming down?"
Tito: "Yes, we're sending
some."
Hank: "Good for a little
snack."
Tito: "Do you want the
plain or with nuts?"
Hank: "That's the trou
ble. No nutty ones. I had to
take my teeth out, that's
why you didn't recognize
my voice."
The crowd of 300 above
laughed at this. There is a
lot of joking up there. The
Salvation Army was busy
handing out snacks.
Biologists Issue
Plea in Behalf of
Vanishing Species
Washington - IUPII - Biolo
gists Issued a plea today in
behalf of "vanishing species."
They addressed It to earth's
fiercest predator, man. They
appealed to his economic self
interest, to his moral sense,
and to the delight and scien
tific knowledge he derives
from creatures of the wild.
Nature has been 'evolving
different forms of life for
something like three billion
years. Nature itself has doom
ed the great majority of spe
cies of extinction.
But It has let about 3,500
species of mammals, includ
ing man, and 8.000 species
of birds survive to the pres
ent. In recent times the great
extinguisher has been not na
ture but man.
Man Is The Villain
In a symposium al the 16th
international congress of
zoology scientists said that in
99.9 per cent of the tragedies
which wipe out whole species
today, man is the villain.
He kills off Irreplaceable
animal types cither by direct
slaughter or by destruction of
habitats through stream pollu
tion, the felling of forests, or
Indiscriminate use of poisons.
Many of the 1,500 species
of mammal In Africa are in
dnnger. But the new African
states are trying to save some
of them. There are sound eco
nomic grounds for doing so.
In Africa, scientists have
discovered, wild animals prop
erly husbanded, can provide
hungry man with more pro
tein food on marginal lands
than cattle grazing the same
areas can produce.
Wa Don't Own World
In the opinion of Ian Mc
Taggart Cowan of the Univer
sity of British Columbia, Van
couver, there is a far more
compelling reason for trying
to save species now in jeo
pardy. Said Cowan:
"Wc don't own the world.
We hold a life rental on it.
It is our responsibility to turn
it over to our descendants in
at least as good condition as
when we got it, preferably
better."
So far man has destroyed
100 mammal and more than
100 bird species. In danger
are 55 mammal, 100 fish. 48
bird, and six reptile species.
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Popular
New York -4UPD- Stocks got
off to a good start and the
popular averages posted sub
stantial gains today.
Steels were firm. Chrysler
rose 1 on predictions of
higher sales for the 1964 mod
els. General Motors and Ford
tacked on fractions.
Chemicals inched up and
international oils were steady.
Beckman added 1 despite
news of lower earnings. IBM
was unchanged but Electronic
Associates, Motorola and Tex
as Instruments added around
1 each.
DOW JONES AVERAGES
New York - IUPII - Dow
Jones final stock averages:
30 industrials 718.47. up
2.75; 20 railroads 175.44. off
0.15; 15 utilities 144.13. up
0.58. and 65 stocks 259.92.
up 0.71. Sales Thursday
were about 4.54 million
shares compared with 3.82
million shares Wednesday.
Thursday's prices on selected
stocks:
Allied Chemical 50
Alum Co Am fiHi
American Air Lines
American Can 4(i'.t
American Motors 18 't
AT&T. 122 'i
American Tobacco 7
Anaconda Copper '.9 'a
Armco Bn'g
American Standard IS
Bendlx Corp Sl'i
Bethlehem Steel 31 '
Boeing Air :13l4
Caterpillar Corp 45 1 n
Chrysler Corp 65-
Regional Edition
Medford
Average
Coca Cola 10?.,.
CB S '"'
Columbia Caa -
Continental Can
Crown Zellerbach 48 'j
Crucible Steel 24-
CurUss Wright 20",
Dow Chemical 60
Du Pont - ....143'ii
Eastman Kodak .... lil'a
Firestone 3 a
Ford JStt
General Dynamics 2C '.a
General Foods .. ... 84 i
General Motors TS
General PorUand Cement ...... 22's
Georgia Pacific - VJ
Greyhound 44
Gulf Oil 4Ui
Homestake 5H
Idaho Power 35
IBM 412'i
lnt Paper 30
Johns ManviUe .... 49
Kennecott Copper 73?i
Lockheed Aircraft 37 .a
Martin Mi
Merck M't
Montana Power 39
Montgomery Ward 39"'(
National Biscuit 55 '
New York Central 22 ,
Northern Natural Gas 58
Northern Pacific 47 'i
Pac Gas Elec - 33',
Penney J.C 44
Penn Mt 0i
Permanente Cement 7'.
Phillips 52
Procter St Gamble 795.
Radio Corporation 7's
Richfield Oil 47T,
Safewav 01 4
Santa Fe Pfd "'J'i
MAN STEALS POLE
Dallas -IUPD- Police today
sought a thief who went to a
lot of trouble to steal one of
Southwestern Bell Telephone
company's 25 foot power
poles. A 12-year-old boy told
them he saw a man fell the
pole, saw it into sections and
haul it away.
Page 2A
JTRIBUNE
s Make Gains
MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1963
Sears . .....
Shell Oil .........
Socony Mobil Oil ....
Southern Co
Southern Pacific
S perry Rand
Standard California
Standard Indiana . ..
Standard NJ
sun Mines
Texas Co
Texas Gulf Sulfur - ;
Texas Pacific Land Trust 26
93 'i
4fis
71,
54 ,
37
14's
80
63
.. 701.
Thlokol
Trans America
Trans World Air
Tri-Continental ...
Union Carbide
United Aircraft
United Air Lines
U.S. Plywood
U.S. Rubber
U.S. Steel
United Utilities .
West Bank Corp .
Westlnghouse
W ftmi Art Tw &
(every august)
Most people jet the Christmas Spirit along sbout December.
1 But the end of our year comes much earlier. Right now! When
, we're expected to play Santa Claus and make gilts of our cart
(bj cutting; prices, raising trade-ins and relaxing terms). Why
' not drop by and tell us which Merc you'd like for Christmas.
MEDFORD MOTORS
225 South Riverside
CASH and a BRAND NEW CAR TOO!
. I UEftSi RENT I
1 SELL OR IUV f
J . RLL MAKES ' I V
J CESS TRUCKS K
u ---3 v-st , j , DEC ni "
WE WILL PAY YOU CASH FOR YOUR PRESENT CAR!
When you lease, you are not required to invest a
large sum of money in the form of a down payment
or purchase price. Your total outlay of cash, in many
cases, consists only of the first month's lease pay
ment at the time you take delivery of the new car
or truck of your choice.
ANNUAL LEASE DAILY RENTAL
All Makes - Cars & Trucks
DARRELL MILLER'S
E AUTO LEASE, Inc.
CORNER 10th and CENTRAL
0
Meet
Mr. A.B.C.
n
y
a
He Works for our Advertisers
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 cur circulation records The
circulation facts thus obtained are condensed in easy-to-read
audit reports which teU our advertisers: How much circu-
ntW Km.??! u SfS; St Was obtained: and ny
other FACTS that tell advertisers what they get for thei
money when they advertise in this newspaper
Advertisers are invited to ask for a copy
of our latest A.B.C. report.
'The Audit Bureau of Circula
lions, of which this newspaper
is a member, is a cooperative,
nonprofit association of nearly
4000 advertisers, advertising
agencies and publishers. Or
ganized in 1914, A.B.C
brought order out of advertising
chaos by establishing: A def.
inition for paid circulation; rules
and standards for auditing ond
reporting the circulations of
newspapers and periodical.
MedfordTribune
n i Mi
54".
.. 21 'a
.. 48',
.107
.. 44 "a
.. 39',
.. 59',
.. 49
S0,
.. 38',
.. 41,
.. 35 r.