Anti-lntegrationist
Wins Mississippi
Democratic Primary
i,.n Miss -HIPtl-Ll. Gov. i blocking the admission of Ne-
' ... I - Tomna MfrnHith In "Die
Paul Burney Johnson Jr., the
defiant seereeationist who
won Tuesday's Democratic
primary runoff for governor,
accepted congratulations to
day from Gov. Ross Barnett,
one of his chief supporters.
Barnett, prohibited by law
from succeeding himself, paid
a post-midnight call to John
son's hotel suite and expressed
delight with the decisive tri
umph over former Gov. J. P.
Coleman.
With all but 64 of the state's
1,874 precincts complete,
Johnson had 247,678 votes to
Coleman's 186,469.
Barnett called it "an en
dorsement of states rights,
constitutional government and
' segregation of the races."
Sweep State
Johnson, 47, lost three ear
lier races for governor, but in
this campaign he capitalized
on the University of Mississip
pi integration crisis and oppo
sition to the Kennedy admin
istration to sweep the state
with the exception of a few
counties in Coleman's native
northeast Mississippi and a
couple of strong labor coun
ties in south Mississippi.
Johnson, a gaunt and bald
ing son of a former governor,
joined Barnett in physically
Miss" last fall. The lieutenant
governor told voters he had
"stood up for Mississippi ana
he repeatedly attacked Cole
man for supporting John Ken
nedy in the 1960 presidential
race.
Senator Morton
Agrees To Speak
Vancouver, Wash-IDPD-Sen.
Thruston B. Morton (R-Ky.),
chairman of the Republican
Senatorial Campaign commit
tee and former national party
chairman, has agreed to ad
dress a $25-dollar - a - plate
fund-raising dinner here Nov.
14.
The announcement was
made today by Mrs. M. A.
Pithoud, Clark County Re
publican Central Committee
chairman. Morton is scheduled
to speak in Portland the fol
lowing night.
NO CONFERENCE
Washington IUPU President
Kennedy will not hold a news
conference this week. He last
met with newsmen on Aug.
20.
Rogue Valley Edition
Medford
Page 2A
Tribune
MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1963
Foreign
griefs
GUARDS SHOOT TWO REFUGEES
Berlin-HI'li-Communist border guirdt ihoi two refugee!
during the night and may have killed one oi them. West Ber
lin police reported today.
The guards ihot down a man trying to escape to freedom
in an East German Army ambulance on the Eait-West Ger
man border and fired on another refugee fleeing to West
Berlin on foot, police said.
KOREANS TO RECEIVE DESTROYER
Seoul, Korea-lUPIl-The tint destroyer and largest ship to
be turned over to South Korea by the United States will
arrive in Korean waters on Sept. 4, a U.S. military spokes
man announced today.
The 376-foot warship, formerly the U.S.S. Eber, was trans
ferred to the South Korean government last May in Los An
geles. It was originally commissioned in 1943.
INDIA SCHOOLING PERCENTAGE UPPED
New Delhi. India-H'Pll-Three-quarters of India's children
got at least some formal education this year, the highest per
centage in the nation's history, an education ministry state
ment said today.
Judge Moves to Block Integration Attentat
By United Press International
A federal judge, citing ra
cial tension, Tuesday blocked
the first voluntary school de
segregation in the Deep South
state of Georgia.
The ruling, which stopped
the enrollment of six Negroes
at a Brunswick, Ga., high
school, was handed down
while Negroes from through
out the nation traveled to
Washington for today's his
toric freedom march on the
nation's capital.
Although the Brunswick in
tegration was blocked, the
school board at nearby Sa
vannah, Ga., announced Tues
day that 21 Negroes will be
admitted to two white high
schools.
The Savannah board acted
Stocks Rally During Heavy
Trading on News About Rails
New York -IUPII- Stocks ral
lied sharply on heavy trading
today as it appeared there
would not be a rail road
strike.
Rails paced the advance
with nearly all the carriers
used in compiling the rail
average up a point or more.
Sizable gains were register
ed among a number of blue
chips including American
Telephone, General Electric,
General Foods, International
Nickel, Du Pont, U. S. Steel
and Texaco.
DOW JONES AVERAGES
New York - IUPII - Dow
Jones final stock averages:
30 industrials 725.07, up
DOWNTOWN
THURS., FRI., SAT. ONLY!
1
S
2 Yards
Terrific Buys on Back To School Material
DRIP DRY COTTONS
Assorted prints and white good. F-J
Regular 57e yd. ""lT
PRINTED CORDUROY
38" to 41" wide-15-30 yd. lengths
Regular $1.27 yd.
SLEEPWEAR FLANNEL
Lightweight, 1-10 yd. lengths,
36" wide. Asst. patterns. Reg. 37c
ASSORTED COTTONS
Prints, stripes, plains, white goods.
36" wide. Reg. 37c yd.
w
$11
Plaid Suede FLANNEL
Sanforized, 1-10 yd. lengths.
36" wide. Assorted colors and
plaids. Reg. 47c yd.
$1
EVENING STAR
AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC
2 year guarantee. Completely washable, mothproof
and non allergic. 100 nylon binding.
$Q97
SINGLE BED, SINGLE CONTROL V
DOUBLE BED, SINGLE CONTROL V
DOUBLE BED, DUAL CONTROL A
Newberry's DOWNTOWN
Open Monday end
Friday Nilei 711 9
5.19; 20 railroads 176.63. up
3.12; 15 utilitiei 143.67, up
0.6S, and 65 ilocks 261.52,
up 2.39. Salei Wednesday
were about 5.12 million
shares complied with 4,48
million shares Tuesday.
48',
Wednesday's prices on selected
stocks:
Allied Chemical
Alum Co Am
American Air Lines
American Can
American Motors
AT&T
American Tobacco .
Anaconda Copper ..
Armco
American Standard
Bendix Corp
Bethlehem Steel
Boeing Air
Caterpillar Corp
Chrysler Corp
Coca Cola
Columbia Gas
Continental Can
Crown Zellcrbach .
Crucible Steel
Curtlss WriRht .
Dow Chemical
Du Pont
Eastman Kodak
Firestone
Ford
..123
.. 2H3.
.. .10
.. 61',
.. I7
51
31
. 3"i
.. 45
71
1023,4
.. 29',
.. 46
.. 4'.
.. 24'i
.. 20 i j
60',
. 242'i
110'2
.. 35 i
.13
General Dynamics 23
Search (or Pilot
Pressed off Coast
McChord AFB, Wash.-IUPD-Coast
Guard vessels and
planes were pressing the
search today lor the pilot of
an F-106 jet fighter who is
believed down in the Pacific
Ocean 15 miles off the coast
of Washington's Olympic Pen
insula. The fighter crashed into
the ocean after n midair col
lision with a B-57 medium jet
bomber at about 1:10 a.m. to
day. The bomber later land
ed at McChord.
The pilot of the fighter,
1st Lt. Roger Axlund, from
Sioux Falls, S.D., was seen
to eject from his plane. The
search was being concentrat
ed in the area between the
mouth of the Hoh river and
Destruction island.
Air Force officials said the
sea in the area where t ie
pilot was believed down was
calm, but the visibility was
poor.
The bomber's crew, Capt.
Roy Gage, pilot, and 1st Lt.
K. I. Langley, observer, wee
unhurt.
Officials said the fighter
and the bomber were engaged
in a routine mission when the
crash occurred.
Officials said the fighter
brushed the bottom of the
1357 as it made a pass at the
bigger craft.
The fighter was assigned to
the 438th Fighter-Interceptor
Squadron at McChord, while
the bomber was from Hill
AFB in Utah.
General Electric
General roods
General Motors
Gcncrttl Portland Cement .
Georgia Pacific
Greyhound
Gulf Oil
Idaho Power
I.B.M
Int Paper
Johns Manvllle
Kennecot Copper
Lockheed Aircraft
Martin
Merck
Montana Power
Montgomery Ward
National Biscuit
New York Central
Northern Natural Gas
Northern Pacific
Pac Gas Elec
Penney. J. C
Penn RR
Permanente Cement
Phillips
Procter & Gamble
Radio Corporation
Richfield Oil
Safeway
Santa Fe Pfd
Scars
Shell Oil
Socony Mobil Oil
Southern Pacific
Sperry Rand
Standard California
Standard Indiana
Standard N.J
Sun Mines
Texas Co. .
Texas Gulf Sulfur
Thiokol
Trans America
Trans World Air
Tri-Continental
Union Carbide
Union Pacific
United Aircraft
United Air Lines
U.S. Plywood
U. S. Rubber
U. S. Steel
United Utilities
West Bank Corp
Wcstinghouse
SI
.. 86,
.. 75
.. 22 2
.. 52
.. 43
.. 50',
.. 353,
,.443'j
.. 305,
.. 47
.. 73i,
.. 34 ?i
.. 1!)?,
..105
.. 38 'a
.. 39H
.. .1.1 ' 4
.. 235,
.. .16!,
.. 48
.. 33,
.. 44!,
.. 21 'i
.. 17 'i
.. 54',
.. 78
.. 711,
.. 48
.. 62 J,
.. 29',
.. 93 ' i
.. 46i,
.. 72',
.. 36',,
.. 14 ' a
.. 663,
.. 64
.. 707,
.. 10
71
.. 15
.. 20
.. 54
.. 21',
.. 47
..108
.. 40'.,
.. 447,
.. 39
.. 59
.. 49
.. .11
.. 38
.. 41
.. 35 ',,
Airmen Get Leave
After Experiment
San Antonio, Tex. - IUPI) -Four
airmen third class, in
cluding two from Oregon, who
volunteered to spend 43 days
in a space cabin simulator
will get an extra treat an 11
day leave during which they
all plan to go home.
The four emerged from
their locked up chamber Mon
day and were pronounced in
excellent physical condition.
The volunteers were identi
fied as Billy F. Stephens, 24,
Knoxville, Tenn.; Donald R.
Jacobsen, 19, Florence, Ore.;
Gene F. Curtiss, 19, Portland,
Ore.; and Karlheinz Smarsch,
21, Manaroncck, N.Y.
Area Horses Place
in Siskiyou Show
Several southern Oregon
persons who entered horses in
tile Siskiyou county horse
show, Yrcka, recently re
ceived blue ribbons.
Raider Mount, owned by O.
Z. Parker, Jacksonville, won
grand chnmpion in the quart
er horse stallion class aflcr
receiving a blue ribbon in
the four year old and older
' clnss.
j Lola Clavcr, owned by
Emile Marsh, Grants Pass,
won a reserve champion
j ribbon in the quarter horse
1 geldings class, and Rondo Lo,
owned by Gullitk Krause,
Medford, won a blue ribbon
for three year old mates.
In games during the horse
show Lowell E. Fowler, Phoe
nix, was first in the dinner
bell race.
In the beef rlnssrs at the
fair, Angus bulls, owned by
Paul J. Carlson, Hoots Angus
; ranch. Grants Pass, won both
champion and reserve ehain
J pion ribbons. The reserve
champion Angus female was
also owned by the Hools An
gus ranch.
Japanese Visitor
Scheduled to Arrive
Mosatoschi Hirona, Ashiya,
Japan, is scheduled to arrive
this afternoon in Medford as
a guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Sharon Eichelbergcr and
their son, Steve Eichelbergcr,
3367 Forest ave.
Hirona, who has been in
the United States for the past
two months, on the Experi
ment in International Living
program, is a "brother" of
Steve Eichelbergcr who lived
for over a month last fall in
the home of Hirona's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Elsuyii Hirona
in Ashiya.
Young Eichelbergcr was in
Japan through the same pro
gram, as a freshman student
from Lewis and Clark col
lege, Portland.
During Hirona's visit here
through Sept. 6. he will meet
Dr. Enrico DcMaria, now a
valley visitor from Italy, also
on the same program.
Plans have been made for
Hirona's meeting with Miss
Toshiko Funabashi, who ar
rived here last week from
Tokyo. Japan, and Miss Mic
ko Hayashi, a Japanese stu
dent at the Medford High
school, who has lived here
for the past year.
A part of Hirona's time
will be spent at Lake of the
Woods with Dr. DcMaria at
a summer home there.
Farmers Now Grow
'Electronic' Corn
Minncapolis-l'PP - Farmers
are now growing corn from
seeds "raised" by electronics.
A computer tells Cargill,
incorporated, corn geneticists,
before a kernel is planted,
which 50 hybrids out of a uos-
43,000 will icrn-. 'e.
j Youths With Matches
j Cause More Blazes
j Salem iITIl Three more fires
I caused by children playing
i with matches were reported
today by the state forestry de
partment. j They were among 1 1 small
! blazes noted yesterday on
i state protected forest and
1 rangclands.
Two of the children-caused
blazes occurred in central
j Oregon, and the other in the
l lacKamas .Marion district.
This brings to 11 the num
ber of such blazes reported
by forestry officials during
the past five weeks.
All of Tuesday s fires were
small, and all were reported
out or controlled. .
under an order of the same
judge who halted the Bruns
wick desegregation.
At Buras, La., Archbishop
John P. Cody called for cit
izens to overthrow "hateful
influences" which he blamed
for an explosion and fire at a
once - integrated Catholic
school.
The bishop Tuesday closed
Our Lady of Good Harbor
No. 2 school after a gasoline
blast and fire ripped the build
ing Monday night. ,
Racial developments else
where in the nation:
Ocsla. Fla.: Tnirtv.one Np.
groes were to be arrigned in
county court here today on
charges stemming from recent
racial demonstrations.
Montgomery, Ala.: Suit was
filed in federal court here
Tuesday by a Negro student
seeking entrance to Auburn
University Graduate School.
Harold A. Franklin, a 1962
graduate of Alabama State
College, named William V.
Parker, dean of the school,
and Charles W. Edwards, uni
versity registrar, as defendants.
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Welcome (Solvers
ond Golf Fans-to the 35th Annual
So. Oregon Golf Championship
1 J 1
-1
m
33
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IN THE MEDFORD SHOPPING CENTER