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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 3, 1963)
(iimtacMBtua ooe . ... TheyH Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo I J NECNV NELLIE A SME THINKS " SHE'S JUST " FROM NOW ON I SHE TAKES VOU J ITS OKAY TO FlSMINa TO if VELVEETA VITUS WILL , . f SURPRISE S ASK YOUR RGUKE OUT HAVE TO CLAIM SHE r 'L,r EyTb95? VAcE BECAUSE I HOW OLD MRS.wAS A CHILD BOOEJ, v1? 1 oX!i'BJ-E.IJ4iSlNl' I SHE A0MITS A VITUS IS-SHE Y,t-!l wm,-U' VViiDh QUESTIONS-AN0 A 10 THIRTY-)? KNOWS SHE TTS' VITUS POLPn L POOR VITUS CNE-y COULDN'T ) JOk' Marveling. Ai.tue 1 m9LKih?E 'SiV .nerve of tvia dame MfcUFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFOHD. OREGON TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER I. IMS Rep. Duncan Joins Oregonians Backing Civil Rights March Russia Accuses Communist China Moscow (UPD The Soviet Union, seizing on an apparent ideological contradiction, has charged Communist China with maintaining a foreign policy that dooms many overseas Chi nese to suffering under "imper ialism." The official government news paper Izvestia said Monday night the Peking regime was quick to advocate violence to un seat imperialism but showed "startling indifference" toward its own nationals in Hong Kong, Macao, and the Nationalist Chi nese strongholds at Matsu and Formosa. Premier Nikita S. Khrush chev's doctrine of peaceful co existence between differing so cial systems is one of the key points of dispute in the ideo logical quarrel between the two communist giants. Peking maintains that no com promise should be made in the "bitter life and death struggle" with imperialism and that any nuclear war inevitably would end with a victory for commu nism. Izvestia said Peking's "belli gerent recommendations" were ! ment and didn't return to Wash- Probers Schedule Descent Into Mine Moab (UPD An investi gation crew of about 25 men prepared today for their descent into the blast-shattered depths of Texas Gulf company's $35 million phosphate mine, seeking an answer to what caused a blast that killed 18 workers a week ago. Preliminary investi g a t i o n crews Monday rode buckets nearly 3,000 feet beneath the surface of the earth in a pre liminary examination of ma chinery and electrical equip ment. Meanwhile, a spokesman for the U.S. Bureau of Mines, James Westfield, assistant director of health and safety, said a meth ane gas explosion four weeks before the disaster in the mine had n jt been reported to his agency. However, it was reported to Utah mine officials. Four Moab miners were burn ed in the July fire in the mine. Of the 25 men trapped by the explosion Aug. 27, only seven were rescued. A 5 it. By A. ROBERT SMITH Mail Tribune Washington Correspondent Washington Two of Ore gon's members of Congress par ticipated in the huge civil rights Svsj d e m 0 n stra" Sf- tion at Lincoln jr. - W r Memorial last .Hsj-g week, not as W marchers but ,.: as lawmakers who wanted to A show their sym- pmny lur i ii e cause. They were Sen. smith Wayne Morse and Rep. Edith Green of Port land. Both were in a party of some 150 members of House and Senate who went in a group to greet the multitudes during their afternoon program. road bill against the urgency of the threatened nationwide rail strike. Duncan made a brief House speech in favor of the civil rights demonstration, and Ullman the day after the march strongly endorsed it. Meets Marchers Congresswoman Green appar ently was the only Oregon legis lator to meet with the busload of marchers who traveled all the way from the Pacific North west. She met them at a Cath olic church in nearby Alexan dria, Va., where the group had gone to meet church members who were putting them up for their first night's sleep in a bed in four days. "When Americans of all races and creeds travel together thou sands of miles it is demonstra bly clear that we have reached Sen. Maurine Neuberger was , "je place wnere neitner a wall n flrpnnn t 10 nrov nuc uook aiu"e ui a tun- previous end for dedication of Fort Clat sop National Historical Monu- intended for export only and were not for home consumption. VICTIM IDENTIFIED Anchorage, Alaska (UPD A paratrooper who drowned Thursday in the Eagle river on Ft. Richardson military reserva tion near here has been identi fied by the Army as Pfc. David Blue, 25, Raleigh, N.C. ington for the civil rights march or the railroad strike debate which preceded the current La bor Day breather that Congress is observing. But she issued a statement expressing sympathy for the march on Washington. Reps. Robert B. Duncan, Al Ullman and Walter Norblad all remained on Capitol Hill where the House was debating the rail- famous mm SON L VITAMINS Khrushchev Ends Yugoslav Visit Belgrade (UPI) Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev to day concluded a 15-day visit which apparently ended the Kremlin's feud with President Tito and brought Yugoslavia closer to the Soviet camp. Khrushchev's special plane took off for Moscow after a lavish airport sendoff in which Tito said "there are a lot of pos silibities for our cooperation." The two Communist leaders kissed each other on the cheek as a parting gesture for the re birth of Soviet-Yugoslav friend ship worked out during Khru shchev's "private" visit. The Soviet premier was given a 21 gun salute and an honor guard as he boarded the plane. The diplomatic corps was on hand, with the exception of rep resentatives of Communist China and Albania, the two principal nations which have de fied Moscow's leadership of world communism. SEPTEMBER ONLY! PRICE BEXEL 3 Betel J V SrmL Formula IMfWOVtD J BEXEL SPECIAL FORMULA IMPROVED ISO Capiulet 6 mot. lupely) NOW w $4o BEXEL CANDY-LIKE CHEWABLE TABLETS FOR CHILDREN 350 Tablcri (8'! moi. lupplyl NOW ST $3Z5 SAVE $3.74 SAVE $4.79 IB mm BEXEL MPM (MAINTENANCE PIUS MINERALS) 225 Capmltt (7' moi. lupply) . NOW 8 "3ZT SAVE $3.49 BEXEL VHP (VERTHICH POTENCY) 1M CapivlM it ei. iuppItI NOW ' SAVE $6.49 West Main Pharmacy 135 Weit Miin Phon 772-233CU gressional wall of complacency will stop the march to freedom," Mrs. Green said. She called the march a "com mendable, logical and tradition al avenue of protest" which would never have taken place "if whites were treating Negro Americans in the work-a-day world in the same manner they expect and demand to be treat ed." Congressman Duncan called the march "one of the great est demonstrations in our his tory in support of a piece of legislation" and a true exercise of the "right of citizens to come to the seat of their government, and to petition Congress for a redress of grievances, one of the great rights protected by the first amendment of the Constitution." At the same time, Duncan in dicated his support for the civil rights program President Kennedy has proposed. "Most of the president's rec ommendations, including the controversial public accomoda tions section, are already law in Oregon, as well as in many other state s," Duncan said. "Our experience with such laws in Oregon has been uni formly favorable." Affirmation of Right "The march on Washington for jobs and freedom is a his toric affirmation of the right of petition, a striking expression of protest against widespread in justices and a call to the con science of all Americans. The president's recommended leg islation is an affirmation of our national responsibility to correct those injustices and a call to the conscience of all of us legislators. I await the oppor tunity, joined by many others, 1 am sure, to answer the call of the president, the petition of our Negro citizens, and the demands of the time, Duncan concluded. Congressman Ullman called the march "one of the most stimulating experiences in the history of the democratic proc ess" and he predicted "it will have a wholesome and positive influence on civil right legisla tion, and on the civil rights movement, and will stand be fore the world as proof that America can still be looked to as the leader in allowing people the right to seek social justice." Sen. Neuberger recalled that as a young teacher in Portland in 1933 she joined a march to demonstrate the need for eco nomic recovery programs to offset the impact of the depres sion. She said the civil rights demonstration is equally valid and she pledged to continue to support civil rights bills as she did : the Oregon legislature. Kashmir Villages Levelled by Quake New Delhi, India (UPI) Rescue workers with picks and shovels today dug through the ruins of 58 villages in Kashmir devastated by an earthquake which killed an estimated 100 persons and injured about 500. The earthquake Monday morn ing was the worst to hit Kash mir in modern times. The area records up to 20 tremors yearly but rarely has a fatality. Government officials distribu ted cloth to bereaved families to make into burial shrouds. Army tents, food and kerosene were also carried in for thousands left homeless in the 50-square-mile disaster area. Porthnder Sentenced For Enticing Alien Albuquerque, N. M. (UPD Federal Judge H. Vearle Payne has sentenced a Portland, Ore., labor contractor to a year in prison for enticing a Mexican alien to enter the U. S. illegally- Marvin K. Wilson, 58, plead ed guility to one count of an 11-count information. He was charged with enticing the labor er to enter the United States at Deming, N.M., in July with promises of a job in the Oregon fruit and berry harvests. SCALES CHECKED Salem Bean growers in Oregon had more than 775 scales checked for accuracy this sum mer by the weights and meas ures division of the Oregon De partment of Agriculture. Subscribers To report nmtrupcr r non delivery of th Mail Tr(hun In Medfnrd. phor.e 772 8111; Ah- lnl call it 4is Bring it. or 4(12-3002: Yrrtu. phone rv 2-2Rft before 6 45 Dm. dully and 10 31) am Sunday. ' If refutar delivery arnvea 7Vif of'i.e. thua eliminating Hfiel meaencr eervice. "? ohone J) Victory I CHRIST SCIf Accurate Complete News Coverage 1 Year $22 6 Mmthi ill 3 Montht $5.50 Clip Hill 4trtlWfntitrafd rttwrn It -ilh TO' thtJf monir trdtr t; Tht CtifMtl elet Mllf Out Nr-y Slrttt tMtofl, Mail. 021 If PI-IS VISITOR FROM JAPAN Mosatoschi Hirona, second right, Ashiya, Japan, arrived in Med ford last week as a guest of Steve Eichel berger, 3367 Forest ave., and his parents Mr. and Mrs. Sharon Eichelberger. Hirona, has been in the United States for the past two months under the auspices of the Experiment in International Living program. Last fall Steve spent more than a month in Ashiya in the home of Hirona's parents with the same program. Greeting Hirona at the Medford air port last week besides Steve and his mother was Miss Lindsay Darneille, left. Insurance ... at Its Best Fred R. ftrtnnan, CIA "Mr. Insurance" Lewall ttlverteii "Mr. . 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