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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 5, 1963)
Kennedy To Select Public Members in Kail Rules Dispute Washington (UPI) Presi dent Kennedy was expected to select today the three public members of the arbitration board that will decide key is sues in the railroad rules dis pute. ' The board was set up under the law enacted by Congress Aug. 28 to provide for compul sory arbitration of major issues in the strike-threatening rail road controversy. It will be composed of two members from each side and three neutrals. Kennedy was forced to pick the three public members after the union and management members decided that any at tempts to agree on neutrals would be futile. The law provides that Kenne dy must name the three arbi trators representing the public by Saturday in the event of a labor-management d e a d lo c k over their selection. The board is empowered to hand down binding decisions on two issues whether firemen are needed on diesel locomo tives in freight or yard service, and the size of train crews. The I ruling will be effective for two 1 agcmcnl repi esvntativcs to dis- I years. cuss procedures ior resolving I AAtianna cruit-ulat inn was (hut iha lruurnnl HlKniltn the President would select the j The railroads have chosen J. puDiic memoers eiiner irom we a. none, cnici nuguuuiur iui academic world or the ranks I the carriers, and Guy W. Knight, of retired federal judges. 1 vice president of labor relations Many of the professional labor-1 for the Pennsylvania Railroad, management arbitrators arc dis- i to represent them on the arbi qualified, in effect, from scrv- j tration board, ing on the board because they j The union members of t h e have issued decisions on some j board will be H. E. Gilbert, facet of the rail controversy in president of the Brotherhood of the past. Locomotive Firemen and En- Under the law, the railroad gincmen, and Ray McDonald, cannot place new job-eliminat- vice president of the Brother ing work rules int effect and 1 hood of Railroad Trainmen, the union representing nearly' 20,000 on-train workers cannot .cine County Team strike for six months. . .. , . The board was directed to bc-i Wins honors at rait gin its work within 30 days and j Salem (UPI) Lane county issue its decision within 90 days j 4-11 club members showed that from the date the law was puss-' they know what to look for in ed. chickens by capturing team 'ihe decisions on tne two main honors in 4-H poultry judging at issues will take effect 60 days i the Oregon State Fair. In addi- aftcr they are announced. So- lion, one member of the team Foreign Briefs JAPANSE SENIOR CITIZENS RECEIVE GIFT Tokyo (CPU Prime Minister llayato Ikeda today sent gifts to 2.01)0 elderly Japanese who assembled to celebrate enactment of a new law guaranteeing care far the aged. Each of Ihe senior citizens received a lacquered wine cup. called secondary issues were left for negotiation in the hope they would be settled without a new crisis or strike threat. Labor Secretary W. Willaid Wirtz has called a conference Friday of the labor and man- cantured individual honors Winning the team champion ship were Clyde Makinson, Eu gene, and brothers Jim and Pat Edwards, Cottage Grove. Mak inson took honors as the best individual judge. Before College Visit Drews Wira7j3 li Y ViMiT THIS IS THE t MODERN iV LOOK FOR j YOUNG , ' . INDIVIDUALISTS v ft ni ii f ' x i V '.V JsTTJ Offering you nation- I I men's wear it con- Hf i's,9n,ly sensible 1 Pric- wife j VU BOYS' SUITS m by NunnBuh $20.95 ... AND THE EFFECT IS TRIGGERED OFF NEATLY BY "MR. SLIM", THE NATURAL-LINE 'MADIS0NAIRE' FASHION BY VARSITY TOWN. It's the Ideal lightweight suit for the young man with a "mind-of' his-own" way of dress and a track star waistline of 28-30-or 32 inches. Shoulders are natural without padded exaggeration. The jacket is slightly shorter for accentuated height Trousers are straight, narrow and pleatlcss for a long, l-e-a-n effect. Suits by Curiae .... $59.95 "GRENADIER" by Griffon $85 Open Tonight and Friday nil v m'yQL Carry lh Ivy Traditional took right down to your shoes. This heavy, winqtip grained brogut completes th natural ihoulde took. by Johtniton Murphy $25 Black or Brown SINCE 1918 DREWS Manstore IN THE MEDFORD SHOPPING CENTER EL SALVADOR DENIES COUP CONNECTIONS San Salvador, El Salvador (LTD The government denied today thai there was any connection between the transfer to Washington of Col. Joaquin Zaldivar and reports of a frustrated military coup d'etat. The assignment of Zaldivar lo the Security committee of the Organization of American Stales was described as routine. LIGHT TANKS MOVED INTO ilKASILIA Brasilia (LTD The Army moved light tanks Into (his back woods capital Wednesday lo put a stop to anti-government rioting by Communist-led student groups. FRANCE WARNS AGAINST TEST OPPOSITION Paris (UPI) France has warned Australia, New Zealand, Chile and Peru that their campaigns against French nuclear test ing plans in the Pacific can damage their friendly relations with her, the French government announced today. Stock List Mixed With Autos Firm; Steel Prices Ease New York (UPI) Slocks were narrowly mixed today. Autos were narrow but firm Steels cased and chemicals were mixed. Electronics were erratic and featured Minneapolis- Honeywell, Motorola, and IBM off 1 or more and Control Data, Electronic Associates and Tex as Instruments up a point or better. Lanvin. Campbell Soup and Scars Roebuck lost a point or more but Xerox, U.S. Smelting, Varian, S. D. Warren, Corning Glass and Perkin - Elmer tack ed on 1 or better. DOW JONES AVERAGES New York (UPI) Dow Jones final stock averages: 31) industrials 732.!):', up O.'JI); 20 railroads 175.-17. off 0.01; 15 utilities 1111.70, off 0.5.1. and 65 stocks Uli2.71, off 0.311. Sales Wednesday were about 6.07 Spcrry Rant! Standard California Standard Indiana Standard N. J Slokcly Van Camp Sun Mines Texas Co. Texan Gulf Sulfur Texas Pacific Land Trust 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 Unities West Bank Corp Westinchousc - Youngstown - .. B7, . A.1 .. 71', .. 22', . II .. 7.1 . IV. . 26 . 22', .. 54 'i . 21 U . 4S'i inn', . 40', . 4Vi, . 40J, . 60', . 4f)'i . 53'. . .1!M, . 42 ', . 37 118'j million shares compared with 5.57 million shares Tuesday. Wednesday's prices on selected fitni'ks: Allied Chemical Alum Co Am American Air Lines American Can American Motors .'. AT&T. American Tobacco Anaconda Copper Armco American Standard Hcndix Corn Bclhlchcm Steel Murine Air Brunswick Caterpillar Corp Chrysler Corp Coca Cola CBS. Columbia Gas Continental Can Crown Zcllerbach Crucible Steel Curtlss Wricht uow cncmlcai Du Pont KaMman Kodak Kireslone . ford General Dynamics General Electric General Foods General Motors . General Portland Cement Grorijia Pacific Greyhound Gulf Oil Ilomcstake Idaho Power I B M Int Paper . John Manyille Kennecott Copper Lockheed Aircraft Martin Merrk Montana Power Mnntpomerv Ward National Biscuit New York Central Northern Natural Gas . Northern Pacific Pae Gas Elec Penney .1. C. Penn RR IVrmanente Cement Phillips Procter At Gamble ttailio Corp .. Itichfteld Oil Saleway Scars . Shell Oil Roconv Mobil Oil Southern Co. Southern Pacific . .11', . 24 ' i .. 211-U .. 411 'V, .. lilt. ..123'k .. .. 52 U .. 32 .. 3.1 .. 12-U . 44 .. 72', ..102 72'j .. 30 243, .110': ... 3i .. 53- .. 2(i' ... Bna Log Falling From i Truck Hits Car A small log fell from a pass- i nig uuun. uiiiu Lite nooa ot ai car early this morning on Cra ter Lake highway near Antelope rd. and resulted in injuries to the driver, state police reported. Raymond Birch Scrivener, 35, of 717 Posse lane, Medford, was reported in fair condition in the Rogue Valley hospital today with cuts and bruises and an injured knee. The car was extensively dam aged and had to be towed from the scene, officers said. A flatbed truck driven by Dale James Bates, 28, of 121 South B st., Eagle Point, was hauling three short firewood loOC U'hon Ihn tnn InrV Knllnrl off, according to state police. It hit the Scrivener passing car. ! Seven young people received j minor injuries in a one car acc- dent yesterday on Crater Lake j highway, four miles east of Medford, state police reported. ; A car, driven by James Marrs ' Jr., 17, oi n:)0 park st., Meatord, had Dulled 'out to nass a line of southbound cars when anoth-1 or car pulled out and crowded the Marrs station wagon onto the shoulder and into a ditch, reports showed. 104 311', 23 'i 3 V 4ft 41", 17 51 ' 7 1 New Stretcher Used in Mines Council to Consider Appraisal Request Grants, N.M.-(UPI)-A new type stretcher in use at the uranium mines in the Grants area allows the patient to be carried either vertically or horizontally. Special straps hold the head firmly in place so even a person with a broken neck can be transported with out compounding the injury. The stretcher is made from a sheet of heavy plywood sup ported by two sied-like runners attached to the bottom. Hand holes for carrying the stretcher or for attaching ropes to lower or raise it are near the outer edges of the stretcher. Other straps hold the torso and legs. The runners on the bottom The Medford citv council to-; "' the stretcher to be pulled 1 night will consider appi tipria-! across muck piles or under lion of a sum not to exceed $2.- j Si'oiind railroad cars without 1 5(K) for appraisals of property shifting Ihe position of the earmarked for city buildings in patient the proposed civic center. i Inventors Leo Bradshaw and 1 The money would come from i E. V. Miller, of Kermac Nu ' the city's emergency fund. The j I'lcnr Fuels corporation said it 1 ordinance follows the rocom-! combines the rigidity of a "bro 1 mentlation of the Capital lm- ken back" splint and the mo ' provemcnts committee, a group ' bility of the basket-stretcher I appointed by Mayor James Dun-1 commonly used in underground levy to study the city's future mining. needs. j - The committee has plated the ; Xparfh tr ma civic center and construction JCO I til IUI Jlllull of a new citv hall at Ihe head rxi t of its priority list. U ang I 0nCfin.Tr.tPn Public hearings arc slated on r IH,IC -WlltCllll OICU requests for a chance of zone i Tacoma (UPI) The search fitim single family to multiple for a small plane carrying four family for properly located at ; Tacoma residents was' concen- OPEN A REVOLVING CHARGE ACCOUNT TODAY the southwest corner of Crater Lake ave. and McAndrews rd., and for annexation of property situated north of Stewart ave. and west of Chestnut st. trated in the Hoquim-Aberdecn. Shellon area today. State Aeronautics Commission Director William Bebonini said the plane earn ing Mr. and Mi's. j Ray Harvey and their son and WMVI-S Hi:ltl(i daughter-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. rortland-t ITO Arthur Bov Anson Harvey, is known to have Hraier, 38, Fairviow, waived : landed at Copalis Beach, preliminary hearing today on a I The party left Tacoma Mon (irst degree murder charge in flay for a one-day visit to Ocean connection w ith Ihe fatal shoot-1 Shores, Wash. They have not ing of Fred Talker, XI. on Aug. been heard from since they took :'. 'off from South Tacoma Airport. End of World Near. Jehovahifes Told Pasadena, Calif. (UPI) Convening Jehovah's Witnesses from throughout the world were told Wednesday that "the world is in its final hour" and faces "the greatest and most destruc tive war in all human history." N. H. Knorr, president of the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, keynote speaker of the eight day international assem bly of Jehovah's Witnesses, spoke to an audience of 47,000 gathered in the famed Rose Bowl despite cold, damp weather. "The march of all the world ly nations to the greatest and most destructive war in all hu man history is unquestionably being conducted under demon control," he declared. Rolling Log Kills Father of Seven Corvallis (UPI)-A father of seven children was killed today when a log rolled from his truck and crushed him at a log dump three miles north of here. Robert McCombs, 39, Philo math, had loosened the binders of the truck when a 16-foot log slid off, hit an a-frame and struck him. Regional Edition Page 2A MedfordSWTribune MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1963 Small Timber Fire Started by Sparks Sparks from a power saw were the cause of a fire yester day afternoon that burned a quarter acre of timberland at the west branch of Elk creek, state forestry officials said to day. Firemen called to the scene at 3:30 p.m., extinguished the flames soon after arriving at the area. M:HI'M;Hl.l:ll.li:il.l:.HII:ri m i"M mt il I. C. IHIm In . IM Ch, 0AKDALE MARKET 401 South Ojkd.l. Medford Happy as a bird with! VITAMIN D 7HOMOGENIZED MILK m TASTES BETTER IfcL...1...,.!?,. J o o o SUPER MARKET , -LIMIT RIGHTS RESERVED - FREE DELIVERY CHOICE 10-6 Sundays 8-9 Week Days GROUND BEEF ECONOMY PACK 3 lbs. I 00 BOLOGNA lb. 33 WHOLE or HALF STICK PORK STEAK lb. 49c REAL TASTY SHORT RIBS lb. 2 4-H and F.F.A. SAVINGS! SLAB BACON Sliced Free LB gff HAMS BUTT HALF lb. 55 SHANK HALF lb. 49 SLICED 89 lb. GIANT TIDE 59 JORGENSEN'S FIESTA ICE CREAM Vz c.79 C H B MAYONNAISE Ql. 49 HUNT'S PORK & BEANS No. 2'i 4 orl 00 (jt-LOWEST Mcis SUNSHINE A mm pi u KRISPY CRACKERS 2 box 55 LINDEN'S 14 OZ. 00 TURKEY NOODLE DINNER 3 F0R Sp TUNA m jfrcSflOO MANDARIN ORANGES fOI!$B,00 HUNT'S SOLID PACK TOMATOES NO. 2'2. U.S. NO. 1 LOCAL POTATOES 10 lbs. 55 BELL PEPPERS 3 FOR 1 3 RED GRAPEFRUIT Sfor'H 00 LOCAL GREEN &.V) TOMATOES CABBAGE w-lb. W lb. 7' 1 , 350 lu IPi-Rie - rWe 644-2733 - "A Good Place To Trade" - Central Point O o o