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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 30, 1963)
6 A MONDAY, SKPTEMBUK 30, liMU MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON MEDFORD MAIL TKIBLNE. MEDFOKD. OREGON MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 3r), 1963 ft 9 GREEN THUMB Fred Nardi is framed by tomato plants which grew 13 feet high in the yard of his home in Chicago, 111. How ever, tomatoes did not grow above the 10-foot level. Nardi says he gave the plants the usual garden care. (UPI). Doubts of Vicious Birmingham Bomber Erased by Report By AL KUETTNER UPI Correspondent Any lingering doubts that a truly vicious and malicious bomber is at large in Birming ham, Ala., disappeared with a sober announcement from the police department. The latest outrage in the steel city's grim racial conflict in volved the detonation of two ex plosive charges 13 minutes apart. The police said the first was an apparent decoy, set off to draw a crowd. The second ap parently was a home made booby trap which utilized a tool box filled with dynamite over laid with staples, other pieces of metal and rocks. The contents were meant to News About Servicemen REASSIGNED Airman Second Class Wayne L. Ellis, Medford, is being re assigned to Castle Air Force Base, Calif., after his gradua tion from the technical training course for aircraft radio re pairmen at Keeslcr Air Force base, Miss. He was trained to operate, test and repair interphone and emergency radio equipment. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert N. Ellis, 128 Ashland St., Medford, and is a graduate of Medford High school. IN MANEUVER Army Specialist Four Charles M. Francis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey M. Francis, 780 North Mountain ave., Ashland, is par ticipating with the 25th Infantry Division in Exercise Dusty Trail I, a combined arms maneuver on Hawaii. Specialist Francis Is a driver In Troop A of the Fourth Caval ry's Third Reconnaissance Squadron at Scoficld Barracks, Hawaii. He is a 1!HS0 graduate of Lcc Vining High school in California. ENLISTS Albert M. Watson, son of Maj. and Mrs. Archer H. Watson, Jr., 402 O'Gara St., Medford, recently enlisted in the United Slates Army and was given the oath of enlistment by his father. Watson will be given eight weeks of basic training at Ft. Ord, Calif., and will then have 14 days leave upon completion of which he will be assigned to School, Ft. Monmouth, N.J. Pvt. Watson graduated from Medford High school with the class of 1961 and enlisted in the army's "Choose it Yourself" program. spray people who came to the scene. A tragedy was averted because the crowd that usually materializes at a bombing scene stayed in fright behind their doors. Birmingham now has experi enced 23 racial bombings in the past five years. Until the 16th St. Baptist church was hit Sept. 15, taking the lives of four Sun day School girls, there was no apparent design to kill. The church bomb was placed be neath the steps and timed for a delayed blowup. Wednesday s bombing appear ed at first to be mere harass ment loud noises in the nicht to disturb the uneasily sleeping city. Later information proved that theory to be all wrong. Need for Caution Disclosure of the new tactics used by the bomber means that police will have to investigate future explosions with extreme caution. It will have to be some what like a military team going into a mined town. This one could have boon planted to kill officers," Police Inspector J. W. Haley said. "It definitely was a booby trap, meant to kill." The new brand of violence came as two presidential me diators former Army Secre tary Kenneth Royall and for mer West Point coach Earl (Red) Blaik were schedul ing closed - door meetincs with white and Negro leaders over the race crisis. After sessions with each race the two had nothing to report. They said earlier their mission would take a long time during which they planned no press briefings. Demands Federal Troops several Blrmlnuham Nemo leaders complained that their integration movement was hav ing difficulty finding the media tors, but they managed to get together late Wednesday. I Controversy over the commit tee operations, plus the booby ' trap incident, brought renewed demands from the Rev. F. L. I Shuttlesworth, a leader in the! Birmingham movement, for fed eral troops. It s clear that law and or der have broken down; they are throwing dvnnmite every where and anywhere," Shuttles worth said. Shuttlesworth, himself, is one i of the major points of contra-1 versy in the stormy racial sit-! ualion. Most Birmingham while leaders refuse to deal with him on grounds he is "one of the outsiders." His present chinch is in Cincinnati. The wiry little racial leader holds a strong influence, how ever, among the approximate ly 5,000 Negroes who have been most active in demonstrations. TAURUS AM at K -'69-71-78 MAR. 22 6.19 UM STAR GA2EK!0 Br CLAY R. TOLLAN OtMINI Ov 4-18-29-34 48 50-63 CANCIR JUNE 2) JULY li 3-U-16-5M r32-4!-8UM Tfl JULY 24 WOO AUS.H urlv JK Your Doily AcliVilj, Ovidc JM According to tht Stan. " To devalop messaga for Tuasdov, rod words corresponding to numbers of your Zodiac birth sign. 1 Gwprwwlio. 3 1 Your 61 Good 2DiM.'.nt 32Ttndncy fOHfiCfn 3 Btrwr t-on 4 Your 34 Earn SDitttrtncw :i5Cotrllvo 6 Good 30 Ccott minfl 7Grod .Vfor (Chwrhil 3Hovt .IV or.no 40 Frit.Td 41 In J?Slol .IB. 44PT'ty , LIIRA :t'T-u,rh OCT. JJOJlfcL 1- 5-10-31(1 173 (Nr., 10 Will, 11 M.lht IZCnonco 13 Show Ull'm'fWto ISFrom 16 A 17 Toko It Capacity 19Compon 20Thor 21 Fortunate 22 Nortnory 2.1Vnotul 24 N 25 Con 26T.nn 27 Caution 2". A. JO To 30D,itot Good 45 Action 4 You 47 Your Jit Met 40 Molt SO Mono 04 Nttmory A rViCon 07 Lol 0 Imr-ovtl 09 U,Jr 70 Reef iv 71 Doiol 72 C-nl'ol 73 Oil 1 74 tili 7b isun 75 And 77 LMi 7Tr.kv 70 SwneonO 0A 51 Tomporomontlt Your W Montis ? Wo. S3 Will 54 Conflict SSMOV MA. 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Florentine tooling trim . . , Ivory, pink, blue or black . . . comparable value 5.00. 3.99 ACRILAN COMFORTER Soft and light, yet wenalerfully warm acrylic filled . . . outslaneliifj aria mJ celctiw. PRICELESS HEIRLOOM - The man in the iron mask (jg) is Russell Blum, 8, who tries on one ot the more than 500,000 rare and priceless heirlooms which are on display at the Bay Area Antiques Show in San Francisco. (UPI) Dislodged Property Owners Receiving Federal, State Aid WASHINGTON (UPI) - Fed-! eral and state governments are taking action to soften the blow suffered by the property owner who must move his home or business to get out of the way of a new highway project. Congress last year enacted legislation authorizing the use of federal highway funds for the first time to help reimburse dis lodged owners for some of their moving costs. The law provides a maximum $200 payment for residential re location and $3,000 for business. However, the payments can not be made unless the state passes legislation authorizing them. The Bureau of Public Roads said that since the effective date of the law Oct. 23, 1962 all state highway departments have set up machinery for giving re daction advice. 19 States Take Aclinn And 19 states actually have taken the appropriate statutory action to authorize reimburse ment for moving costs. These are: Connecticut, Hawaii, Mary land, Massachusotls, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Da kota, Tennessee, Utah, V e r mont, West Virginia and Wis consin. About half of these already have made residential reloca tion payments during the six months the program has been in operation. Payments averag ed from $40 in one state to $:i00 in another. In the case of the higher aver age, the state must be putting up the extra $100 since federal funds cannot be used only to pay up to $200. In addition, information from the Bureau of Public Roads in dicates that five states have made payments to business property owners since the pro gram was authorized last Octo ber. The business reimbursements covered 17 projects and the pay ments averaged statewide from $24 to $2,000. Bureau records show that dur ing this six month period, about 2.'l,000 residential and business properties had lo be relocated to make room for a highway going through. This new program to make life a little easier for Ihe man dispossessed by the highway de partmentwill be administered on the local level. As in the case of other aspects of the federal aid nignway program, Washing ton supplies the money and the states decide how to divvy it up. Then, its up to the federal government to make sure it has not been wasted. This is one reason why the states have been reporting to the federal Bureau of Public Roads on their relocation pay ments and providing other in formation on their programs. Bureau records show that about 77 per cent of the reloca tion checks sent out to residen tial property owners involved interstate highway projects. These projects comprise the largest portion ot the federal aid program with Washing Ion paying 00 per cent of the bill. Bureau data also reveals that relocation primarily was a city rather than a country problem. About 90 per cent of the moves required were in urban areas. UO Campaign for Funds Defended EUGENE (UPI) - Phil Sher burne, student body president at the University of Oregon, Sunday defended a drive to get students at the university to con tribute their breakage fees to a campaign to save the state's tax measure Oct. 15. He made the defense in a let ter to State Sen. L. W. Newbry (R-Ashland), who criticized the drive Saturday. Sherburne, of Rainier, told Newbry that "this is a student campaign" and "no university official has any part ot it." Newbry had said he did not think the drive was in "good taste" and showed "poor judg ment on the part of the univer sity." Sherburne said in the letter "it is a student campaign be cause students realize what the effects of a no vote would be for higher education, even if many people in the state do not realize it. I do not believe that the students are acting in bad taste." Dennis the Menace h rt r . JiP f fly 0 M5-2S pj 43 54 62 " M 76 79 89 V- I TKH IS SURE A LONESOME PAflTOF THE tVW. . .. WHEM HI i bUE9 TO iWkK AN TvU OO CW.K 10 BfcUJ ..v v. :