6 A
SUNDAY, OCTOBKR 20, 1963
.MLDKOKD MAIL TRIBUNE. .MEDFORD. OREGON
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Grants Pass Ranch
Wins Top Awards
At Portland Show
GRANTS PASS Hoots An- Ranch, second. Thirteen groups
gus Ranch of Grants Pass, top of two bulls competed,
winner in its class at the recent Get-of-Sire (four animals, both
Oregon State Fair, brought sexes represented): Hoots An-
home still more champion hon-1 gus Ranch, first, on get of i
ors this week from the highly ; Hoots Bardoliermere. Eleven
competitive Aberdeen A n g u s gets completed.
Show at the Pacific Internation-1 Junior Get-of-Sire (three ani
al Livestock Exposition in Port-mals, both sexes represented):
land. i Haystack Angus Ranch, first,
Represented in the show were ! on get of Panarama of East
some of the West's top register- i field. Ten junior gets competed,
ed breeding herds from Cali- Grand Champion Female was
fornia. Colorado. Oreson and exhibited by Rancheria Angus
Washington, including the lar
gest registered herd in the Unr
DISCUSS OBSERVANCE Discussing plans for
observing United Nations Week in this area
are (left to right) Mrs. Ogdcn Kellogg, presi
dent of the League of Women Voters who is
pointing to the site of UN headquarters; Fred
lioy Neal, president of the local chapter of the
the Oregon United Nations association; and Carl
Brophy, United Nations Week .chairman.
Problems of United Nations
Reviewed in Anniversary Week
(Editor's note: The follow
ing article was written by
Carl M. Brophy, Medfnrd,
chairman of United Nations
Week for the local chapter of
the Oregon United Nations As
sociation. United Notions Day
will he observed Thursday,
Oct. 24.)
By CARL M. BROPHY
On Oct. 24, the United Nations
Charter will realize its 18th an
niversary. The General Assembly of the
United Nations has resolved
that Oct. 24 of each year should
be dedicated to making known
the purposes, principles and ac
complishments of the United
Nations; and by proclamation,
the President of the United
States has set that date as Unit
ed Nations Day in America.
What we read, sec on tele
vision and hear of the United
Nations relates primarily to the
proceedings before the General
Assembly when it takes up such
matters as the crises in the
Congo and Cuba. When we see
the United Nations dealing with
problems of such magnitude we
often experience a sense of dis
couragement at the progress
made toward satisfactory and
lasting solutions.
While It is true that many of
the solutions or attempted solu
tions to the problems faced at
the United Nations fall short of
the goal, in most cases they
avert more disastrous conse
quences and arc steps in the
right direction, often giving a
basis for further progress.
Not Realistic (imils
There arc those who say that
the United Nations should be
dissolved and that we should
all go our scwalc ways, each
finding a saint ion to his own
problem. Such critics claim
that the purposes and goals of
the United Nations nre not real
istic. Nothing could be farther from
reality than those criticisms. In
this era of almost instantan
eous communication with the
ever present and haunting
West Berlin Woman
Arrested as Spy
BERLIN (UPI) - A West
Berlin woman formerly cm
ployed as a typist for American
interrogators has been arrested
by police here on suspicion of
being a Communist spy, U.S. of
ficials said Saturday.
West Berlin police said the
30-year-old woman, identified
only as Renalc I., was placed
under "investigative arrest"
Thursday but has not bee n
charged.
U.S. officials said the sus
pect had worked as a clerk
typist for American personnel
who interrogated refugees from
Communist East Germany at
the West Berlin refugee center.
The American officials, how
ever, denied West Berlin police
reports that the woman had
served as chief translator for
U.S. intelligence men during her
employment at the refugee cen
ter between Dec., Ii)55 and June,
I960.
THIN COAT
NEW YORK (UPI) - FI1A
housing inspectors arc using a
Radget these days to scratch
test the paint on a house to
determine whether the paint is
the right thickness, reports
House and Home magaiine. The
pencil sized plastic gauge has
three teeth which cut the paint
surface to depths of three, four
and five thousandths of an
inch. Four thousandths is the
proper thickness for paint.
SENT TO HOSPITAL
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -George
Rivera, M, accused of
deliberately running down and
killing a Jehovah's Witness
from Itoseburg, Ore., was com
mitted Wednesday lo Atascade
ro State Hospital for the crimi
nally insane.
threat of nuclear holocaust,
world interdependence has be
come the reality and as a re
sult, world order has become an
absolute necessity.
Going our separate ways in
the world has generally result
ed in the use of armed force as
Ihe means of resolving disputes.
Certainly the maintenance of
our national strength is essen
tial pending satisfactory world
disarmament, but the use and
threat of force as the basis on
which to build a permanent
world order is unrealistic in this
nuclear age.
Must View Efforts
We must view the efforts and
accomplishments of the United
Nations not only in light of the
tremendous problems with
which it copes, but also in the
light of the overwhelming neea
for a world forum in which to
discuss and resolve world prob
lems.
In addition, we should also at
tempt to better understand the
many other areas of a less
glamorous nature in which the
United Nations is working. In
some of these other areas, great
things are being accomplished
to raise the standards of less
fortunate peoples and newly de
veloped nations and to smooth
frictions that have developed
between neighbors.
This work, of which most of
us know little or nothing, con
tributes greatly toward the de
velopment of an orderly society.
For example, in the Near
East the United Nations Relief
and Works Agency continues In
feed and clothe over a million
refugees and the United Nations
Emergency Force patrols daily
the armistice demarcation lines.
The United Nations has an
Economic Commission in Eur
ope, Latin America, in the Far
East and Africa where there are
resident representatives, pri
marily in newly developed
areas, providing essential tech
nical and administrative guid
ance. In the Far East, Ihe Unit
ed Nations is assisting in ar
rangements for self-government
and self-determination and is
actively engaged in easing re
lations in those neighboring
countries in disputes.
Kniliiirk limn Study
The United Nations is also
embarking upon a study of the
problems involved in Ihe ex
ploralion of outer space and
celestial bodies.
Although there was a lime
when only Buck Rogers would
dare consider travel lo the
moon now Ihe onlv question up-
pears to be whether a landing
on the moon will be in eight
years or less than eight years.
As a result, there are great
legal questions to be answered
in the not too distant future con
rernini! ownershin of celestial
bodies, rights to Ihe use of the I
natural resources there, tne law
that will govern activities in
space and so on. A special com
mittee of the t'niteil Nations on I
the peaceful uses of outer space
has initiated studies of these
problems ami the United Na
tions has successfully adopted
certain resolutions which pro
vide some basic principles, in
cluding a resolution adopted in
11 to the effect that interna
tional law and the Charter of
the United Nations apply to
space and celestial bodies.
Some of The Areas
These are but a lew of Ihe
many areas in which the United
Nations is working dally. If
more of us were familiar with
the vast scope of the work of
the United Nations and its ac
complishments, we would prob
ably tend to be less critical and
more appreciative of its place
in our world society.
This week. United Nations
Week, will give all of us an
opportunity lo better acquaint
ourselves with the' United Na
tions. To Ihe extent that we cm
do so, all of tis should partici
pate; since a thorough under
standing of Ihe United Nations
hy all Americans, all ol whom
are directly ittvohgd in sup
porting It, is an enlial ele-
mcnt to its continued and neces
sary existence.
If it receives the interest and
support of the peoples of the
world, It can, as staled by Presi
dent Kennedy in his last State
of the Union Message, ". . .
form the framework for a world
of law a world in which no
nalion dictates the destiny of
another, and in which the vast
resources now devoted to de
structive means will serve con
structive ends."
Blind Commission Burglars Steal Cash from Firm
Cuts Operating Fund
Medford police reported a se- ter and Associates. The thieves
ries of break-ins and attempted ; ransacked the Tycer office but
Fire Season Still
In General Effect
PORTLAND (UPI) The Ore-1 break-ins in the city Friday,
gon Commission for the Blind
trimmed its budget Friday.
The commission's budget
committee slashed $30,150 off its
operating fund more than the
six per cent or $29,000 cut re
quested by Gov. Mark Hatfield.
However, the committee
avoided trimming services, in
cluding the monthly allowance
to blind students.
The action followed crushing
defeat of the 1963 Legislalure's
$60 million tax program by Ore
gon voters in a special election
Tuesday.
including the theft of about $537
in cash from Armin Richter and
Associates, 1 King st.
Officers said the thieves gain
ed entry by prying off a rear
window screen and forcing the
window at the Lewis Tycer Ad
vertising agency on the ground
floor at 1 King st.
Then they forced the second
floor office door of Armin Rich-
ted States.
The Hoots Ranch won the
grand champion bull ribbon as
well as bull calf champion and
senior champion bull. Its closest
rival was Haystack Angus
Ranch, of Longmont, Colo.
Judge of the show was Profes
sor Herman Purdy, Department
of Animal Husbandry, Pennsyl
vania State University.
Major honors for champion
bulls were awarded as follows:
Bull Calf Champion and
Grand Champion Bull: Hoots
Bardoliermere 70 (a September
1962, son of Hoots Bardolier
mere, senior herd sire at Hoots
Angus Ranch); Junior Cham
pion and Reserve Grand Cham
pion Bull: Haystack Sir Gala
had (sired by Ankonian Excali
ber, Haystack Angus Ranch,
Longmont, Colo.); Senior Cham
pion Bull: Hoots Bardoliermere
30 (a Sept., 1960, son of Hoots
Bardoliermere).
Winners in group classes
were:
Three Bulls, owned by exhini
I tor: Haystack Angus Ranch,
first; Hoots Angus Ranch, sec
ond. Eight groups of three bulls
competed.
Two Bulls, bred and owned
by exhibitor: Hoots Angus
Ranch, first; Haystack Angus
The commission cut the
Ranch of Hat Creek, Calif.; and ' monthly allowance to blind stu
the Reserve Grand ChamDion dents before the election after
Female was exhibited by Is-; being told by the Department ( a ra"y by Oregon State Univer
land Acres, of Klamath Falls, of Finance and Administration i s'ty students as part of their
Noteworthy to experienced , to expect a 14 to 25 per cent ; Homecoming festivities
High School Student
Killed During Parade
CORVALLIS (UPI) - A 15-
year-om nign school girl was
killed here Friday night during
cattle breeders is the fact that 1 cutback
all Hoots Angus champion bulls . However,
at both the Pacitic international
and the Oregon State Fair were
sired by their 1959 Grand Cham
pion Bull of all major western
shows. This champion herd sire
is fast proving himself to be an
exceptionally prepotent produc
er of champions.
the governor
stored the allowance.
Robert Hiatt Passes
Architecture Exam
SALEM (UPI) The Oregon
State Board of Architect exam
iners Friday announced t h e
names of 12 registered ar
chitects who had successfully
completed a 36-hour written ex
amination. Among those listed were Don
ald L. Smith, Eugene; W. Ray
Glass, Corvallis; Junior D. Mil
ler, Klamath Falls; Robert D.
Hiatt, Medford, and R. Chandler
Soggc, Salem.
GAS USE UP
NEW YORK (UPI) Ameri
can home owners bought more
built-in gas ranges, gas clothes
dryers and central heating boil
ers in 1962 than in any previous
year, according to the Gas Ap.
plia -:e Manufacturers associ
ation. Preliminary year-end es
timates show sales of the three
types up 6.0, 13.1, and 4.2 per
cent, respectively, above the
1961 levels.
rairicia wustrack died in
stantly when she fell beneath
the wheels of a flatbed truck
filled with college students dur
ing a noise rally.
She had attempted to get on
the vehicle when it was moving
and had slipped.
n .. I h Ft .,cirlinnC FI9VA
. . .l ; D U I II 1 II l iiji.iv...- ......
apparently iook noimng - d ,mcwnat in a fewr
The cash was taken from a ,, lau " .. ,,:,.,.
u: tu- d;-i,. t : vanev Clues auu iuc
me cduuict ill uie mimei ui- . , ,. , ,
fice. Most of the money was in
GENERALS DISAGREE
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Three
retired generals disagreed
Thursday with Defense Secre
tary Robt. S. McNamara over a
bill that would require manda
tory four-year terms for mem
bers of the Joint Chiefs of
staff. '
$20 bills. A little under $17 was
in petty cash.
The ransacking of William
Dawkins and Associates's office
in the same building netted only
about $5 in cash.
Thieves also broke into the ad
joining offices of Dr. Bernard
T. Thompson, dentist, and Dr.
Duke G. Anderson, optometrist,
and took about $18.
Earlier Friday evening thieves
almost pried out the glass win
dow between the door and show
window at Weisfield's Jewelry
Store, 509 East Jackson st., and
had pried out a large piece of
glass at the Sears Roebuck farm
and garden store at the rear of
the main store. Thieves appar
ently failed to gain entry, police
said.
but the fire season is generally
still in effect.
Despite damp mornings, the
weather is still dry enough to
be hazardous, fire department
chiefs feel.
Burning permits are still re
quired on lands protected by
the State Forestry department
and within the Central Point
and Talent Rural Fire Protec
tion districts.
Open burning is now permit
ted inside the city of Medford
during all daylight hours after
a verbal permit has been ob
tained from the city fire depart
ment by telephone. Medford
residents may burn materials
in screened barrels up to 10
a. m. without a permit.
Permits are required in the
city of Ashland all year around.
About 70 per cent of all the
rubber used in the U.S. today
is synthetic, made from crude
oil or natural gas.
On Display
The Largest Selection of
GAS HEATING EQUIPMENT
in Southern Oregon
Space Heaters Wall Heaters Wall Furnaces
Forced Atr Furnace Suspended Furnaces
Infra Red Heaters Comb. Gas Hearer & Air Conditioner
A Large Selection of Makes and Models
Authorized Coleman Dealer
NATURAL GAS EQUIPMENT CO.
Hjaring ind Air Conditioning 111 W. Main Ph. 772-2322
Open Fridays 'Til 8 P.M. Saturdays 'Til Noon
ATTENTION ALL SKRINERS!
You Are Invited to Attend the
Josephine County Shrine Club
HALLOWEEN DINNER DANCE
And Guest Night Honoring Potentate
LYNN NEWBRY and his Divan
For all Shriners and their guests
Time: SATURDAY NIGHT, OCT- 26lh
7:30 P.M. to 1 A.M.
Place: Larry's new dining room
LARRY'S RESTAURANT, Grants Pass, Ore.
Price: $3.75 per plate, includes social hour
dinner and dancing.
Music by Johnny Lusk Orchestra
For reservations phone tusk Music Co. 772-8635
or Grants Pass Greenwood 6-4595
Josephine County Shrine Club
A WONDERFUL 3-DAY BAZAAR FOR COMMUNITY BENEFIT AND TO HELP FINANCE THE KINDERGARTEN FOR HARD-OF-HEARING CHILDREN
HIGHLIGHTS OF THE BIG
Fun Program
Carnival the complete carnival from the Shopping
Center parking lot
Foreign music recorded ... on the public address
system when other entertainment is not available
John Lusk playing the Baldwin organ and singing
humorous songs, we hope, also
Chancellors Medford Senior High School dance
band
Donna Hogan a soprano , , . singing French songs
in the Paris Sidewalk Cafe
Tony Lausman playing his concertina . . . this will
be taped for the P. A. system
The Checkmates girls trio from high school ... Pat
Selby, Jacque Long, Chris Helman
The Kinsmen two high school boys, John Eads and
Bob Haworth, singing folk songs, with Bob accom
anying on his banjo
Colleen Hope dancers dancing the French can-can
and the Hawaiian hula
Modeling of continental fashions by Burelson's in
both restaurants
And Other Sparkling Fun Features!
REMINDS YOU To Be Sure To Enjoy The
SPONSORED BY THE JUNIOR SERVICE LEAGUE
OCTOBER 25 26-27
RUMMAGE & FOOD
SALE-BAZAAR
30 Booths
... all types of new and used merchandise for sale . . .
rummage, homcbakcd foods, plants, baiaar gift items, art
works donated by artists of southern Oregon, an original
cook book, an oriqinal Christmas card.
KIDDIES
LAND!
. 9 rides and games of skill
burro ride.
. a puppet show
CARNIVAL
. plus continuous music and informal entertainment
. . . costumes of foreiqn lands . . . modeling of continental
fashions in the restaurants.
2 Restaurants
. . , the German (root) Beer Garden (featuring German sausage and pret
zels the Paris Sidewalk Cafe (featuring food catered by North's)
Top Off the Fun with FIESTA Ice Cream!
For Fine Dairy Products . . . Always Ask for "Jorgeiisens"
o t ' ",7
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