1
New Travel Restrictions Placed on Oommunist diplomats
Certain Areas
Will Be Closed
To Curb Spying
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
United States today clamped
new travel restrictions on Com
munist diplomats from eastern
Europe to prevent spying.
' Certain areas of the United
States now will be closed to
travel by these diplomats, as
they nave neen tor bovici ow
rials since 1955.
The purpose is to prevent the
satellite nation diplomats from
gathering intelligence data for
tnc Kussians Dy touring u.a.
defense areas which are barred
to Soviet officials.
Representatives of the em
bassies of Poland, Czechoslo
vakia, Burglaria, Romania, and
Hungary were summoned to the
State Department one by one
and informed of the new rules.
Overhauling Map
' Meantime, the department
was overhauling the map of
U.S. areas closed to Russian
travelers. The map, a patch
work of "closed" cities, coun
ties and states, will still place
some 26 per cent of the country
off limits. But the geographic
areas will be different.
The measure has been under
intense debate in the Kennedy
administration since last sum
mer. Military officials urged that
the Russians do not need to en
ter the closed areas, because
they can always send a Hun
garian or Czech diplomat or
military attache.
- State Department officials op
posed the measure, mey saia
some eastern European coun
tries recently have begun, or
indicated they will begin, cas
ing restrictions against U. S.
travelers.
j Counter To Policy
. The State Department said
the move runs counter to U.S.
policy of welcoming greater ties
with eastern European satellite
countries in hopes of loosening
their ties with Russia.
. The outcome of the dispute
was said to be a compromise.
.' Some supplementary travel
restrictions against eastern Eu
ropeans are being eased, in
cluding a requirement that the
State Department be given ad
vance notification, of trips.
. Officials said the new rules
involve another fundamental
change. Until now, U.S. travel
curbs have been a matter of re
tailiation for similar restrictions
by Communist countries. Now,
officials said, the travel regula
tions win be determined only on
grounds of security.
Hatfield's Message Draws Varied Reaction
Enthusiastic
Support, Bitter
Disapproval Told
By ZAN STARK
SALEM (UPI) -The special
session of the legislature was
launched Monday agreed there
was much to be done, but not
agreed on what should be done.
Reactions to Gov. Mark Hat
field's special message to a
joint session of the House Sen
ate ranged from enthusiastic
support to bitter disapproval.
Hatfield admonished lawmak
ers to go swiftly about their
work, then go home.
House Speaker Clarence Bar
ton, D-Coquillc, said the ad
dress was "what I expected."
Senate President Ben Musa,
I
Rogue Valley Edition
Medford
11 A IT
Page 2-A
Tribune
MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1963
NEW FOOD WRAP
NEW YORK (UPI)-Prc-cut
sheets of transparent plastic
wrap solve the sticky problem of
covering food and other prod
ucts without a struggle. The
sheets are interleaved with tis
sue paper, so that they can be
removed easily from dispenser
to -Ejects they are to cover An
envelope package contains 26
sneets of thi
Squares)
he wrap. (Saran Wrap
r SENIOR CITIZENS AS
BLOOD DONORS ,
Q. Should aldrr partont
Ore art called "lenior rill.
tnt") donate Uoadf
A. Most blood-collecting agen
cies will accept blood from
donors who are between 18
and t years of age. The tip
per age limit is imposed in
order to protect persons
whose health might be im-i
paired by the rapid loss of
an amount of blood that rep
resents 7 to 10 of their total
blood volume. Therefore, jieo
plo who are 60 or older are
generally not accepted as
donors.
COLA BEVERAGES
Q. po enta dtlnki contain
callrlntf
A. All cola drinks contain
caffeine. The Food and Drug
Administration permits use of
.caffeine in these beverages tip
to 1.2 grains per 12-oz. bot
tie. fly way of comparison,
lhe average 5-oz. cup of cof
fee contains about 1.5 grains
caffeine,
TTe pirlage prnrrlplion. In
aafr, effirirnl container that
protect the medlrine agaimt
fioiiible harmful efferta of
iglit, air or moisture.
FREE CITY-WIDE
DELIVERY SERVICE
Green Stamp
Hi
Main & Cintral 772-9431
D-The Dalles, commented
agree, we have a job to do. I
still hope we can get the job
done in seven or ten days.
House Minority Leader F. F
Montgomery, R-Eugene, said
"we will tighten our belts along
tne lines he recommended.
Senate Minority Leader An
thony Yturri, R-Ontario, termed
Hatfield's address "brief, clear
and to the point.
Worst Ever: Pearson
But Sen. Walter Pearson, D
Portland, blasted the message
as "tne worst address I have
ever heard any governor de
liver. I resent his remarks di
rected at the legislature. He of
fered no solution to the prob
lems." Underlying the day's activities
was a tone of seriousness.
Musa termed it "a different
attitude of legislators."
What It foretold was not clear.
Hatfield admonished lawmak
ers not to enact any new tax
measures. But within an hour
of his speech more than a dozen
had been proposed, and it ap
peared the flow had barely begun.
Barton commented "it s any
one's privilege to introduce bills
as long as they are gcrmain to
the subject and hand."
Pearson acidly noted,
"They're wasting their time and
the legislature's time by holding
tax committee meetinKs.
Musa refused comment. "It's
not for the Senate to pass judB'
ment on House tax proposals at
una time.
Confusion and Contrast
It also was a day of confusion
ana contrast.
There was confusion because
the normal legislative processes
were revved up to jet speed.
Six of the bills introduced Mon
day were given two readings
and rcierred to committee with
in an hour's time a process
mat under normal nroccdures
would take two days.
Contrast resu ed because loo-
islators assigned to committees
were put immediately to work,
while others had nothing to do
but wait.
Still unresolved was whether
the legislature would make
budget cuts, or allow the gov
ernor to make them.
There was no agreement in
Ways and Means whether it
should assume a one-shot mea
sure would be approved.
And mere were so many con
flicting views on proposed cuts
in basic school aid. that the
problem was turned over to a
subcommittee.
The responsible leaders con
tinued to voice the belief that
the session would end in a week
or so. But there was an under
lying nole of concern that in
dicated the session might ding
on tor a longer period.
snortiy alter the joint session
ended, Robert .lossy, secretary
treasurer of the Multnomah
County Citizens Committee for
economy and equitable taxation
-a Diancn ot he Broun that
spearheaded referral of the Still
million lax increase measure
presented petitions to Musa urg
ing adoption of the Liberty
Amendment. This proposed
change in the federal constitu
tion would outlaw Income taxes.
Foreign Briefs
VENEZUELAN GUERRILLAS KILL POLITICAL LEADER
BARQUISIMENTO, Venezuela (UPI) Communist guerrillas
armed with tommyguns shot and killed a rural political leader
Monday night in Sanarc, a village 60 miles south of this provincial
capital, It was reported today. The death of Castillo Hernandez,
local leader of the predominately-Catholic Copei party, increased
tne ion oi lied terror in Lara state to at least three dead In 24
hours.
Sheaf of Legal Papers Recalls Tragedy on Ketch
Bluebelle on Vacation Cruise Through Bahamas
ERHARD GETS ASSURANCE FROM BALL
BONN UPI) Undersecretary of Stale George W. Ball today
personally assured Chancellor Ludwig Erltard the United States
slates does not Intend to withdraw troops, from West Germany.
EAST GERMAN YOUTHS ESCAPE TO WEST
BERLIN (UPI) Five East German youths escaped In pouring
rain to West Berlin Monday night, West Berlin police said today.
aii were unucr its.
INDIA TO PRODUCE OWN TANKS
NEW DELHI, India (UPI) India will begin producing its own
tanks In late 19G5, the Defense Ministry announced today.
PRINCESS OF SIKKIM EXPECTING BABY
CALCUTTA, India (UPI) Princess Hope Namgyal of Sikkim,
the former New York socialite Hope Cooke, is expecting a baby,
This was confirmed here today by her husband, the Maharaikunv
bar of Sikkim, who said the infant is expected In February or
early marcn.
Profit Taking Led
By Electronics
Stops Advances
NEW YORK (UPI) - Some
afternoon profit taking today
snapped a string of three suc
cessive advances and turned
stocks irregularly lower.
Electronics were among the
first to move down from their
early highs. Fairchild Camera,
Beckman, General Precision,
Texas Instruments and Zenith
were off large fractions to more
than a point. However, Motoro
la, IBM and Havcg managed to
hold some of their gain.
Rails were the only group in
the Dow Jones averages to
show a gain. Strength in this
group reflects news that the
Kennedy administration and the
Soviets have reached an agree
ment on the basic conditions for
the sale of U. S. wheat to Rus.
sia.
Portland Produce
PORTLAND (UPII Dmrv mar
ket :
Em-To rrt.Hm- AA axtra
larcc 4R..S2c; AA lurce 4i,.4nc: A
lari:r 4.l-4iir; A A medium -tiM-tr
A imall 33-30c. rarloni t crnt
hiaher.
Butler-To Mailer,; AA unit A
prints K7c; cartons 3c hialier: B
prims Hflc.
Cheese i medium rurrrl Tn re.
i ','.TrV4".'4n;'- Pro''"ed American
3-1 lb. loaf. 43-i.ar.
DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW YORK (UPI) Dow
Jones final slock averages: 30
Industrials 750.21, off 3.50; 20
railroads 173.28, up 0.20; 15
Utilities 137.59, off 0.51, and
05 stocks 26,1.11), off 0.81. Sales
Tuesday were about 1.61 mil
lion shares compared with 3.37
million shares Monday.
TuearlHy'B price, on
stocks:
Allied Chemical
Alum Co Am (xdi
American Air Linea Ixdl
American Can
American Motora
AT&T
American Tobacco
Anaconda Copper
Arnu-o ...
American Standard
Bendlx Coin
Bethlehem Slecl
BoclnR Air
Brunswick
Caterpillar Cnrp
Chrysler Corp
Cocn Cola
CBS
Columbia C.as
Continental Can
Crown Z.cllerhach
Crucible Slrel
Curtis Wrlsht
Dow Chemical
Hu Ponl
tlastmnu Kodak
Ftrcslunc
ford .. .
Cenerat Dynamics
(Jeneral Kleclrlc
General Foods ixdl
General Motors
c.enral Portland Cement .
Georcla Pacillc
Great Northern Railway ..
Greyhound
Gull Oil
tlomestnkn
Idaho Power
IBM
Inl Paper
-lohns Mimvlllc
Kcnnrcoll Copper
Lockheed Alrcratl
Marlin
Merck
Montana Power
.. 31 ;
.. H;,s
.. 31 '
.. 41'.
.. 21',
.133
.. 271,
.. 47,
.. t3
.. 17
.. 4!lli
.. 30 1 j
. .Ill's
.. II',
.. 47
n;
.103
. ni'i,
.. 27'j
.. 42
.. 33
.. 22':
. 1!)' ,
7.1.,
ni-i,
7
at'i
23 ,
.14
.13 n
47',
411
. 4RS
.. 34 'i
.. 47',
. 77
.. 3!l
.. 20'.
. 1113'
Montgomery Ward
national Biscuit
New York Central
Northern Natural Gas
Northern Pacific
Pac Gas Etec
Penney J. C. -
Penn RR .
Pcrmancnle Cement
Phillips
Procter A Gamble
Radio Corp
Richfield Oil
Safeway
Scan
Shell Oil.
Soconv Mobil Oil
Southern .Co
Southern Pacific
Sporry Rand
Standard California ....
Standard Indiana
Standard N. J
Slokcly Van Camp ....
Sun Mines
Texas Co.
Texas Gulf Sulfur
Tex Pac Land Trust
Thlnkol
Trans America ,
Trans World Air
Tri-Contlnenlal
union Carbide
Union Pacific
United Aircraft
Uniled Air l.tnea
U. S. Plywood
U. S. Rubber
II. S. Slecl
Uniled Ulilllles
West Bank Corp . -
Wcstinchousc ..
Vounustown Ixdl
.. 34 i
.. 5H34
22"i
... 52 1 i
.. 4fi?i
.. 31
... 43 ',
.. 22',
... IS".
... 48'i
.. 7B'i
11'i
..43',
... fll',
... on',
... 44 i,
... 64 'J
... .12
... 34 ,
... IT.
... at',
... n'i
... 7fl'i
... 23 ' ,
... 1 0 '
... mi1,
... is
... 25
... 22
... .11'i
.. 2.1 'a
46H
..113
.. 40j,
.. 4.1 'i
.. 33'i
.. 63',
.. 411',
1 1 ',
.. .in
. 42
.. 36',
..US',
MIAMI (UPI)-Another sheaf
of legal papers kept alive today
a sea tragedy born two years
ago on the bloody decks of the
ketch Bluebelle in the dark wa
ters off the Bahamas.
It was on behalf of the only
survivor of the tragedy, Terry
Jo Duperrault, that suits were
filed in federal court Monday
seeking a total of $750,0OfJ from
three Miami brokers charged
with negligence in drawing up
charter papers lor tne last voy
age of the Bluebelle.
That was to have been a hap
py voyage, the dream vacation
of Arthur Duperrault, 44, a
Green Bay, Wis., optometrist
and his family. There was his
wife, Jean Duperrault, 38, and
the three children, Terry Jo, 11,
Rene, 7, and the brother, Bri
an, 14.
And there was the skipper,
handsome, suntanned Julian A.
Harvey, 45, a muscular adven
turer, former Air Force test pi
lot and racing captain. The first
mate was his pretty wife, Mary
Dene, 38.
The 60-foot Bluebelle, a trim
blue-hulled ketch that had been
built at Sturgeon Bay, Wis.,
sailed Nov. 8, 1961, from Fort
Lauderdale for the leisurely
cruise through the Bahamas.
The first news of the violent
end of that cruise came Nov. 13,
when Harvey was picked up by
a freighter as he drifted in a
dinghy in New Providence Chan
nel in th". Bahamas. Tied to his
boat was a rubber life raft car-
Russia Invited To
Present Views on
Denuclearization
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.
(UPI) The Soviet Union was
called on today to present its
views on denuclearization of
Latin America, a project that
could deprive the Russians of
Cuba as a missile base.
Ten Latin American countries
sponsored a resolution before
the eeneral assembly s main po
litical committee calling for a
hemispheric conference on the
proposal to declare the area
free of nuclear weapons.
Reference to Cuba
Although nobody mentioned
Cuba by name, reference was
made repeatedly in the opening
round of the debate to last Oc
tober's crisis which erupted
with disclosure that Russia
maintained missiles and bases
on Fidel Castro's island, well
within striking distance of the
United States.
In the settlement of the Lar-
Investment Funds
Nnon quotation! on te looted
itockn:
- Bid Asked
Bullock ia ;n u.titi
Chemical Fund 12 45 Kl ill
Colonlnr Encr 12.47 13 (CI
Eaton lluwurd Stk ... U .K. 13.32
Fidelity 17.07 1R.45
Fundamental Invest 10.25 11.23
Group Sec Aernsp. . 7 12 7 fit
Group See Com Stk 13.15 14 40
Hamilton HDA . 5 07 5 35
Miis Inv Growth Stk fl.33 n.34
National Growth ft .14 nil
Stock 111.8.1
TV - Elec 7 ..1JI
United Accum 13.18
United Income 12. 33
United Science 7 00
Vnluc Line Inc .131
Variahle 7 13
Weill. )K i on 14 ftl
Over-the-Counfer
Western Stocks
Hy I'nllptl Prrss Intf rnallnnal
mil amfI
Bnnk Ainprli'H 114 '. H7'.
nmsp CHiu'Rcte 31 'j II.Vj
Cnl Par Ulil 2.V, 27'a
Con Ki'ClRht !!', in'.
Cyprus Mtnrl M. S4'j
Kqultahls S&l. .IO'i :U '
1 Nniionnl Bnnk 72 7.Vj
.Innlvn 27'
MnrrlBon Kniutticn 2!). 31'.
Mull. Kennels
N W. Natural Ga ..
Orwn Melal
l'f,1l,
PGE
tl S. National Bank
Tektronix
Wot Coaul Tel
Weyerhaeuser .. .
33'.
I'.
211 '.
24',
na
, 21'
, 22'.
. 32'i
3.V,
1 1 j
27'i
House Members
Administered Oath
SALEM (UPI) - Two new
members of the House were
sworn in Monday shortly after
it was called to order.
Chief Justice William McAl
lister administered the oath of
of office to Mrs. Elizabeth Kel
say, widow of the late Rep. W.
0. Kelsay, D-Roseburg, who
was killed in an auto crash Oct.
4, and to Forest Grove Publisher
Hugh McGilvra, 57, who suc
ceeded Rep. Robert Jones, R
Portland. Jones resigned Oct.
31 to accept appointment as a
Multnomah County Circuit
Judge.
Portland Flu Cases
Claimed Increasing
PORTLAND (UPI) - Flu
cases in Portland are increasing
this year.
Dr. Thomas Mcador. city
health officer, said 2,013 cases
had been confirmed compared L
to 1,698 for the same period of
10B2.
There have been three deaths
from influenza so far compared
with four at the same time last
yea''- j
WASHINGTON (UPI) If and
when the Russians need to buy
potatoes and poultry. Sen. Ed
mund S. Muskic, D-Mainc, says
the U.S. government is ready
to help them out.
Muskic said Sunday that "no
government roadblocks stand in
the wny of U.S. sales of surnlus
potnlocs and chickens to Rus
sia." He said, however, that So
viet officials had not expressed
any interest in buying.
ribbcan crisis in the face of
U.S. reprisal threats, Russia
withdrew missiles , from Cuba
but Castro never permitted in
spection by the United Nations
or any other international
agency to verify their with
drawal. Cuba previously has demand
ed that U.S. nuclear weapons
be withdrawn from the Panama
Canal zone and Puerto Rico.
The Cuban attitude on the 10
power resolution was not yet
clear, although the sponsors
said privately they expected no
vote against it.
U. S. Support Expected
The United States was ex
pected to support the measure
if all the Latin American coun
tries do so.
Actually, the resolution sim
ply calls on the Latin Ameri
can countries to "initiate stud
ies" on hemispheric denucleari
zation. A conference was ex
pected to be called early next
year. , i
The political committee put
aside its disarmament debate
pel " g new negotiations to
reconcile the positions of the
United States and Russia.
rying the body of young Rene
Duperrault.
Harvey told the Coast Guard
when he returned to Miami that
a storm had snapped the mast
of the Bluebelle on the night of
Nov. 12 and sent it through the
hull of the ketch. There was a
fire and panic aboard, he said,
and when it was over the Blue
belle had gone down and the
only sign of his passengers was
the body of Rene, floating in a
life jacket.
It was almost as Harvey was
telling his story on the morning
of Nov. 16 that a man named
Nicholaos Spachidakis on
freighter named the Captain
Theo spotted what he thought
was a fishing buoy bobbing on
tne Atlantic, this was Terry
Jo, severely sunburned, but
alive.
The next day, as doctors re
ported she would survive her
ordeal, Harvey slashed himself
fatally with a razor blade in his
Miami motel room.
When Terry Jo could tell her
story, it didn't jibe with Har
vey's. On the night the Bluebelle
went down, she recalled, she
was awakened in her cabin be-low-decks
by her brother's fran
tic cry: . "Help daddy. Daddy,
help."
When she went outside she
found her mother and the boy,
young Brian, lying in pools of
blood near the stairway to the
deck. On the deck, she said she
found Harvey with a pail of wa
ter, and he ordered her back
below.
Up Second Time
She said when she was up a
second time to escape the wa
ter rising in her cabin she found
the decks awash and saw Har
vey leaping overboard toward
an empty dinghy. She saved
herself with a life raft she
found still aboard.
This was the Coast Guard's
conclusion:
That Harvey killed his wife,
the Duperrault parents and Bri
an, and scuttled his ship, but
did not harm the two girls
"probably in the assumption
that they would drown when the
vessel sank."
Rene probably did drown, the
Coast Guard said, and Harvey
picked up her body to lend cred
ibility to his story.
The "most probable cause"
for the tragedy, the Coast
Guard said, "was the state of
mind of Julian A. Harvey," and
a $20,000 double indemnity in
surance policy Harvey had tak
en out on his wife not long be
fore was listed as a possible mo
tive. Terry Jo, now 13, lives with
relatives in West De Pere, Wis.
Monday's suit was filed by the
Kellogg-Citizens . National Bank
of Green Bay on behalf of Ter
ry Jo.
C&rds
for Thursday, Nov. 2S
SWEM'S
217 E. MAIN
Mcrford, Or-ogon
Member by Invitation National Selected Morticians 1
funeral service
costs are personal matters
provided in keeping with the
individual wishes of each family.
We have funeral services in every price range.
Our prices are plainly marked at all times
and there are no hidden extras. . .
Here are facts, quoted from
a recent survey by National
Selected Morticians, cover
ing 162,891 services in
North America. As mem
bers of this group, we participated in this study.
Under $200 4.2
$200 to $350 ... 8.5
$351 to $600 ...27.8
S601 lo $1000 48.4
Over $1000 ...11.1
(MAKE YOUR OWN DECISION
with FULL KNOWLEDGE -
Conger-Morris
WEST MAIN AT SIXTH
I
PORTLAND niPli nrev.r.1
ihlrkent No I irade (Irenrcl to
retailer.. Kryera. whole drawn, 2!l
J7c ' lb ; eul.un 33-40c lit; hen.
'Bhl type, whole drawn. 21-2.V
H'. llchl t.oe hens, rut-tin. 1.
neavy Whole. 3.V3!ic lb.
30c lb .
Portland Livestock
POnTI.AND (ltPIl IISDA
Cattle Monday 1200. Choiee aleen
near lonn lh. 34 w mixed snod
chnlee under 1 100 lb. 2:1 .10.24 2."i;
mixed KotHl-ehotee ticilera 21
22 SO Cattle today 31)0 Standard
!b"75011""I: b" tuller.ullllty
Calvea Monday 1,10 Mich .land-ard-good
210.270 lh vealera 2.1-21
talvci today .10 No early teal
.S".t'2Prt"y m" 1 ""l ' hutch
eri I6-1S2.1 Hogt lodav 2.10. r.arlv
!b2 mnA 3 bulcnr moatly
Sheep Monday and lodav I4W
Choice-prime woolcd ulauihlcr
lamb. tB-18 21; thoice.prlma with
,NoodY,,5,V7-"J u,""-
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