Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 19, 1963)
Try and By BENNETT CERF- " A FRATroMiTu u . J n.,,.h . Use lch'San nt in for a thor- ;wTndcws SL tTe which involved sendin 311 the ZTZon Z 1 .laU"dry' s an angry ') across the road. "Gentle .."men,' it read. "We must ''must insist that you put JJ back the curtains in your j upstairs windows imme ' diately. We are not in terested in a course in .anatomy." j, Back went this note s from th fraternity broth ers: "Dear Girls: This course it not compul- sory." People who assumed that beinr one or h ,ii,i men in the world automatically guarantees happiness and lack -of care must have been shocked to hear the comments of billion- aire J. Paul Getty on television. "The best times I've had in my ...life were ones that didn't cost me a cent," recalled Mr. Getty. "What worries me is that I'm on the dull side. I'd give most of my fortune for a better personality." Why does Mr. Getty con tinue working very, very hard? "After all," he was reminded, .""You're not going to be able to take your money with you." .-. "That's a good thing, I guess. It might be a burden," he nodded "wand rushed back to his office. i A wild riot in a tough West Texas oil town brought a hurry real! for the Rangers. When only one Ranger alighted from the Scar, he was asked where the others were. He replied, "There's only one riot, isn't there?" , 1963, bjr Bennett Cert. Distributed by King Futures Syndiutt Travel Restrictions Called Harassing Retaliatory Move A. ROBERT SMITH Mail Tribune Washington Correspondent '7 WASHINGTON - President Kennedy has hinted that the chief reason for closing many "Sections of the country to travel by Communits bloc diplomats " was to impair spying on nuclear missile bases. v Behind this decision was an "Incident involving a Hungarian diplomat who reportedly visited "several, new missile bases in ""the Northwest some months 'ago, including the new ICBM ""base being built at Great Falls, lont., causing consternation at "'the Pentagon. In Oregon, the new travel "xrder makes Multnomah, Mor row, Linn, Klamath, Coos and "Benton counties off-limits to diplomats from Russia and the "Eastern Eurpean Communist satellite nations of Hungary, ''Bulgaria, Poland and Czecho slovakia. Oregon has no nuclear missile "bases, but these counties con tain most of Oregon's few mili tary installations, notably a jet "fighter base at Klamath Falls as rwell as jet fighters based at "yortland International Airport, the Air Force's SAGE base near ""Corvallis and the Navy's Board nan bombing range. . Others Oft Limits ' In addition, seven other Ore- Eon counties, making 13 in all, were declared off-limits to Rus sian diplomats but not to satel--iite country diplomats. They are Lane. Douglas, Marion, Polk, Washington, Yamhill and The Rogue Valley SOLOMON Hear how God is using this man to His Glory! Over 3000 souls saved the first six months of his ministry. Whatever your faith-whatever your belief, you should hear him. God will bless you abundantly. T November 21 -DINNER MEETING 7 P.M. NORTH'S CHUCK WAGON -$1.75 per Plate Phone Reservations Early 772-7767 or 779-2288 Stop Me ..... Clackamas counties. For the past two years only five Oregon counties Clatsop, Columbia, Coos, Hood River and Mult nomah have been off-limits to Soviet diplomats. Asked at his news conference by this reporter to explain the rationale of expanding this re stricted area, Kennedy indicated that it is a harassing retaliatory move against the Soviets. "In the case of the Soviet Union, 26 per cent of their coun try is off-limits to the United States, and we have put the same percentage of ours," said the President. "If they would be willing to change that per centage or drop it, I think we would be willing to." The newly imposed travel re strictions on satellite nation diplomats were explained by Kennedy in this way: "We have attempted to put some limita tions on the travel of bloc mill tary attaches, because we feel it is important to the security ot the united States, and to the Alliance. The base of the alli ance rests upon the nuclear lorces ot the united States. I think we have to protect their security. The Defense Depart ment felt very strongly that this was important, for the security of the United States or other wise it would not have been done." Informed sources added that Communist intelligence work was being conducted by mill tary attaches connected with East European embassies here who were free to travel any where in the country. The Hun garian diplomat who was snoop ing on Northwest missile bases apparently violated no restric tions. Tourists Not Restricted , The new order doesn't restrict Soviet tourists or newsmen, only diplomats. Officials explained Language Teachers Learn Army's Way GEARHART. Ore. (UPI) - Language teachers from throughout the Pacific Northwest at a two-day convention here learned how the armed services run their language program. Col. Lloyd H. Gomes, director of the Defense Language Insti tute, Washington, D.C., told some 300 teachers the basic dif ference between the armed services method and that of the schools in language instruction "is that we concentrate heavily on speaking and understanding a language." "In a general language course the schools touch more 'leavily in the areas of reading and writing than we do, and they in corporate literary works with the languages, he said. He added that service instruc tion is more intense, with the average institute student going to school 40 hours a week and studying nothing but langmge. Classes also are limited to eight students maximum. National Grange Princess Selected PORTLAND (UPI) - Miss Marie Newton, 22, of Winston Salem, N.C., is the new National Grange princess. She was chosen as the Grange neared the end of its national convention here. She is a school teacher. Another member of the Old Richmond Grange at Winslon- Salem, Richard L. Angell, 18, finished second in the race for national prince title. This was won by James H. Simpson, 21, Kuna, Idaho. The awards were based on outstanding Grange and com munity work. Miss Marion P y 1 e, 23, Bethany, W. Va., was runner-up in the princess contest. Anti-Suicide Posters Declared Depressing BEDFORD, England (UPD A local bus company today re jected an anti-suicide group's advertising posters because they would "depress passen gers." . The posters, offered by the "Bedford Samaritans," read: "Despair? If you are in despair and tempted to suicide and don't know where to turn for help, ring Samaritans, Bedford 2200." that the order is designed to check the activities of trained military attaches who can gath er valuable information about precise locations of missile bases and other likely soviet targets if they are free to drive about the country in automobiles containing instruments used for such intelligence work. The new order won't solve the problem of spies moving about the country, whether they be Americans or foreigners dis guised as tourists. Travel of cultural exchange groups, such as the Bolshoi Ballet, or visiting Russian foresters, educators or engineers looking at dams, wouldn't be affected by the order. Within closed Multnomah county, the city of Portland re mains open to Red diplomats, but they must use ran or com mercial air transportation to reach the city and not bus or auto transportation which would necessarily pass through closed areas. Chapter of the FULL GOSPEL BUSINESS MEN Presents . . KING A1KDK0RD NOV -L "HA " f r 0Ap$i Stf MAID OF COTTON Sharon Lee Moore, 20, Hollywood, UCLA senior majoring in apparel design, has been named California Maid of Cotton. She will represent California in the national Maid of Cotton competition in Memphis, Tenn., next summer. (UPI) 1W TO Baker Sized WASHINGTON (UPI)-Speak- ing of Bobby Baker, as who isn t these days, I have a vivid image of the unfrocked Senate majority secretary in my gar den of memories. I remember how Baker used to stand by a chamber door during roll calls. As certain senators filed in to cast their votes, you could see him mouth the word "aye." Was Baker telling the sena tors how to vote? Or at least how the majority leadership wanted them to vote? I used to think so, but now I m not sc sure. In the licht of subsequent de velopments, it seems entirely possible that rather than saying "aye" he was merely saying "Hi." I have altered my original impression owing to the fact Soft and Slender 14H-2414 Never underestimate the charm of a bow especially when it points up a neckline as pretty as this. Note graceiui, inverted-pleat skirt. Printed Pattern 9233: Half Sizes 14&-16&, 18&, 20&, 22&. Sizes 14,-4e, 16V4, Wk, 20'i; 22'A, 24'4. Size 16Vi requires 3'4 yards 45-inch fabric. FIFTY CENTS in coins for this pattern add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Marian Martin, Med ford Mail Tribune, Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS with SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. CLIP COUPON FOR 50c FREE PATTERN in big, new Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog, just out! 354 design ideas. Send 5IZES 1 MAIL TRIBUNE, MKDKORD, OREGON ) Apparently Up All Wrong that I apparently had Baker sized up all wrong. Forgotten Man Although Baker has been pic tured as an influential figure, if you took a poll of the Sen ate today you probably would get the idea that most senators barely knew him. "Bobby Baker?" they will say. "Let me sec. That name sounds familiar. Isn't he the singer who made a record of 'Mack the Knife?' " Obvibusly, anyone that ob scure wouldn't have been post ed at the door to pass along tne word on voting, bo he must have been just passing the time or day instead. But if Bobby was not the Sen ate power I took him to be, I still cling to my first concep tion of his ability to throw a party. On that point there is no gainsaying that he was a whiz. I recall all too well the for mal opening of a plush new oceanfront motor lodge in which he had an interest. Bak er invited a few hundred of his most initimate friends to help him celebrate the occasion. The guests, who included a few run-of-the-mill freeloaders like me, were transported to the Atlantic shore in a fleet of air conditioned buses. Police escorts were provided along the entire 150-mile route. In the rear of each bus was a bar and a bartender, who kept the passengers plied with champagne and other potent potables during the journey. By the time we reached our domination, I was not only plied. I was ply-eye. And that was only the beginning. We arrived at the inn just In time for a cocktail party at which the drinks were served by long-legged beauties wear ing black net stockings. The cocktail party lasted un til time for the return trip, at which point the bartenders on the buses resumed pouring champagne. When they poured me off the bus about midnight, I felt like some senators do now. Bobby Baker? Who he? SOVIF.TS GET 'HELP' PARIS (UPI) - U.S. Under secretary of State George W, Ball id Monday Western long term credits are allowing the Soviet Union to keep its mill tary production in high gear and to shore up its agricultural crisis, informed sources said. AND ON THf SACK USE CHRISTMAS SEALS ''-ry MAIL tARLY EI J CHRISTMAS rjLk STAMPS Ml Mm FIGHT TUBERCULOSIS md other Respiratory Diseases MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE Check Seminar Set Here This Week Area law enforcement agen cies were completing plans to day for a Check Seminar, for Jackson county businesses to be held Wednesday and Thursday, Nov. 20 and 21, in the court house auditorium. The reminar is designed to aid businessmen and their employ es in detecting false checks, which are a particular problem during the holiday season. Th i Jackson County District Attorney's office, the Oregon State Bureau of Identification and Investigation, and the Fed eral Bureau of Investigation will participate in the seminar, as well as the sheriff s office and city police department. A session will be held from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Wednesday for employers and managers. Two sessions Thursday, from 9 a.m. to noon and from 7 to 10 p.m., has been scheduled for employees. , Firm Files Against The Dalles Schools THE DALLES (UPI) - The Harvey Aluminum Co. has filed new motions with the Wasco County clerk in connection with the case it brought last year against School District 9 (Chen owith) just west of here. The pending case deals with the boundary line between Dis trict 9 and School District 12 (The Dalles). The motions ask that if the boundary line is determined to be as contended by School Dis trict 12, then $89,132 of the firm's 1963-84 tax money should be allocated and disbursed to District 12 rather than District 9. Harvey last Friday paid $511, 116 in property taxes to cover 1963-64. District 12 is a defendant in the school district boundary case but has adopted the plaintiff's position. Army Cook Held On Murder Charge BOISE (UPI) -George LeRoy Stedtnitz, 20-year-old Ft. Lewis, Wash., Army cook, was held to day without bond on charges of shooting to death a member of a religious entertainment group. Hit once in the face and twice In the body with bullets from a British .303 rifle was Eugene Raymond Carroll, 22, Boise. An FBI agent, conducting the case since it occured on- gov ernment property, said Stedtnitz was charged with first degree murder after turning himself in to the Boise police. The agent said Stedtnitz walk- CENTER: DYNAMIC M CONVERT ZZ' I FOREGROUND: JCTftTAR HOLIDAY COUPE '"afeT", nL." - A Now there are three Ml series... andthenewilBtStarMI VISIT VOUIt LOCAL AUTHORIZED OLDSMOBILI J.R.'s WHITNEY OLDSMOBILE, 415 South Riverside Avenue iwwih.iiU I mi g 0 4 ACADEMY HEAD Capt. Charles S. Minter Jr., top photo, will , become superintendent of the U. S. Naval Academy next February. Capt. Sheldon H. Kinney, a native of Pasadena, Calif., lower photo, will succeed Minter as commandant of mid shipmen. (UPI) ed into the Veterans' Adminis tration hospital recreation room Saturday night and fired at Car- roll, a member of a group that entertains at the hospital each Saturday night, bledlmlz s moth er is the leader of the group, the agent said. The agent said .Stedtnitz and Carroll knew each other, but motive had turned up in the in vestigation. WHIM M MIM IS I m D. WINNING "OARRV TUESDAY. NOVEMBER, 10, 1963 Complaints Are Filed ASHLAND Complaints for carrying a concealed weapon and driving while under the in fluence of intoxicating liquor have been filed against Charles Lyle Murphy, 35, of 605 N. Mountain Ave. Murphy was arrested by Ash land police following a series of events at the Cooks Reception Beer Parlor, 66 E. Main St. He was then lodged in the coun ty jail. According to Herb Hayes, Ashland Police Chief, one of his officers was called by the beer parlor at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, where it was reported a man arrived in a taxi, went to a rest room, fought with a man Court Asks Further Discrimination Views WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Supreme Court, by a 5 to 4 vote, pressed the federal gov-er-iment Monday to submit fur ther views on whether restau rants and other places of public accommodations may bar Ne gro customers on the basis of race. In submitting its views to the court last month in a series of "sit-in" cases from Maryland, Florida and South Carolina, the Justice Department had care fully skirted the broad consti tutional questions involved in such discrimination. INSURANCE SMITHS Fred R. Brmnin, CIA "Mr. Insurance" UNLESS WE CHECK FOR YOU, YOU'LL NEVER KNOW how much we can save you by packaging your personal or business policiesl Your insurance money as we spend our own. SAVE WITH Medford Insurance Agency The R. A. Holmes Agency "the Insurance Center" 25 West Main Street Dial 773-7343 1 772-4444 Ai near js your telephone . .. I no I No need to nettle for a fraction nf the action : ; : with three frent new Olds 88 on the acene! Sample the Super 88, for example, and watch 330 horae power'a worlh of Rocket V-8 roaponse in action! Move over In the daring new Dynamic 88 . . . and move out in Oldsmobile'a popular-priced popularity alar. (Full 123-inch wheelbaae and four-coil-apring ride are only the beginning!) Now teat-drive number three Jetalar 88 the newenl, loweat priced 88 of all. Along wilh "wow-winning" alyle.it porta 330 cubic inches of V-i 8! Which in for you? See QUALITY DIAL! MOOR! SHOW" t TU1DAV A 5 in Ashland already In the room, tore off the rest room door and left in the same taxi. The officer arrested Murphy 15 minutes lata- while driving a pickup truck on a nearby street. In checking the truck, officers said they found a load ed .32 caliber revolver. Victim of the fight at the beer parlor was Leland Donca, 32, of Route 1, Box 437, Talent. 73 YEARS OF SAFETY and sound money management Lowell A. Iverson "Mr. Homeowners" will be spent as carefully brand new Jettire ttocket. your Oldnmobile Dealerl NIOHT t C-TVI- if la ME0F0K0-513 Mulhnl Shopplnf Cm. I.l.phtoi: 779-1221 50c for Catalog. 1