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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 24, 1963)
Mrs. Neuberger Faces Holidays Without Good Cheer of Seashore Bill By A. ROBERT SMITH Mail Tribune Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON - Sen. Mau rine Neuberger faces the holi days without the good cheer from a Senate victory she had hoped to gain with her Oregon Dunes seashore park bill, Sen. Wayne Morse, refusing to be a jolly Santa, denied his junior colleague the gift of CO' operation in bringing the bill up for debate. After Morse threatened to talk at great length if Senate leaders dared to bring up her bill, the Oregon Dunes measure was sidetrack ed while the Senate took up and quickly passed a similar fn MINERAL BATHS AND ARTHRITIS Q, I hare arthritis and have had little success with due tars Would warm mineral baths help? A. Perhaps you have expect ed loo much from doctors. There is no cure for arthrili. Warm baths are only a part of the tola! basic treatment of the condition. Such baths should always be prescribed by a physician familiar with the case. This is essential not only to obtain the most benefit but al&o to avoid harmful effects. appendicitis . Q. If a icoman developed appendicitis during preg natuyt would the doctor op crate' If mo, icould tilts damage the -child? A. The doctor would operale if the mother's life was in danger. The child would not necessarily be harmed. Remember the diagnosis i and treatment of disease is the junction of the pa ' tietu's personal physician, Prescription, filled wild ex pert professional care liy phurmarisls who lake a pv sonal interest in you. park bill on Lake Michigan called Sleeping Bear Dunes. Mrs. Neuberger was not dis heartened by the delay and re mained confident that Senate approval of her bill is assured early next year, despite Morse's hostility to a key feature of the bill. The Senate's expeditious han dling of the Sleeping Bear bill tended to sustain this confident forecast. Morse and a number of Republican senators express ed opposition to the clause in the bill allowing federal con demnation of residential prop erty, but the Senate approved the bill without change in less than an hour. The original Sleeping Bear bill sponsored by Sen. Philip Hart, D-Mich., provided for a 77,000-acre park including 1587 structures, many of them resi dences. The Senate Interior Committee trimmed it down to 42,000 acres covering 288 structures. The committee had performed similar surgery on the Neu berger bill, trimming it from 42,000 to 30,000 acres, thereby reducing the number of resi dences in the park from 264 to 15. The committee, however, felt the government should retain the right of eminent domain in creating new parks. In both bills, it provided that after homeowners sell to the govern ment they can still live in their homes for 25 years. Morse took the occasion of the Sleeping Bear bill's considera tion to condemn this provision in both bills. "My position of principle will be maintained by me regardless of whether only one landowner or 1,500 are affected," he said. He predicted this issue "will result in a series of mass meet ings in my state in the months ahead." He said it was "probab ly the hottest issue" in his 1962 re-election campaign and that it has engendered a controver sy that will rock its (Oregon) politics for some time to come." Morse claimed that feel i n g against the Dunes bill is so high on the Oregon coast that when President Kennedy consid ered inspecting the dunes by auto on his conservation tour last fall, "it was said that if he did that, he would be picketed." "In my opinion, when a state's delegation is not united in re gard to such an issue, neither the Senate committee nor the Senate should seek to impose upon the state a proposed park which causes conflict of this kind within a state," he said. (When Morse championed the Hells Canyon dam bill a decade ago over opposition from other members of the Oregon delega tion, and got this same commit tee's approval, the prospect of imposing a federal project on the state with a divided delega tion didn't dissuade him.) Morse said he favors a park but that there are more Oregon dunes in public ownership "than the public park could ever use and not one square foot of addi tional sand dunes need be con demned." The Sleeping Bear park would be created from 10,000 acres of public and 32,000 acres of pri vate land on the Michigan coast. The same group of GOP sena tors who signed a dissenting re port against the Oregon Dunes park's condemnation feature op posed the Sleeping Bear park entirely as unnecessary. Morse said he favored t h a Sleeping Bear park but without the condemnation clause. But he made no attempt to delete the clause from the bill, pre sumably because it was obvious that he lacked support enough to win. The Senate's approval of the Sleeping Bear Dunes park in this form fortifies Mrs. Neu berger's hand for the day the Senate takes up her bill; but Wayne Morse has pledged to make a hard fight against it. Pone Says oly Land Trip No 'Tourist Excursion' Regional Edition Page 2-A MEDFORDfeTRIBUNE MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 196.1 Vegetable Oil Exporter on Bail; Awaiting Trial FREE CITY-WIDE DELIVERY SERVICE &9C Croon Stampi mn Main & Central 772-9431 NEWARK, N.J. (UPI)-An- thony (Tino) De Angclis, for merly the nation's biggest edi ble oils exporter, was free on bail today awaiting trial on an 18-count Indictment charging him with transporting forged warehouse receipts across state lines. A federal grand jury Monday indicted the 48-year-old presi dent of the bankrupt Allied Crude Vegetable Oil Refining Corp., of Bayonne, N.J. The jury accused him of transport ing forged warehouse receipts for $30.4 million worth of edi ble oils that apparently never existed. De Angclis surrendered im mediately, pleaded innocent and was released on $5,000 bail. Each count of the indictment carries a maximum penally of 10 years in prison and $10,000 fine. De Angclis was granted bail after he agreed to surrender his passport and remain in the New York-New Jersey area, condi tions insisted on by Assistant U.S. Atty. Sanford .laffe. The grnnd jury was continu ing lis investigation to deter mine it De Angels also lorged the warehouse receipts, .lalle said. Allied Crude went bankrupt Nov. II) when it could not meet $18.6 million in margin calls. A multi-million dollar commodi ties scandal which had reper cussions on Wall Street and abroad developed when credi tors of Allied Crude began searching for the oil for which they held warehouse receipts. The firm had obtained credit on the basis of receipts for mil lions of pounds of oil that was supposed to be in storage tanks at a huge tank farm in Bayonne. Bruce T. Mills Registered Representative PACIFIC NORTHWEST COMPANY Invoitment Socuritiot Since 1921 302-3 Fluhrer Bldg. Central and Main Phone 773-7319 Edmund E. Han Vic. President Tetrphone 773-7319 to consult with Mr. Hass nr Mr. Mill on Investment and retirement programs using the securities of utilities, banks, in iu ranee, industrial, and Mutual Fund &htrcv Other offices in Portland, Salem, Eugene, Se.tttle. Spokane, Tacoma, Aberdeen, Bcllingham, Yakima, Wenatchce, Walla Walla, Kcnnewick, Boise, Lewiston. ID...... AClflC orthwest Company investment Securities Members: Midwest Slock Exchange Correspondents of . . . KIDDER, PEADODY and COMPANY Menibern New York Stock Exchange Snider Lectures at St. Mary's School John Snider, former Mcdford mayor, and organizer of the Sister City Committee, illustra ted a lecture on Alba, Italy, to students of St. Mary's High School recently. Snider emphasized Ihe an tiquity of the city in contrast wilh its hustling modern indus tries. Colored slides showed Roman relics (although Alba pre-dates Home), medieval cas tles, and street markets co-existing with substantial business enterprises in chocolate candy, textiles, and newspaper pub lishing. Points of common interest be tween Ihe Sister Cities stressed by Snider were pear growing, Ihe use of Oregon plants sent by Mcdford to Alba, and the naming of a dress design pro duced in Alba. The place of young people in Ihe home and in industry re ceived special mention, and pic lures of young Alba residents who lived in Medford for a lime were shown. Portland Livestock POnTLAND lUPII Onlrv mar KCRS To ITtnilrn,: AA rMrii lai-IlL- Ift-.VJr; AA Ifll'ltn 47-.W; A litlttr 4."-47r. AA mnlnini 4l-4.ir: A small U.V.Ille; carton 1-cent hlnhr-r llutter-To iTlmlcrv AA and A prints li7c. cut-tons ;tc higher. B print. ttttc. L'lu'osr inirtlium rurcili To rr Inllrrs 4ft-41o; irm'r.scil Ameri can .VI (I II). Inal. 4.1 -me POUTl.AND tlUMi nrioori chhlrrn No 1 grmte rircsM-rl to retailers Frvers. whole drawn. Jfl,'..-J7 mosllv 2R..to,' lb; cut-up ill. tile lit, hens. hKht l pe. whole iliawn. I'ti-LMc lit. In:lit lpe hens, cut-up. 'J.VJric Ih.i heavv whole. j.i-ll!lc III. Prayer for Peace, Unity in World To Be Offered VATICAN CITY (UPl)-Pope Paul VI said today his pilgrim age to the Holy Land is no tourist excursion but rather an "historic voyage" to pray to God for peace and unity in the world. In a speech to the cardinals and other members of Ihe Ro man curia gathered for their traditional Christmas Eve audi ence, the pontiff said his trip will be "rich in grace and peace for the church and the world." "What is this trip?" he asked rhetorically. "A tourist excur sion? A political expedient? An evasion ot our duties wnicn keep us here?" ureal Importance Then, answering the questions he posed, the Pope added: We hope to encounter the Lord in our trip, which seems for its novelty, for its signifi cance, for its resonance, to as sume great importance, the sig nificance of which we cannot yet calculate, but which we feel to be immense, at least as a symbol, at least as a portent." fope Paul s pilgrimage is scheduled for Jan. 4-G. In his Christmas message he recalled the Magi, the three Biblical Kings who brought gifts from the East to the new-born babe. Paul said the coming Christ mas filled his heart with de sire for a world free from hun ger, (or a world of peace and for unity between men in Christ. First of Several Events The papal Christmas message was the first of several Vati can events In connection with Christmas celehrntinns. Tonight Ihe pontiff will say midnight Mass In Ihe Sisline Chapel for members of the diplomatic corps accredited to (he Holy iee. Ihe Popes message, over Vatican Radio, began by ex tending "to all of you our best wishes for a blessed Christ mas." He said "people who possess so many objects of so-called exterior happiness often stand in need of interior happiness." This "genuine, personal, pro found and sincere" inner happi ness was his wish lor all. The Pope said that in view ing the "panorama of nations" Ihe pressing need of mankind is peace. News of Kennedy's Death Withheld by Johnson Because of Fear of 'Worldwide Conspiracy' WASHINGTON (UPI) - Fear that President Kennedy's assas sination might be part of a "worldwide conspiracy" to kill all officials in line for the presi dency prompted President Johnson to order news of Ken nedy's death withheld for a time. Assistant White House Press Secretary Malcolm Kilduff said Monday that Johnson ordered word of Kennedy's death with held at least until he could leave Youngstown Up; Most Stock List Prices Stay Firm NEW YORK (UPI) Stocks were mostly firm today. Youngstown rose l'i in a steady steel section which in cluded fractional gains in Beth lehem and V. S. Steel. Chrysler, Ford and General Motors all tacked on fractions but American Motors and Stu- debaker were unchanged. Chem icals dipped fractions. Mission Corp moved up more than 1 in the oils where Standard Oil N.J. slipped a large frac tion. IBM, Control Data and Electronic Associates paced a firm electronics section with gains of more than 1 each. Pan American World Airways advanced 2. Xerox jumped 4'i but Polaroid tacked on only Vi. Corning Glass, Dr. Pepper and Itohm & Haas moved lower. DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YORK (UPI) Dow Jones final stock averages: 30 Industrials 7S8.30, off 3.78; 20 railroads 178.01, off 1.34; IS utilities 138.14, off 0.16, and 65 stocks 266.08, off 1.10. Sales (Monday went about 4.54 mil lion shares compared wilh 4.6 million shares Friday. .. 4.V, .. IH's ..137', .. 27', .. 43's .. 44 3, .. 22'. .. 47'i Portland Produce I'llll I I ANI tl'IMl l.'SDA Cal tle J.t Mostlv slaughter hellers, sood-ehotce 841-tmo lt heifer 20, with heavy end scaling llt-ll lh at lit. no other eat l lest ol ttadc. Calves nope Hogs 2M It S I anil 2 harrows anil Kilts l)n.2-JO ll lti-lil2.'. 1-2 sows 2.V1.2HH lh 13. M. 2-3 tirade 42V.lll Iti II .ul-10 .VI : Sheep 7.Y Mostly ewes and no 1 early sales Over-the-Counter j Western Stocks I By I nlird Prri liilf rntton1 . Punk Amrrlr . I Hoisr (. HM'H.lr . C.ll PlH' 1 Con F'meht ' fvimiit Mtnrn ! Knuitntile S.V1 i Im National hank 1 .t.mlsrn I Mt-rriMin Knurl I Mult Hounds N W N.ilurnl C.n . 1 Oregon Mclnl I PP& L PCK 111 S Nalionttl linn!. ! Tektronix I West Const Tel Monday's price on selected tttocks; Allied Chemical ' Alum Co Am ""'a American Air Lines .. Amerlrnn Cn AmerlcHn Motors AT&T . Amprirnn Tnhnrco .... Anicmida Copper Armco Avcn Corp Hendix Corp Hcthlchem biccl Hoc. tic Air Hrunnwlck Catei pillar Corp Chrvtslrr Corp - . I foi-rt Cola i C H S. I Columbia Ims Oimiinenlnl Can Crown Zcllerbach Ciutllilr Slrcl Curll.sB Wrlsht Dow Chemical . . Du Pout F.H.stman Kodak Kucntone . ... Hid Askrd H1'. 7' .14' i Mi, Z; atfl in, ins 2ft1 . '.!', 2( ' . 2i a!t III', 36 B : I IM 2 27 ; 2.V, 2', R7S i)l 'i !!', iiO'j 2A 2.V, 13 .'J ,i 4 V,J.,,i It, 4 I fc r i 1202 N. Riverside Phone 773-4462 OK MARKET Open Christmas Day ic Open Christmas Eve Until Midnite MJB COFFEE 1-2-3 lb. ILCt Ground lb. UJ 6-oi. Initant V9c 10-oi. Initant 1.49 JORGENSEN'S FIESTA ICE CREAM '.i Gallon . 99 m FROZEN FRUIT PIES Apple Peach Cherry Mince loganberry Popular 8" Siie YOUR CHOICE Investment Funds Noon quotations on it (acted tocks t iiitct Hid Akrd Chrnm til Kund 1J ;W V. K.i ion Howard Stk I t 14 2 KiindiimmUl linnl. 10 24 112 Croup Siv Aero fi 7(1 7 33 Croup Sec Com Stk 13 2fi 14 32 Hamilton 1IDA . 3 t 3 31 Kctonf R-3 . IrtRi) 111 4it Krvloue K-4 . .. 10 1!) 1 1 12 K 5lone K-2 3 2 3 73 Ki'Mtom- S-l . . 22 !W 21 33 Kevstone S-2 .... 12 7R 13 D3 K.'tonr S-3 . 13 2B Krv.Aionr S-4 4 30 Maw tnv (iiowlh Stk R 27 Koiri Cenrral Dynamics . (icncral Klcctrtc General Foods General Motors Gcurrul Portland Cemcn Georgia Pacific Great Northern Raitway Ci'cvtiriuiid Gulf Oil Homeotake Idaho Power 1 B.M lot Paper Johim Manvltle Kennecotl C opper . 82 3 Lockheed Aircraft Marlin Merck Montana Power Montgomery Ward National Biscuit New York Central Northern Natural Gas . Northern Pacific Pac Gas Elec Penney J. C Pcnn HR Permanente Cement Phillips Procter & Gamble Radio Corp Richfield Oil Safeway Sears Shell Oil Soconv Mobil Oi Southern Co Southern Pacific Spcrry Rand standard Can forma ..... Standard Indiana standard N. J. Stokoly Van Camp Sun Minci Texax Co Texas Gulf SuITur Tex Pac Land Trust .. Thiokol Trans America Tians World Air Tri-continental Union Carbide Union Pacific United Aircraft United Air Lines ... U. S. Plywood U. S. Rubber U S. Steel United Utilltiea West Bank Corp Weatintrhouse WeyerhaeiiM-r , Youngstown .. 36', .. 20'; ..104 .. 3fl .. 3.Vi .. 30 'j .. Tin -. .. 51'. .. 30 ' .. 45'i .. 23 'i .. l.Vj, 47 79 .. n4 1 j .. 4-J 'a .. .17 a .. f7aH 43i, 18 40 124' Dallas' Parkland Hospital Nov, 22. Kilduff quoted Johnson as saying there was no way of telling whether the death of Kennedy was the beginning of a chain of assassination at tempts aimed at himself and the next two men in line for the presidency, Speaker John W. McCormack, D-Mass., and Senate President Pro Tempore Carl Hayden, R-Ariz. As a security precaution against this threat Johnson felt that he should get back to the presidential plane "Air Force One" at Dallas Love Field be fore the news of Kennedy's death was released, Kilduff said. He quoted Johnson as saying, "we don't know whether this is a worldwide conspiracy, wheth er they are after me as well as they were after President Kennedy, or whether they are after Speaker McCormack, or Sen. Hayden." Kilduff said that when John son first learned of Kennedy's death, the new President's i corted to a waiting car for th thoughts turned to the circum- trip to the airport. Before the stances surrounding the assas-car left, Kilduff said he told sination of Abraham Lincoln 98 ; Johnson he was going to make years before. the announcement as soon as On the night Lincoln was shot the new President left. Crown Zellerbach Donates Property VANCOUVER, Wash. (UPD Crown Zellerbach Corp. Monday donated a 300-acre park to Clark County. The property north ot Camas includes Round Lake and will be the largest park in the coun ty. County Commission Chair man Lawrence Beauchamp said the tract will be called Lacamas Park and its development will begin immediately. The donation was announced by R. A. Butler, resident man ager of Crown Zcllerbach's Camas operations. Quotes From the News By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL WASHINGTON President Johnson, expressing confidence that enough Democratic House members are back from week ends at home to assure passage of his foreign aid money bill: "I am just sorry that some of them wanted to stay over an extra day." LAJES, The Azores U.S. Air Force LI. Larry Dishon, after flying over the burning hulk of the Lakonia: "It was like a bad dream. They (the survivors In Ihe wa ter) were helpless ... we dropped all the rafts we had but there were not enough. I saw a Utile child about two or three years old In lifejaekct with nobody near him." by John Wilkes Booth, other assassins broke into the home of Secretary of State William H. Seward and wounded him severely, but failed in an at tempt to kill him. The conspira tor assigned to kill Vice Presi dent Andrew Johnson lost his nerve and fled. At that time. Seward was next in line of suc cession to the presidency after Johnson. Kilduff said that when John son was discussing the possibil ity of an assassination conspir acy he mentioned tne attemni on Seward's life. Kilduff said that, as the offi cial White House spokesman on the trip to Dallas, he asked Johnson for permission to re-! lease the news that Kennedy was dead. "No," Johnson told him, "I think we had better wait for a few minutes. . .and I think I had better get out of here and get back to the plane before you announce it." ! A Secret Service guard was assembled and Johnson was es-l Kilduff said that once John son's car pulled away he ran back into the hospital and told newsmen that Kennedy was was dead. In line with John-son-'s security order, however, he said he refused to discuss the new President's "where abouts or destination." Kilduff said that Johnson did not need any time to consider his decision to withhold tha news of Kennedy's dath. Hb termed Johnson's answer "immediate." SHIP IT LASME to or from Oakland, San Fran cisco, Lot Angeles and other California points. Call S Fitzgerald CT3 773-7761 Make this Christmas a ROLLEI CHRISTMAS! 4B 13 MEMPHIS. Tenn. Post Office safety officer M. E. Ackcr man. explaining why he believes "canine neurosis" has caused increased ferociousness among dogs: " The dog goes nut In the morning, lie's tied up. He ran only move a few leet. Nowhere to use his energy. When (he post man arrives. Ihe dog is mighty bad tempered, aching to sink his teeth into someone." WASHINGTON President Johnson, in a festive mood at a congressional Christmas party: "The Capitol Hill Is my home, and perhaps one of the greatest mistakes I ever made was when I left there." U&l Sugar Sales Manager Succumbs PORTLAND (UPI) Wayne Mc.Mullin of Portland, sales manager for U&l Sugar Co., died Monday. He was 48. McMullin was a former bishop of the Ninth Ward of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. A 70 i IMl iHOWlh Nam SW'ck UllUM Ari'iim t'mU'il litromr I'nltrd S.'ipnce Vulup l.me !m Vhi uihlr Wrllinclon in 01 U Ml 1 2 .10 S 'IH . s r, li 77 SM.M.I. I-HY TASTES CHICAGO (UPl)-In selecting a restaurant for children, a sur- iniuw Iw Genpral Foods showed :o eil ! that parents look (or places that "a are informal, particularly cater to children, have children's por tions and special chairs. 1.1 44 7 ; n si i wore heavily embossed, painted, Village Variety and Garden Shop Next to Piggly Wiggly 771 Stewart Avenue DOUS TOYS GAMES STOCKING STUFFERS Post Office Open Sat. 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Ftve picture km in one camera, torn minmtur to 2 u x 2 I, mac - dtel tor colour srxrti. you b what you get 130 00 llllj PoHl-magic H ( ne-veu sysleni: To cameras in a;!?manc snots and ii"Ufli control with eaoo?urr mater. The Rcllt'-Mapic II is lha most uo-to data colour camera. you !M what you gat 289 00 OPEN ALL DAY CHRISTMAS 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. CAMERAS PROJECTORS RENTALS FIASH BUIBS FILM BATTERIES HUDSON'S ROGUE CAMERA 613 E. Main, Medford Phone 773-4288 O o