I AIDS TO MARKSMANSHI P-A competitor on the 1,100-: ird ranse In the national . rifle shoot at Bisley, England, straps his forehead and left knee, using li a right knee as a rest. , Five Ways Listed For Drinkers To Stay Permanently On Water Wagon By ALTON L. 8LAKESLEE Associated Press Science Reporter NEW YORK There are five ways to help alcoholics to get and stay on the wagon. Special drugs that make the drinker sick are one way. The newest of these drugs is Anta buse. By itself, it doesn't do any thing to a person. But if he takes a drink afterward, he becomes sick, with nausea, hot flashes, a gripping sensation in the chest, pounding pulse, loss of appetite, weakness and other effects. Another drug, emetine, causes vomiting. It is given just be fore the person is given a drink, of anything he wants. The sick ness is violent. After four to eight such treatments, most pa tients for months or years after ward 'can't stand the taste or sight of a drink, even when they don't receive the drug first. Neither drug Is a cure for al coholism. No cure is known. The chronic drunkard can reform, but usually can't take even one drink again without starting off on a binge. The drug treatments help, if the drinker sincerely wants to stop. They are danger ous, however, and must be used by trained doctors. A second approach is psycho logical. Chronic drinking may be due to some emotional problem or frustration. If this is straight ened out, the reason for the com- .iJlifi.f!.' RUIIDOIRE. Home freezer New Design, New Features, 8.4 cu. ft. capacity. The only home freezer powered by the Meter-Miser. Has all these features, tooi Space for 290 lbs. frozen food Finger-lip balance lid . Extra-thick, lealed-tighl Insulation Two handy sliding baskets Quick-freeze shelf Automatic alarm signal Interior light mm-' COLD-GAUGE Find out whether your refrigerator Is giving you SAFE COLO hem lop-to-bottom Umpqua Valley Appliance 120 W. Oak Phone 1218 pulsion to drink may be remov ed. So-called sleep drugs may be used to get the patient to talk and remember things he has forgotten about, but which may explain to a doctor or psy chiatrist why the person acts as he does. A third approach is morale- building or spiritual, as typified by Alcoholics Anonymous. Here the drinker gets help and en couragement from people who faced the same problem, and lick ed it. The co-founder of the or ganization says about half of its 80.000 members never took an ther drink. One-fourth fell off the wagon once or twice before succeeding, while the other 25 per cent failed. Fourth is a new legal approach to get alcoholics treated as sick people instead of tossing them into jails to sober up and then go free. A few states are tack ling the chronic drinker as a pub lic health problem, setting up facilities to give them medical care and rehabilitate them. Fifth are studies of bodv chem istry and how chronic drinkers may differ from other people in their physiological make-up. Such studies may snow wny people differ so much in the effects that alcohol produces on them. They lead to ways of telling which peo ple are most susceptible to al cohol, and in danger of develop ing into drunkards. IOOF Encampment Wiil Hold Meet In Eugene EUGENE, July 25. rT) Wimawhala Encampment No. 6, I. O. O. F., of Eugene, will be host Aug. 6 to the grand encampment uiiictis hiiu eiiidiiifjiiiuiii ui Cali fornia, Idaho, Washington, Brit ish Columbia and Oregon. The meetings will be at an outdoor meeting area. in the Coburg hills, known as Beersheba, and all en campment degrees will be con ferred there. The grand patriarch of Califor nia will make an official visit to Eugene at this time, and the grand master of California will also be here. The grand encamp ment officers of Oregon will at tend in a body. Teams from Port land, McMinnville and Vallejo, Calif., will confer the degrees. Priestly Tibetan Rulers Kick Out Chinese Officials CANTON. China. Julv 25. UP) The priestly rulers of Tibet have kicked out Chinese government officials in the latest effort to smash Chinese influence in that remote island at the top of the world, qualified Canton sources reported. The Chinese Nationalists claim suzerainty (a sort of feudal con trol not so definite as sovereign ty) over Tibet. A Chinese diplomatic mission, a radio station and school long nave been maintained at Lhasa, the remote capital in the Hima laya mountains. Canton sources said that on July 7 the Tibetan state council the Lamas who rule in the name of the teen-age Dalia Lama ordered all Chinese govern ment personnel, out of Tibet with in two weeks. The informants said the Chi nese departed immediately for In dia. They hinted that British in fluence may have caused the Tibetan action. Britain and China long have vied for paramount position in the country. .w vi- ' Phone 730-J-5 Melrose By NETTIE WOODRUFF Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cring and daughter, Wendy, left Satur day for Seattle, Wash., where they will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Shlach. Tuesday, Wendy will undergo a major op eration at Providence hospital. Vincent and Earl Preshern and T. B. Busenbark spent several days this week fishing at the coast. Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Pargeter of Roseburg are planning to start construction of their new home this week. They will build on the property they have purchased irom f ence BusenoarK. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mulder of Los Angeles, Calif., have been visiting at the Wesley Topping home for the past ten days. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Simpson and daughters ol Doerner dis trict, returned to their home Tuesday from Davenport, Iowa, where they were called by ths death: of Mrs. Simpson's father. Mr. and Mrs. D. N. Busenbark left last Saturday for San Fran cisco to attend the National Coun ty Officers convention. Mrs. Ray Doerner spent last week at the home of her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas, at Klamath Falls, where she helped care for their new son. Mr. and Mrs. A. "Red" Eck hart have gone to Aberdeen, Wash., on business for a couple of days. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Lackey of Eugene and their son, Gary, are visiting with the formers' moth er, Mrs. Paul Kreuger, in Rose burg. Mn. and Mrs. Joe Matthews spent last Sunday in Ashland, at tending to business. . Henry Conn and son, Woodrow, spent several days in eastern Or egon this week looking after busi ness Interests." Mrs. Wade Worthington of Days Creek visited at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Conn, last Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hatfield and sons of Dixonville and Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Doyle and sons en joyed a wiener roast and picnic at the C. E. Reece home last Friday evening. Explosion Kills Woman, Injures Family Members SUFFIELD, Conn., July 25. (JP) A terrific explosion which literally blew a seven-room dwell ing apart, killed a woman, critic ally Injured her husband and in jured their two sons here Friday night. The woman, Mrs. Howard B. Caldwell, 50, died almost instant ly, the medical examiner said, when the blast razed the two story frame dwellling on Bridge street. Disputt Caused Arrest Following Gun Firing NEW YORK. Julv 25.UP)-A dispute early today over whether a man should borrow money from a woman had this chain of consequences: A rifle was fired but no one was hit; a man leaped from a window and was seriously hurt; another man fell into the East Klver, and later was booked on felonious assault charges. Police gave this account: William Sarieh. 37-vear-old cab driver, approached a party in a secona-siory restaurant and Bor rowed $5 from Martha Kellv Jackson, 40. William Levadas, 31, and another man present, ob- jectea, saying a man shouldn t borrow from a woman. The argument hit a climax when Sarich produced a rifle and fired at Levadas, who, unhlt, leaped from a window to the ground, sufferjng a possible broken neck. Police later picked up Sarich, who said he had thrown the rifle in the East river. Taken there to help police search for it, he fell in. Dragged out by police, he was taken to a station house and booked on assault charges. Elliott's Supporters Launch Defense Plans PORTAND, July 25. UP) Supporters of Sheriff M. L. El liott, whose tenure Is under fire in a recall movement, have be gun to defend the young dem ocratic official via radio broad casts. Elliott is scheduled to speak to his Multnomah coun,ty con stituents next Friday in a radio address. Radio announcements of the speech have urged electors not to sign the recall petitions until they have heard the sheriff tell his side of the dispute. The announcements claim the sheriff "has stepped on political GOINOpHINGJ Fishermen really go for the Nash Airflytel They like the Twin lied arrangement, huge luggage compartment, Increased road clearance, 500-miles-berween-fuelings economy (in the Nash "600" at average highway speed). Their wives like the smart style inside and outside, the lux urious comfort, the one-piece, curved windshield on all modils, the Weather Eye Conditioned Air System. Call us to orrange for on Airflyts ride, soon in "America's most modemjnotor car." IN TWO GREAT' SHSi THI HASH AUtASSADOk AND NASH "oOO" COOPER MOTOR CO. h i (NEA Ttlephtui ETE FOR SALE - P" R'chter (above), 46, unemployed painter of Kansas City, Mo, itho has offered to sell his left eye for I&000, covers nls right eye and reads calender on opposite side of room. He made the offer u a last desperate hope of prolonging his wife's life. Richter hopes that with the money she could spend her remaining days on earth "in peace and com fort." His right eye Is slightly im paired because of an accident a few years ago. toes, and for this, the political 'kiss of death' has been attached to him. A vigorous effort is be ing made to oust him from his office ... so they may put a political machine in his place." SCREENS Soreen Deors 9 Soreen Wire Window Soreeni PAGE LUMBER & FUEL 164 E. 2nd Ave. S. Phone 242 Men., July 25, 1949 The Ntwt-Rvitw, RoMbiirf, Ore. 3 Oregon Industrial Accidents Shew Decrease There has been a monthly re-number of lost time accident! ductlon of approximately 300 In dustrial accidents In Oregon dur ing the lirst live months of 113 as compared with the first five months of 1948 received by the State Industrial Accident com mission, according to a cumula tive report issued by the commis sion. This report shows that a total of 16,432 industrial accident claims have been received at Sa lem covering the period of from January 1 to May 31 as against the 17,868 claims received during the game five months of 1948. , This reduction is reflected in the "all industry" frequency rate of accidents of 47.89 as against the 1948 rate of 56.28. The fre quency rate is determined by the based on one million man day't work. . . During this period there was a reduction of 390 industrial acci dent claims received from the logging industry in western Ore gon and sawmilllng in western Oregon showed a reduction of 352 claims. Eggs of ducks, geese, ost riches, plovers, alligators, croco diles, turtles, penguins, gulls, al batrosses and pelicans are all Important parts of the diets of peoples In some part of t h world. The coyote now has expanded Its territory from the west east to Ohio, and north to Alaska. . WATCH REPAIRING AIL WORK GUARANTEED Open daily, Sundays and Evenings. Closed Saturday t. MARKET HIGHWAY 99 N I JiOUT AND m 7 z AVE I r- WALNTiTy3TRrf "I soi5 pyj RIVERSIDE ADDITION wtinija, & iramt st. AT THE' VALUE V IN OUR ummer Shoe Sale HURRY, HURRY, HURRY k'l WOMEN'S SUMMER SHOES . . . with summer still ahead here are remarkable values AH Whits Brown & White Spectators Blue and White Red and Green Suede Red Sandals Red Suede POO Values to 12.95 Naturalizers Tiffany Originals Johansen and Summer Casuals WHILE STOCKS LAST CHILDEN'S SANDALS AT SUPER SAVINGS Values Up to $4.45 at this Low Price of 88 Sizes 5 to 3 Robin Hood and Sandal Craft in popular colors of all white, brown, red, tan. MEN'S CASUALS for Summer Loafing 95 Values to $14.95 Roblee Pedwin Crepe sole loafers and lace woven lace oxfords, and many others. Sorry No Exchanges All Sales Final No Refunds RBUCKLE'S ' Right en Jackson Sal Starrs 9:00 A. M. Tuesday July 26. 1949 !321 W. Oak Sr. Roieburj;