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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 12, 1963)
x.'-' I .. TJ XV. . .; 'f 'fil ' vx .... ; ' r - r NERVOUS KISS is given the President's ho:d by daughter Caroline as she goes to the Otis Air Force Base Hospital for her first visit with her mother after the death of her brother,, Patrick, The bouquet in her hand is a gift for the First Lady. (UPI Telephoto) I President Faces Very Busy Week HYANN1S POUT, Mnss. (UPI) President Kennedy divided his time today as he will all week between family responsibilities on Cape Cod and duties as chief of state in Washington. His schedule, after the tragic nirth and death of his third child called for: At least one visit ' with his,1 wile, Jacqueline, at Otis Air I''orce Base, Mass., where she is recovering from the premature uirm oy cacsarcan section. Departure at 3 p.m., EDT, from Otis aboard his Air Force jet. transport for Andrews Air Force Base, Md., and a 'quick helicopter hop to the White House. A meeting at about 5 p.m., EDT, with Secretary of State Dean Husk and Defense Secre tary Robert S. McNamara to dis cuss the nuclear test ban treaty awaiting Senate ratification, and Rusk's talks last week with Sovi et Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev and West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. His usual breakfast meeting Tuesday with Democratic con gressional leaders, to discuss vote recruitment for the treaty as well as the administration's other big pending measures civil rights, tax reduction, and emergency handling of the railroad labor dis pute. A flight back to Cape Cod Tuesday evening to see his wife and children, and return to Wash ington Wednesday night or Thurs day morning. Then, another trip back to the cape Friday evening, for the weekend. Hot Weather Expected The five-day weather forecast ac cording to the Weather Bureau sta tion at the Roseburg airport calls for temperatures above normal with little or no precipitation I through Saturday. Protect your loved ones from ex cessive burdens in time of sorrow.' Ask us how pre-arrangements can earn 4 interest, Wilson's Chapel of the Roses 965 West Harvard Mrs. Kennedy Cheered, Wants To Return Home OTIS AFB, Mass. (UPI) Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy, greatly cheered by the visits of her two children, Caroline and John Jr., now is anxious to leave the hos pital and return to the summer i White House on Squaw Island. 1 The President hrnmiht llm youngsters in separate visits Sun- day for an affectionate reunion with their "Mummy," who has been grieving over the death of their little brother, born last Wednesday. Caroline, nearly six, looking like a doll In a blue and white short shift, arrived with her fa ther before noon. She carried a bouquet of black-eyed Susans, larkspurs and pink trumpet lilies she had picked near the summer White House. , John Jr.,' nearly three, hclicop- icreu in on ine evening visit and turned out to be noi n scene Radio Dispatcher Post Open With City Police Chief of Police John T. Tructt an nounced that he has accepted the resignation of Fayc Smith, radio dispatcher with the police depart ment, and is now accepting appli cations for a replacement. Mrs. Smith in her letter of resig nation stated that her husband will ne attending Eastern Oregon Col lego at La Grande this coming vear and that they will be moving to that city. Her resignation is effec tive Aug. 28. Mrs. Smith served first as a me ter maid, then as radio dispatcher on the 3 to 11 p.m. shift in the police office. Qualifications require that the applicant be a high school grad uate with valid driver's license and be able to type, meet the public .iiiu nave some Knowledge of ra- din riisnnteh wnrir teletype and of city ordinances and state laws. Ph. 673-4455 35 T ""i "iiiii " n't 1 1 stealer. Going up the hospital steps holding his father's hand, he asked loudly: "Where's Mum my?" He repeated "Where's Mummy" several times dow, Mummy" several times down reached her room. Neither child had seen their mother since she was rushed to the hospital here after taking them riding on their ponies last Wednesday. Both had been told they had a little brother Pat rick Bouvier Kennedy who had gone to heaven. The First Lady was making a rapid recovery from the Caesa rian birth of her third child. She was out of bed and walking for the first time Sunday. She urged her doctor to permit her to go home to her two lots right away. As parents, the President and his 34-year-old wire appeared to be counting their blessings Sun- day, despite their tragic loss A White House spokesman des cribed Mrs. Kennedy as "greatly encered up by the visits of her i i wo cnuoren. VIOLENCE GROWS Integration Dispute Leads To Slaying Of Negro Girl By United Press International Hood, 21, apparently faced im Police kept extra patrols today I state and university officials, lie in a Jersey City, N. J., neighbor-1 said he hoped to return to the hood where a Negro girl was university, but school officials slain by n while man during a said he could not come back un racial disturbance Saturday. The; til after a hearing on charges he suspect was to be arraigned to-i publicly anil unfairly accused of day in the shotgun killing. i ficials of trying to' get him cx- ln Mississippi a liver ferryboat turned around in mid-stream Sun day to bring into custody 25 whites and Negroes who refused to use segregated wailing rooms. Police and .sheriff's deputies at Plaquemine, La., arrested the group brought to shore by the ferryboat's captain. Officers said they would be charged witli re- : sisung arrest. Ronnie Moore, a field secretary ! (or the Congress of itacial Equai I it.v (CORE), said witnesses told him otticcrs used their shoe heels to break the "passive-resistance i nrmlock" of the group. Officers ! denied any brutality. ' At Lexington, N. C, police ! stepped between angry whites and Negroes outside a jail where three Negro youths were being held for the slaying of- a white man in a race riot June 6. The Negroes knelt and prayed outside the jail, and then Charles Poole brother ot one of the jailed Negores exchanged hot words with white hecklers. When the white and Negro groups moved toward each other, police quickly took up positions in the middle of (he street to keep them apart. Other integration develop- j ments: Tuscaloosa, Ala: James A. Hood, 21, one of two Negro stu minent expulsion for criticizing ' dents who entered the all-white University of Alabama under fed ' eral guard two months ago, quit to "avoid a complete mental and . physical breakdown." VENETIAN BLINDS Sales ond Service SERVICEMASTER Of Roseburg 672-4601 W. Givt S&H Gre.n Stomps 2 The News-Review, Roseburg, Senators Group To Call Vaiachi WASHINGTON' (UPI) Joseph Vaiachi, one of the Justice De partment's prized informers on crime and illegal narcotic sales in the United States, soon will be called before a Senate investiga tion committee to reveal publicly what he knows about large-scale crime syndicates. Sen. John L. McC'lellan, D-Ark., said Sunday his Senate perma nent investigations subcommittee would suspend its current exam ination of the controversial TFX fighter plane contract to hear tes timony from Vaiachi for three or four days. McClclian said Vaiachi, a con victed narcotcs seller, may pro vide enough information to serve as the basis for an expanded ver sion of a subcommittee investiga tion of national and international narcotics rackets, planned for aft er the TFX hearings. Officials Mum Government sources, mean while, have refused Jo give out further details about the New York hoodlum since they leaked the story last week that Vaiachi had been providing information about "Cosa Nostra," the nation's Liquor Counts Jail Several Hoscmrrg City Police look into custody several persons in con nection with liquor charges over (he weekend and lodged another person, Wayne Douglas Smith, 21, Myrtle Creek, in the city jail Sat urday night to face a drunken driving charge. Keith Allen Muters, 24, Gresh am, was charged with furnishing liquor to minors. He and Charles Vernon Eastwood, 20. and a 17- year-old boy and two 15-year-old girls, all of Portland, were taken into custody about 1 a.m. today. The latter four are charged with being minors in possession of al cohol. Muters admitted furnishing the liquor and signed a statement to this effect, police said. One of the girls denied consuming any of the liquor. Those under 18 were turned over to juvenile officers and held for their parents. They told police that the 17-year-old youth and the girls had gone to Grants Pass to take a friend, but on their return had car trouble near the Glcndale Junction. They called Muters who came to assist them and East- wood came along for the ride Taken into custody Saturday night were Jimmie Alan Tibbelts, 18, of Tiller, and Daniel Steven Criswell, 18, Canyonville, both charged with being minors in po session of alcohol and contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Ap prehended with them was a 15-year-old Myrtle Creek girl, who was booked for illegal possession of alcohol. She was turned over to juvenile officers and then re leased to her parents. City police took four persons into custody on vagrancy charges when they investigated reports that the men were observed along the railroad tracks. They had no visible means of support. Two oth or persons were picked up for rjeing drunk polled. Goldsboro, N. C: About 150 Negroes staged an orderly anti segregation march in the town that saw 13!) Negroes arrested in a demonstration Saturday night. Sixty - five Negro demonstrators remained in the Goldsboro jail. Chicago: The American Bar Association considers a resolu tion today calling on lawyers to promote coi:al rights for Negroes The resolution also asks an end to violent racial demonstrations. Australian Noses Out Miller As Wood Hewer John Miller of Garden Valley, world champion chopper, was nos ed out as Pacific Coast champion chopper Saturday night at a coun ty fair in Quincy, Calif. Miller was second to Tom Kirk : of New South Wales, Australia, who also won the Ail-Around Woodsman trophy. Miller was 1.3 seconds slower than Kirk in chop ping through a 12-inch burr log. Kirk won the standing block chopping competition at the recent Sutherlin Timber Days. Miller and Bob Waibel of Sweet Home were second in double hand bucking and Waibel won in choker setting. Helps You Overcome FALSE TEETH Looseness and Worry No lonncr be annovrd or frl Ul-m-Me bMif f Uxwe. wobbly fa is it'th. FASTKKTH. n Improved alkn ltiic jr.on-scltli powder, sprinkled on vour plt; hold ihem firmer so ther tpl more romtortuble. Avoid embr. rMiTtu rstwd b lorwe pUte Oe FAS TKKTH today at njrdmg count r Ore. Mori., Aug. 12, "63f ' Tjumir- top crime syndicate, ile had been in the federal penitentiary at At lanta, Ga., serving a life sentence when he began giving federal agents names and details about criminal organizations and activi ties. Through Vaiachi, the Justice Department has learned of a doz en men believed to be the leaders of organized crime in America. He also has revealed details of nearly forgotten gangland mur ders and unsolved disappearances Vaiachi has a police record which dales from 1918 when he was 15. It showed 18 arrests in a 38-year period before his final arrest and imprisonment at At lanta on narcotics charges. Most of the 18 charges brought against him during 38 years were dis missed. In Secret Hideaway Valacm now is Being Held in a secret hideaway to prevent gang - sters from assassinating him for giving information about their ac - tivities to the government. The subcommittee counsel. Je- rome Adlerman, and other staff members already have inter viewed Vaiachi at the hideout to gain information which McClellan said he hopes to use to further show Cosa Nostra's multi-million-dollar operations in 'gambling, ex tortion, narcotics and loan-sharking. Vaiachi, the son of Italian im migrants, was born in New York City in 1903. He reportedly is married and has two children. Hospital News Visiting Hours 2 fa 3:30 p.m. and 7 to 8 p.m. Mercy Hospital Admitted Medical: Mrs. Donald Driggars, Mrs. Edward Middendorf, Mrs. Pe ter Van Zanden, Mrs. Fred War ren, Mrs. William Graham, Joe Guse, Mrs. William White, David Chase, Mrs. George Goldader, Mrs. Elmer Coomes, James Thrall, Mrs. William Zerback, Alvin Bos worth, Hcba Hartley, all of Rose burg; Mrs. Allen Rogers, Slither lin; Airs. Lcland Haight, Dillard; Mrs. Kenneth Morgan, Winston. Surgery: Charles Gentry, Fred Oldfield, Thomas Bentley, M r s. John Hane, Elizabeth Zora, all of Roseburg; Gary McDonald, Dave Mordyke, both of Myrtle Creek; LcRoy Kesterson, Winston. Discharged Gary Casebeer, Mrs. Ralph Hawes and son Kenneth George, John Blanchard, James Palmer, Mrs. Richard Heath, Mrs. William Lasswell and son Cameron Phil lip, Mrs. Claude Crabtree and daughter Renee Marie, all of Rose burg; Preston Hargis, Pendleton; Mrs. Lyle Beccroft, Mrs. Ronald Kenwishcr and daughter Shelly Rae, all of Sutherlin; Mrs. James Wolf, and daughter Erica Lynn, Glide. Douglas Community Hospital Admitted Medical: Edward Geary, Mrs. Robert Manchester, Mrs. Noel Campbell. Robert Severson, Flor ence Hudson, Mrs. Vincent Pres chern, Mrs. Donald Kegeler. all of Roseburg; Mrs. Rodney Pruitt, Winston; Vernic Rhodes, Portland; Mrs. John Ingham, Myrtle Creek. Surgery: Donald Hughes, Mrs. Elmer Robinson, Lloyd Gray, Al fred Denton, Jcannoltc Kirchncr, all of Roseburg; Keith Comstock, Danny Wells, both ol Sutherlin; Roy Osborne, Myrtle Creek; Mrs. Theodore Tankerslcy, Winston. Discharged Delbert Ollivant, Kenneth No land, Kevin Blondell, Darel Per sons, Mrs. Ed McCall, Kathleen Armstrong, Donald Hughes, Shan non Huntsucker, James Koch, Mrs. Perry Clute and daughter Pam ela Jean, William Wilson, Jack Stevenson, all of Roseburg; Mrs. John I n g h a m, Mrs. Kenneth Schmidt, Mrs. Carroll Buley, and son Michael Gene. Mrs. Roy Os borne, all of Myrtle Creek; Mrs. Ronald Sutherland. Oakland; Rich ard Willis, Tenmile; Mrs. Ber nard Long, ldleyld Park; Royce Johnson, Bandon; Mrs. Roger Gun ricrson and daughter Deborah Jo Ann, Glide; Kenneth Comstock, Sutherlin; Mrs. Ray Ricknell and son Ray Ernest Jr., Winston. Charles S. McCray Charles Sumner McCray, an 86-year-old Roschurg resident, died Sunday at a local hospital follow ing a long illness. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by Wilson's Chap el of the Roses. U. S. Air Force 'fiV ADM Adu 7Se " Kids. 25t juiyeun i cuius Separate Twins LOS ANGELES (UPI) Two teams of surgeons, working against a 36-hour deadline, suc cessfully separated the Siamese twin sons of a 'teen-aged Glen dale, Calif., couple Sunday. The operation on the day-old boys took three hours. Surgical teams of three doctors each were assigned to each baby in the op eration. "The best we can say is that they are in satisfactory con dition," said a spokesman for Children's Hospital, where the operation was performed. -"The critical, post operative period will last from a week to 10 days." Both infants were placed in inc ubators following the operation. The boys, Daniel Clifford and David Eugene were born Satur day at Glendale Sanitarium by Caesarian section to Mrs. Rebec ca Bar'ley, 16. She and her hus band, William, 19, gave permis sion for the separation. The twins were the first child ren born to Bartley and his wife. She was reported in satisfactory condition at the sanitarium. Doctors said the separation op- , atinn had to he Dcrfnrmed with 1 jn 36 hours of the twins' birth to . tilt the scales of survival in their ! favor. The operation w's completed six hours before the deadline passed Dr. Dwighl Galloway, chief surgeon at the hospital who did not participate in the opera tion said the twins were joined from their breastbone to navel. Oregon Accidents Claim Nine Lives By United Press International Accidents claimed nine lives in Oregon during the weekend. Five persons were killed in traffic crashes, three drowned and one died in a house fire. Warren S c h e 1 1, 23, Albany, drowned while swimming in Wav erly Lake at Albany Sunday aft ernoon. His body was recovered. Dale Hawes, 4, Salem, was killed in a three-vehicle accident on State Highway 22 five miles west of Salem Sunday morning. The child was in a small bus which was struck from the rear by a car and knocked into the path of a semi-truck and trailer. Mrs. Joan Hoffman, 49, Red mond, was killed in a two-car, head-on collision on U.S. Highway 97, 12 miles south of Madras early Sunday. James Kelly, 37, Crescent City, Calif., drowned while swimming in the Rogue River 3V4 miles east of Gold Beach Saturday night. His body was recovered. Bobby Hansen, 44, died of smoke inhalation in a fire at his home at Beaverton Saturday night. Trena Dunmire, 10 - month old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arden i Dunmire of Oregon City w a s crushed when she tell Horn tier parents' car at an Oregon City drive-in theater Saturday night. The vehicle's wheels rolled over her. Two California women were killed in a two-car accident on In terstate 5, 12 miles south of Rose burg Saturday. They were Martha Imfeld, 66, Pacheco, and Josie Burgi, 65, Oakland. Dale Ferry, 32, Oceanside, drowned in a boating accident in Netarts Bay Saturday. His body was not recovered. Virgil L. McCollum Funeral services for Virgil Lew is McCollum, 70, of Grants Pass, former resident of Glendale, were held at 2 p.m. today at Bethany House in Grants Pass with the Rev. Arnold Dalke of Azalea of ficiating. Hull and Hull Funeral Home of Grants Pass was in charge. Interment . followed at Hillcrest Memorial Park. McCollum, who died Aug. 9 at j a Grants Pass hospital, had lived in the Glendale area for 40 years before moving to Grants Pass four years ago. He was born Oct. 14, 1892, in Arkansas. He is survived by his wife. Leta; a son, Dale; one daughter, Modene Wooleridge, res ident of Grants Pass: six grand children and six great-grandchildren. Winston Youth Charged ( With Altering $10 Bill ; Winston City Police officers and Oregon State Police have taken into custody Roger Del Clardy, 19. of Winston, in connection with his alleged attempt to alter the face of a S10 bill. Officers said the bill was altered to appear as a $20 bill, which was presented to the R & B market in Winston, Sunday. Clardy has been booked at the Douglas County jail to face a coun terfeiting charge. Federal officers also are being notified in case they want to proceed further into the case, as altering monev is a fed- I eral offense, it w as pointed out. Supersonic Aircraft T-38 TALON JET TRAINER on display DOUGLAS AUGUST 14-18 ROSEBURG Price Fixing Charged In Miracle Drug Sale WASHINGTON (UPI) Five leading U.S. drug manufacturers have been charged by the Fed eral Trade Commission (FTC) with conspiring to fix prices of a widely-used miracle drug. The commission Saturday or dered the companies to tear up all price lists for tetracycline, a drug used to cure a great variety of bacterial infections, and pub lish new prices independently. A basic ingredient of the drug is Aureomycin, the FTC said. The five-man commission also claimed, in an unprecedented move, the authority to take ac tion to limit or completely halt enforcement of drug patent rights held by two of the firms, Chas. Pfizer and Co., Inc. and Ameri can Cyanamid Co. The FTC charged they had ob tained the patents unfairly by withholding important information from the U.S. Patent Office. The other three firms charged were Bristol-Myers Co. and Bris tol Laboratories, Inc.; Olin Ma thieson Chemical Corp. (Squibb), and the Upjohn Co. The FTC said it considered Bristol Laboratories a subsidiary of the Bristol-Myers Co. Deny Charges Pfizer and Bristol - Myers promptly denied the charges, and along with Cynamid, said they would appeal the order in federal courts. The FTC said that Pfizer's 17 year patent on tetracycline could yield potentially more than a bil lion dollars in sales. Sales of the drug, "probably the leading anti biotic on the market today," it said, have run more than $100 million annually. The FTC order, which over ruled its examiner's recommen dations made after two years of study, told the companies that new price lists must be based on individual manufacturing and overhead costs, desired margins of profits and "other lawful con siderations." The regulatory agency gave each firm a deadline of 60 days from the date of its final order, which was not specified. An FTC attorney explained that the com mission would first study and is sue a second order dealing with the Pfizer and Cyanamid patents. As the basis for its authority to prevent a patent's enforce ment, the FTC cited Supreme Court decisions and it own powers inherent in the Federal Trade Commission Act. It said it used this power to prevent the public from being "classed among the mute and helpless vic Vacdfbsiing RidciSe Couple Attends Mk!ifci3i Reunion By ERMA BEST Mr. and Airs. George Dawson of Riddle have returned from a two week trip to Michigan where they attended a reunion of members of the Dawson family at Fremont. En route to Fremont they visited Yellowstone National Park, Mt. Rushmore and other points of in terest. Their younger son, Gary, who accompanied them on the trip, remained with his grandmoth er, Airs. George F. Dawson, when they left for home, going with her to her home in Chicago for a brief visit before the two of them went to Arizona to visit in Phoenix with Airs. Dawson's granddaugh-' tor and Gary's sister, Airs. T. (Judy) Arthachinta and family. Meanwhile Air. and Airs. Dawson drove from Milwaukee across the Alackinac bridge which spans the water between lakes Huron and Superior, and is the longest sus pension bridge in the world. Fol lowing their visit in Arizona, Airs. Dawson and Gary, accompanied by Airs. Arthachinta and small son came to San Francisco to vis it. Mrs. Dawson's daughter, Airs. Donald Forlney, who later brought them to Riddle. The visitors plan to remain here for a week. Easterner Visits A guest at the home of Air. and Mrs. II. G. Townsend is a long time friend, Airs. Hazel Adkins from Pittsburgh, Penn., who came by plane to Medford where the Townsends met her. Airs. Adkins is on vacation from her duties as an assistant in a home for crip pled children. Recent visitors at the home of You can relax when you're covered by Nobody settles claims faster and more fairly SAFECO or GKNERAL offers a Homeowner's policy that protects you against accidental damages you might cause to other people's property. SAFECO offers many more time-saving and money-saving benefits. It would be our pleasure to discuss them with you. Ken Bailey INSURANCE AGENCY 830 S E. Rose, Roseburg Ph. 673-4428 tims of deception and fraud." Charge Conspiracy The commission charged the firms conspired by having fre quent contacts, including ex change of up-to-date price lists, issued uniform price lists, iden tical bids to purchasers and iden tical dosage forms. Pfizer, in a statement, said "We have not fixed prices. We obtained our tetracycline patent in good faith and without any impropriety." Dr. Philip I. Bowman, president of Bristol Laboratories, said his firm would appeal "with confi dence that our position will be ultimately vindicated." W. G. Malcolm, chairman and chief executive officer of Ameri can Cyanamid Co., said his firm's lawyers "assure us that the ex aminer's initial decision exonerat ing Cyanamid and the other de fendants was well founded." U. S. Plywood Buys McCioud Interests NEW YORK (UPI) The United States Plywood Corp. has reached agreement to purchase all the as sets of the McCioud River Lum ber Co. located primarily in Northern California, for a sum in excess of $10 million, it was an nounced today. The announcement was made by Gene C. Brewer, president of U.S. Plywood, and L. G. Carpenter, president of the McCioud River firm. Carpenter said the proposal had been approved by the board of di rectors and would be submitted to stockholders for approval at a meeting called for Aug. 29 in Min neapolis. Properties of the McCioud firm are located principally about 300 miles north of San Francisco. They consist of a large, integrated lumber facility and 1.2 billion board feet of virgin timber, pri marily pine, on 86,000 acres of land. McCioud also has under con tract rights to an additional 1.1 billion feet of timber. Brewer said U.S. Plywood would continue to operate McCloud's ex isting facilities in California. U.S. Plywood operates a large inte grated forest products complex in Shasta County, directly adjacent to Siskiyou County where McCioud properties are located. Air. and Mrs. John Durgin were Mr. and Mrs. Sandy Sanderson and four children from Reno, Nev. The Sandersons were on their way to Canada to spend a part of their vacation. Recent guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Willard Preston were Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kraft and granddaughter, Alarie Hubele of Ontario, Calif., and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Schuler of Chino, Calif. Darla, Dclton, and Dwight Mad dox have returned to their home in Pcrrydale after a week's visit with their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Airs. Clifford Pleasant. Their mother. Airs. James AI a d d o x, brought them down and came after them. Former Residents Here Mr. and Airs. Floyd Guy, form er Riddle residents now living in Gasquet, Calif., where they oper ate a summer resort in associa tion with E. R. Alexander, were Riddle visitors this week. Linda, Matthew, and Jeff Breuer have gone lo Myrtle Point where they will visit their father, Sam Breuer, and other relatives until school opens. Mr. and Airs. Alvie Brunk and niece, Kathy .Schmidt, arrived in Riddle recently from Concord, Calif., to visit for a few days with A1rs. Brunk's parents and Kathy's grandparents, Mr. and Airs. Heinrich Schmidt, before go ing on to St. Helens to take Kathy to the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Heinrich L. Schmidt. Kathy also visited her maternal grandparents, Mr. and Airs. G. J. Aspey. SAFECO makes it easy for agents, like us, to give you the finest coverage possible. For ex ample, here is one of the specific advantages SAFECO offers you: