The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, June 21, 1963, Page 7, Image 7

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MR. AND MRS. WEBSTER M. RUBLE
Couple exchanges wedding vows in Pullman, Wash., ceremony
Lawson-Ruble
vows exchanged
in Pullman
Miss Norma Jean Lawson,
daughter of Mrs. Iola S. Lawson,
Minot, North Dakota, and Web
ster M. Ruble Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. Webster M. Ruble, Aber
deen, Washington, were married
Friday, June 14, in the Congre
gational Church of Pullman,
Washington by Rev. Theodore Ed
quist. After a wedding trip to Seaside,
the Rubles returned to Bend
where Ruble is employed as the
Sports Editor on The Bulletin. The
new Mrs. Ruble, . a graduate of
Minot State Teachers College, will
teach at Bend High School this
fall. Ruble attended Lewis & Clark
College and the University of Ore
gon. They will be at home at 527
Franklin Avenue.
Attendants at the wedding were
Mrs. Leo Weninger of Minot, N.D.,
matron of honor and Mrs. Warren
Kruger, Pullman, Wash., brides
maid. Best man was Peter Herrenen,
Woodland, Wash. Ushers were
Warren Kruger, Pullman; Mrs.
Pat Duren, Pullman; and Frank
McCreary of Moscow, Idaho.
Miss Lawson was given in mar
riace by her brother, John L.
Lawson. Organist for the cere
mony was Dr. Lewis M. Magiu.
The reception was at the fireside
room of the church.
TUNISIA GETS LOAN
TUNIS, Tunisia (UPI) The
United States will lend Tunisia
$15 million under an agreement
signed Thursday by U.S. Ambas
sador Francis Russell and Ahmed
Ben Salah, Tunisian secretary of
state for planning and finance.
Excessive, habitual drinkers
pay price in premature deaths
By Delot Smith
UPI Staff Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) -It now
has been demonstrated with hard
figures that those who drink ex
cessively and habitually pay for
it by dying sooner than they
would have otherwise. 1
Many people have always be
lieved it but usually they're not
alcoholic. Heretofore, mathematic
al proof or disproof has been
lacking. Vital "statistics do not
say whether their subjects were
alcoholic or non-alcoholic.
Mlchiko Tashiro, a statistician,
and Dr. Wendell R. Lipscomb
had the makings for such a
unique set of figures in the -re
cords of the California State Al
coholic Rehabilitation Organiza
tion. They are members of its
scientific staff.
Living and Dead
To its four alcoholism treat
ment centers 1,692 men and wo
men were admitted in a three-
vear period beginning in 1954.
Tashiro and Lipscomb checked
back on them all and separated
the Dresentlv livine from the
dead.
This eave them two sets of
statistics, a survival table and a
mortality table. These they com
pared to the same tables for the
California population as a whole.
making Drooer statistical and ad
justments for age, sex and race
in order to get mauiemaucauy
precise comparisons.
For the five year period under
consideration, the heavy drinkers
survived only 91 per cent as well
as their opposite numbers in the
general population, demonstrating,
the scientists said, that "alcohol
ics do not live as many years"
as they might.
Death Rates Compared
To verify this, they compared
mortality tables. The average an
nual death rate of the alcoholics
figured out to 26 per 1,000. In
the general population the rate
was 11 per 1,000. Thus, the death
rate among alcoholics was almost
m to i.
As to the causes of death, 24
per cent of the alcoholics died of
violence (accidents and suicides)
and for the general population
violent deaths amounted to 9 per
cent. The next most common
cause of death in alcoholics was
heart disease, 23 per cent Then
came cirrhosis of the liver, 14 per
cent. The comparable percentages
for the general population was 4
and 3.
Tashiro and Lipscomb were
struck by how hard it had been
to ascertain the actual cause of
death in most of the 124 deceased
alcoholics. The autopsy rate
reached 73 per cent (compared
to 34 per cent in the general pop
ulation) and they reminded that
autopsies usually are performed
when there is some doubt as to
the cause of death. ;
LOSE COUNCILMAN
BAKER (UPI) Baker lost a
city councilman Wednesday be
cause he said he could not find
a steady job in the city.
Roy H. Wright submitted his
resignation and said he was mov
ing to Huntington to become city
marshal. Wright once was a
driver for the Baker street department.
Judge allows
plea change
PORTLAND (UPI) Federal
Judge William G. East has al
lowed a former state penitentiary
guard to change a guilty plea to
innocent in connection with 8
charge involving sale of demerol,
a synthetic narcotic.
Judge East said Roland B. An-
derston, 31, Portland, after chang
ing his plea from innocent to
guilty on one of nine counts
Tuesday, has indicated by tele
phone he wanted to change his
plea back to innocent. The judge
said Anderson told him there
had been a misunderstanding re
garding the count, and that he
objected to a word in the indict
ment.
Judge East said the eight counts
which the court dropped Tuesday
on recommendation by the U. S.
attorney's office would be re
ferred again to the grand jury.
Meeting aids
n breaking
down barriers
PORTLAND (UPI)-No new de
velopments in the Northwest's
lumber strike were reported
Thursday following a meeting be
tween officials of the Lumber and
Sawmill Workers Union (LSW)
and Georgia-Pacific Corp.
A company spokesman said the
meeting was concerned mostly
with pensions. A representative of
the union said its principle value
was in "breaking down the barriers."
The company is continuing to
operate on an extension of its con
tract which expired June 1.
The next meeting between labor
and management in the lumber
industry is scheduled here Mon
day when the LSW gets together
with officials of the Timber Oper
ators Council, which represents
196 employers from northern Cali
fornia to southeastern Alaska.
Meanwhile, more than 19,000
workers remain idle from a
strike by the LSW and the Inter
national Woodworkers of America
against St. Regis Paper Co. and
U.S. Plywood Corp., and a retalia
tory shutdown by Weyerhaeuser,
Crown Zeuerbach, Rayonier and
. "jri
The Bulletin, Friday, June 21, 1963
O.T.I. GRADUATE James
E. Alley, son of Mr. and Mrs.
A. Karrer, Tumalo, was grad
uated from O.T.I., Klamath
Falls, June 7, and received
the associate degree of sur
veying technology. He has
accepted a position with
Humble Oil, Los Angeles.
Alley is a Redmond Union
High graduate, class of I960.
Alley received a GPA of
3.337 In the Spring term, and
3.833 in the Winter term.
Eugene man
crash victim
WALDER, Tex. (UPI) Ron
ald Arthur Ward, 27, of Eugene,
Ore., was killed Thursday when
his car skidded on wet pavement
and rammed broadside into an
oncoming truck on U.S. Highway
90 near here.
Investigators said Ward applied
his brakes as he was driving and
caused the car to skid into the
truck. The truck driver, Jesse G.
Mullins, 35, of Woodville, Tex.,
suffered minor injuries.
Walder is about 90 miles east
of San Antonio.
Temperatures
High Lew Pep,
T
T
.11
Portland march
to mourn death
of Medgar Evers
PORTLAND (UPI) A mourn
ing march in memory of inte
gration leader Medgar Evers will
be held here Sunday afternoon,
President Mayfield Webb of the
Portland branch of the National
Association for the Advancement
of Colored People announced
Thursday night.
He taid similar marches will be
held throughout the country at the
same time. Evers was shot in
Jackson, Miss., last week.
Bend 63 35
Astoria 63 51
Baker 72 47
Brookings 63 48
Klamath Falls 73 43
Medford 77 54
Newport 59 50
North Bend 66 55
Pendleton 73 54
Portland 67 51
Redmond 69 43
Salem 67 50
The Dalles 75 54
Chicago 67 46
I Los Angeles 75 60
INew "Vork 81 59
I San Francisco 62 53
Freeman plans
trip to Russia,
bloc nations
WASHINGTON (UPI) Secre
tary of Agriculture Orville L.
Freeman has scheduled a month's
tour of farmlands and agricultural
facilities in the Soviet Union and
several Communist bloc countries
beginning about July 13.
Freeman is expected to spend
18 days in the Soviet Union, in
specting all phases of Soviet ag
riculture.
He will be accompanied by
Mrs. Freeman and economists
and scientists from the Agricul
ture Department.
Besides the U.S.S.R., Freeman
and his group will visit Poland,
Rumania, Bulgaria and Yugosla
via. Freeman's visit will be within
the framework of the United
States-U.S.S.R. agreement on ex
changes in the scientific, educa
tional, cultural and other fields
for 1962-63.
In effect, the visit will repay
one made here in September and
October, 1962 by K. G. Pysin, the
then minister of agriculture of
the Soviet Union and five other
ranking Soviet agricultural ex
perts. Pysin since has lost his
job.
The group is expected to travel
from Washington to Moscow by
commercial plane and to use So
viet planes within the U.S.S.R.
Under present plans, at the end
of 18 days a United States plane
will pick up the Freeman party
at Moseow and fly the group to
Warsaw, Sofia, Bucharest, Bel
grade and back to Washington.
A department source said Free
man expects to see as much of
Soviet agriculture as possible,
and by observing the agricultural
technology, get an idea of things
to come in Russian farming op
erations.
Striking mill
workers face
loss of fobs
I Last of Modoc
Indians dead !-
KLAMATH FALLS (UPI) - A
funeral was held Thursday for
Asa Miller, believed to be the last
full-blooded member of the Modoc
McMINNVIIXE (UPI) The Indian Tribe. Miller, believed to
Yamhill Plywood Co., which was be about 85 vears old. died Tum.
struck June 6 by Local 3-213 of day
the International Woodworkers of Hfl waj m oy,
America, has written union mem- ...
bers to return to work next Mon-,whre h Pfrents were "f1 fo
day or they will be considered;01" Modoc War o 1872-
tired, union sources said today.
The union local made the letter '"'Z ."ii . re
public. It said that if the employes ? '
j : j ,, . . X ing house lor travelers who came
did not report for work at 8 a.m. , h nnH n .
Monday the company would con- j 'He was mlnister fc
sider this a termination of em- ,v, n!M. c,j , , T
ployment and they would be per-, !
manently replaced.
Ted Aaron, business agent for
the local, said the union men
would stand firm and maintain
picket lines Monday.
Fifty-five members of the local
IWA went out on strike June 6
in a dispute over wages and
working conditions. Local negotia
tions were senarate from other
lumber industry-union talks.
The union asked for a 40-cent
wage hike over three years and
the company offered a 15-cent in
crease. Fire destroys
camp lodge
STEVENSON, Wash. (UPI) -Damage
estimates ran up to $100,
000 today from a fire which de
stroyed the main lodge building
at the Wind Mountain Girl Scout
camp here early Thursday.
Cause of the blaze was unknown.
There were no injuries.
The camp, about eight miles
east of here, is the resident camp
of the Portland area Girl Scout
Council. The camp will open on
schedule Monday, despite the
blaze, officials said.
CDCDL7
i
DIVORCED OVER TIP
LONDON (UPI) - Mrs. Jean
Hyttner was granted a divorce
Thursday after testifying to a
Freeman in meetings with So-1 long marital squabble started by
vict officials is not expected to her husband. The cause of the
3t Lasts longer . ew
money
-X- Endorsed by Iwtt tmhfc
era everywhere
-X- More homes soe
with SWP Home
than any other html
take the initiative in any talks
regarding trade relations between
the United States and the U.S.S.R.
But if the matter does come up.
it is likely that he would let the
Soviets know that any plans for
trade expansion between the two
countries would be predicated
largely on easing ot cold war
tensions.
Mrs. Freeman's schedule is ex
pected to include talks with So-
.01 1 viet women about consumer prob-
. lems.
T
.17
.04
.11
T
T
argument: A tip she gave the
garbage man.
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