Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 18, 1958, Image 7

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    Backstairs: Ike Forestalls Maneuver
BY DAYTON MOORE
Uniied Press International
Washington OD Back
stairs at the White House:
President Eisenhower made
double sure the Russians
wouldn't steal his thunder at
the U.J. General Assembly
meeting on the Middle East.
He decided to address the
emergency session three days
before it began but held up
any formal announcement un
til the eve of ttie meeting to
forestall any possible Soviet
maneuver to overshadow his
appearance.
That was also the reason for
waiting until just 30 minutes
before the President spoke to
distribute advance copies of
his text. Normally, texts of
the President's major speeches
are given out hours in advance.
Work on the President's
speech actually began late last
month when it appeared there
HORNBROOK
Man Injured in Accident
By CATHERINE CHAPMAN
Hornbrook Curtis L.
Lewis, 33, of Ashland is in
the Siskiyou General hospital
in Yreka where he was taken
by ambulance from Horn
brook Wednesday afternoon.
His right leg was amputated
five inches below the knee,
and he also suffered a frac
tured skull when the motor
cycle he was riding skidded
into the rear of a parked car
and overturned in front of the
George Sloan residence.
Lewis, a long - haul truck
driver, had been called home
from a trip to St. Louis, Mo.,
by the death of his father-in-law,
George Sloan. He and his
wife, Marjorie, and the other
members of the family,1 had
just returned from the fun
eral when the accident oc
curred. This entire communi
ty was shocked and grieved
by the incident, and are wish
ing the injured man a speedy
recovery.
Miss Dorothy Smith was in
Buhl, Ida., last week iend,
where she served as an at
tendant at the wedding of
Miss' Norma Lee Urbach, a
former school-friend in Yreka.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Campbell and son, Ricky, of
Chico, Calif., were week end
guests at the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. E.
Jeter.
On- Monday of this week,
the Jeters received a phone
call from their son, Pvt. Bill
Jeter, that he would arrive
home thfs week end to spend
a short leave before reporting
.Sept. 3 to White Sands, N.
Mex., on his next assignment
with the Army. Bill has been
stationed at Huntsville, Ala.,
the past 12 weeks.
Several young people have
returned home after being
away on vacations. First to
arrive was Miss Gerry Elmore,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E.
C. Elmore, who had been at
Monterey Park, Calif., for
two weeks visiting her second
cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Leon
ard Dudley and children.
Mr. and Mrs. Smith brought
Geyry and Gary Dudley up
with them, then continued
north to Canada for their va
cation. Miss Linda Blanken
ship, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Blankenship, ar
rived home on Tuesday after
spending two weeks in Sac
ramento with her aunt and
uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Mills and children. The Mills'
are former residents of Hilt.
Arriving home Wednesday
morning was Miss Lillian
(Ticky) Rawhouser, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Mason,
who has been in Gardena,
Calif., the past six weeks, also
with an aunt and uncle, Mr.
and Mrs. S. G. Carvso.
Miss Claire Ladd is visit
ing her brother, Alden Ladd,
in Eureka, Calif., while she is
recovering from injuries sus
tained in a car accident in the
Siskiyous last week.
Also recovering from minor
injuries is Mrs. Edward Braut
lacht of Klamath Falls, who
was injured in a car accident
south of Yreka last week. Mr.
and Mrs. Brautlacht are at
the home of his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. George Brautlacht.
Mrs. George Pettee was
guest of honor at a birthday
party Saturday evening at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Nye.
Other guests were Mr.
Pettee, Mr. and Mrs. A. A.
(Slim) Protsman, and Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Adams. After din
ner, the group spent the even
ing playing pinochle.
Mrs. Zelda DeMartini and
daughter, Colleen, of Oak
land, Calif., and Mrs. DeMar
tini's brother. Jack Bradley,
and son, Bruce, of Napa,
Calif., arrived this week at
the home of Mrs. Bertha Brad
ley for a few days visit, but
were called back to Napa
suddenly by the illness of a
small daughter of Bradley's.
. Eugene Inventor
Killed in Crash
Springfield OJPD Robert
M. Riley, 36, of Eugene, was
fatally injured in a collision
involving a Springfield city
police prowl car in which he
was riding and another auto
early Sunday morning.
Riley, a nationally-known
Eugene inventor, was work
ing as a merchant patrolman
at the time of the crash.
Riley and Patrolman Rod
ney Brester were chasing a
car at speeds of 75 to 80
miles per hour when a car
romins from the opposite di
rection started a left turn in
front of them.
The two cars collided, the
police car flipping end over
end and shearins off a pow
er pole about 12' feet from
the ground.
Riley was thrown from the
wreckage.
He was rushed to a Euaene
hospital where he died about
an hour later from head arid
chest Injuries.
Driver of the other car,
Gerald Keith Wilson-of Eu
gene, was not injured. Police
said the car being chased was
not apprehended.
Patrolman Brester was
taken to a Springfield hospital
with minor injuries. ,
Riley, the only licensed pri
vate detective in Lane coun
ty, was the inventor of a me
chanical duck decoy that was
in demand nation-wide.
Hollywood UPB Milo
Frank left work late one day
at MGM and. noticing a new
drive-in telephone, decided to
try out the new gadget as
well as let his wife, actress
Sally Forrest, know he'd be
late for dinner.
He won't do it again at
least not with the car radio
going. Miss Forrest said it
might have been the car radio
but that it sounded like a
juke box at the corner bar.
In the absence of the regu
lar minister, the Rev. "Ted"
Hargreaves of Montague,
services at the Methodist
church were conducted last
Sunday by Harry Harper, a
layman in the Dunsmuir
Methodist church.
Mrs. Harper and their son,
Tommy, and her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Hartzel Gray, of
Yreka also were present. The
Rev. Harold Coleman of the
Yreka Methodist church will
be in the local pulpit Sunday
Aug. 17, and the following
week, the Rev. Hargreaves
will be back from his vacation
and will resume his duties.
would be a summit meeting of
the U.N. Security Council on
the Mideast crisis.
Eisenhower, Secretary of
State John Eoster Dulles and
their top aides at that time i
started drafting a peace pro
gram to present to such a
meeting.
C. D. Jackson, vice presi
dent of Time, Inc. was called
in to head up a speech-writing
team composed of White
House and State Department
Aides. He coordinated the
work of getting down in words
the peace plan ideas advanced
by the President and Dulles.
Soviet Premier Nikita S.
Khrushchev reversed himself
by scuttling a summit meeting
and calling for an emergency
session of the General Assem
bly instead.
It was not certain at first
whether the U. S. -peace plan
would be presented to the
General Assembly by the
President or by Dulles.
The President's first thought
appeared to be to let Dulles
present the proposal since
heads of government would
not noramally attend special
Assembly sessions. However,
he changed his mind after urg.
ings of Congressmen of both
major political parties and
British Prime Minister Harold
Macmillan.
Mrs. Bernice Brittsan of
Medford was a visitor for sev
eral days this week at the
home of Mrs. Ella Rose. The
two women had been neigh
bors at one time on' Williams
creek, and had not seen each
other for 34 years. .
Miss Mary Lee Rutledge and
Miss Sharee Walsh attended a
bridal shower in Hilt Monday
evening honoring Miss Sher-
rill Smith. Miss Rutledge s
mother, Mrs. W.'A. Rutledge,
was one of the hostesses.
The August meeting of the
Women's society of the Metho
dist church was held on
Thursday, the 14th, at the
home of Mrs. Clarence Gow
ing in Mt. Hebron, Calif. Those
making the trip were Mrs.
Loren Cummins, Mrs. Ivon
Howard, Mrs. Clara Howard,
Mrs. Henley Clawson, Mrs.
Bertha Bradley, Mrs. George
Brautlacht, Mrs. Nell Larson,
Mrs. Ernest Adams, Mrs.
Mary Taggart, Mrs. Minnie
Bloomingcamp and Mrs. Har
ry Chapman.
Mrs. Taggart and Mrs. Ivon
Howard furnished the trans
portation. Mrs. Gowing is a
member and former president
of the society. Mrs. Beverly
Howe, a neighbor of Mrs.
Gowing's, attended the meet
ing briefly.
Miss Penny Barnum, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Bar
num, is at Girl Scout camp at
Lake o' the Woods for two
weeks. Her brother, Mike, is
in Modoc county with the
Forest Service for the summer.
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Klontz
of Auburn, Wash., were visi
tors this week at the home of
his sister and brother-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bear.
Visiting the Bears last
week were her niece Mrs.
Harold Reynolds of Stamford,
Conn., and Mrs. Reynolds'
brother and his family, Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Klontz and
two sons of Phoenix, Ariz., all
of whom had been to Seattle
to visit relatives, then to Kanv
loops, B.C., to a reunion with
other relatives, some of whom
had not seen each other for
18 years.
Their stop here. was made
enroute to Mexico, before Mrs.
Reynolds returns to Connecticut.
Fire Damages
St. Helens Dock
St. Helens UPD Fire-swept
the St. Helens city dock and
a Columbia River Packers as
sociation fish receiving plant
Sunday doing an estimated
$50,000 damage.
The blaze, which started in
a fishermen's net rack shed,
spread rapidly before a brisk
north wind and destroyed two
buildings, a car, two fishing
boats, a sand bunker and sev
eral fish nets.
All available volunteer fire
fighters from St. Helens aid
ed by a truck and crew from
Scappoose and two tankers
from the state department of
forestry fought . the fast-moving
blaze. . '
Firemen prevented the fire
from spreading to the huge
Pope and Talbot lumber mill,
some 300 yards away from
the blazing dock. Hundreds of
thousands of board feet of
lumber lay unprotected on the
mill dock. Water was sprayed
on the high stacks of lumber
and on the roofs of mill build
ings to prevent the spreading
of the blaze.
A serious explosion was
averted by a quick-thinking
police sergeant, Clyde Bud-
din gton, who broke open a
building leased to Dahlgren
Feed and Building Supplies
company and aided by four
other men, carried some 350
pounds of dynamite from the
path of the flames.
President Returns
To White House
Washington (UPD Presi
dent Eisenhower returned to
his desk at the White House
today after a week end of
golf and relaxation at his
Gettysburg, Va., farm.
Eisenhower returned from
Gettysburg with his wife,
Mamie, in an air conditioned
limousine late Sunday. He
looked fit and rested.
The Chief Executive attend
ed Sunday services at Gettys
burg Presbyterian church
with his nine-year-old grand
daughter, Barbara Anne, and
Clifford Roberts, New York
investment banker who was
a guest at the farm.
Jeff Donnell Plans
To Marry Execufve
Hollywood OJPD Actress
Jeff Donnell, the television
wife of comedian George Go
bel plans to wed advertising
executive John Bricker some
time next month and give up
the Gobel show.
The actress, formerly mar
ried to dialogue director Wil
liam Anderson and actor Aldo
Ray, said she and Bricker
probably would be married on
the West Coast and then make
their home in New York.
Services Scheduled for
Sjlent Film Villian
Hollywood (UPD Fun
eral services will be conduct
ed Tuesday at the Church of
The Hills for Paul W. Panzer,
villain in the silent film ser
ial, "The Perils of Pauline."
The 86-year-old actor died
Saturday at the home of his
daughter, Mrs. Coralie Peif
fer. He had been active in mo
tion pictures , until about two
years ago. '
Panzer first appeared in a
1903 film produced by Vita
graph in New York.
Mosquitoes and Flies
Don't be chewed to bits by these blood
thirsty pests. Just burn i little BUHACH
wherever you want peace and comforc
BUHACH
5of loiy To Us Economical
IT'S COOL
INSIDE
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