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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 30, 1959)
o Quotes From the Hews By united press New York-Soviet'Deputy Premier Frol R."Kozlov, appeal-1 tag for increased trade between the United States and Russia: V both stand lo learn from one another." New York-President Eisenhower, on being told by Kozlov that the Russians are using atomic energy for peaceful pur poses: "I have been preaching that for fix years." Covington, La.-Dr. Robert Heath, a psychiatrist, disclos ing that Gov. Earl K. Long had suffered a nervous break down brought on by overwork and aggravated by a stroke , and heart trouble: "It is not uncommon lo see strokes accompanied by accel erated emotional symptoms." Washington-Rep. Gerald R. ford Jr. (R-Mich.), fruitlessly urging restoration of $25 million or civilian space activities: "If we should err, it should be on the side of generosity." Nervous Breakdown, Effects of Stroke Said Bothering Long ... q LXvingion, i,a. - itru uuv. Earl K. Long is a victim of a nervous breakdown from - . . overwork, his psychiatrists re ported, but they warned him that even so he is in better shape mentally than physi cally. Th psychiatrists borrowed : Long's own words Monday night to tell him that he is . , ' a sicL man and may get V worse, although he is now - rational. v Physically, the psychiatrists said, he is suffering from the effects of a small stroke, or series of strokes and his heart is still laboring from the ef- m .1 v it Tin Bus Driver Dies, 19 Persons Hurl In Highway Crash San Jose, Calif.-(UPD-A bus driver was killed and 19 per sons were injured, three seri ously early today when a Los Angeles to San Francisco Greyhound smashed head-on into a private car 15 miles south of here on U.S. 101. The driver of the car told officers he swerved across the center line into the path of the bus when bumped from behind by another car. Smashes Billboard The Highway Patrol said the bus plunged off the high smashed through a bill pard, sheared off a telephone 5le and rolled to a stop in a eld. The bus driver, Martin Nar dini, 57, Mountain View, Calif., was killed outright. It took rescuers about an hour to pry his body out of the mangled wreckage. The bus carried at least 20 passengers. Patrolman Edward Jeffries said Agnes Lane, 59, "Vancou ver, Wash., suffered com pound fractures of both legs when she was pinned for 15 minutes in the seat behind the driver. The seriously injured were taken to Wheeler hospital in Gilroy. They were listed as Mrs. Lane, the driver of one car, Eavid Randall Kannely, 36, Morgan Hill, Calif., who suffered head injuries; and a bus passenger, Roland March, 46, Fresno, Calif., who suf fered head lacerations and contusions. Patrolman Jeffries said Kannely told him he was southbound when a car driven by Arthur Clinton Berryman smashed into his car's rear This crash sent the Kannely auto into the path of the bus, . Kannely told Jeffries. Berry man wasnot injured. Tillamook Strike Enters Ninth Week Tillamook-(DPD - The Team sters strike against the Tilla mook County Creamery asso ciation continued in its ninth week today. Bealle Dickson, manager of the association, said no further negotiation meetings have been sched uled. The last session between the union, the association and a federal mediator was held here Friday. At that time the union announced a drop from its original demand of 34 cents per hour to 31 cents, and the creamery upped its original 10-cent offer to 12 cents for a two-year contract. A total of about 170 em ployees are idled. The associa tion has continued to operate its huge plant here with man agement personnel and farm ers. 15-Year Lease Signed For Deschutes Plant Timberline Lodge-flJPD-Rich-ard L. Kohnstamm Monday announced he had signed a new 15-year lease with the U.S. Forest Service to manage this noted Mt. Hood ski resort. Kohnstamm has managed Timberline Lodge for the last five years. international fects of an attacked he suffer ed nine years ago while chas ing a hog. The psychiatrists refused to guarantee he will ge well, but said there is now "nothing that would indicate that the governor cannot make anoth er comeback." The psychiatrlsts-Drs. Rob ert Heath, Charles Watkins and Victor Leif-told Long' what was wrong with him in a motel room conference after he had returned from a week end at his "little pea patch"- his farm in Winnfield, La Long, 63, went along with everything except their diag nosis tnai ne naa suixerea a stroke. "I want to tell you that I respect these men and they're doing what they think is right," he said. "But I highly disagree. I never suffered a stroke in my life." Long sat in trousers and shirt, sleeves rolled above his elbows and sock feet planted firmly on a deep carpet as Dr. Heath read a statement for his colleagues. Legal Troubles Possible In addition to mental and physical troubles, Long may also soon have legal troubles. The district attorneys in both Orleans and East Baton Rogue parishes disclosed that they were looking into a charge that a steampship line's agent paid Long $5,000 in 1956 to veto a bill affecting pilots on the lower Mississippi river. The governor has announced that he will divorce his wife Blanche, whom he called "the most jealous woman God ever put on this earth." Long has been in mental hospitals in both Texas and Louisiana, but the phychia- trists' statement was the first detailed diagnosis of what ails him. OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9 ' tiiLiW""fr'g-,,W'- i -TT iii ir - ii i t 1 " T '1 " Wagons Head For Pocatello Soda Springs, Idaho - (CPU - The 1959 Oregon wagon train camped eight miles east of here Monday night and today pulled up stakes and moved westward toward Pocatello. Tonight's camp site was ex pected to be about 13 miles west of Soda Springs, along Fish Creek road. The Soda Springs chamber of commerce and the Daugh ters of Utah Pioneers arrang ed for a banquet for the mod ern Oregon pioneers Monday and each wagon train member was given a bound copy of the history of the Soda Springs area. Soda, Springs is noted as an early home site of Brigham Young, 19th century Mormon pioneer, and also for the spring water that gave it its name. The area was a mecca for wagon trains that paused from the rigors of the trail. Members of the Centennial train visited historic "Wagon Box grave" in the Soda Springs cemetery. Buried in a wagon box, because lumber for coffins here in 1861 was non-existent, were seven members of an unidentified family massacredyby Indians. Oregon Schools To Hear Lecturer Portland - (CPD - Dr. Harold R. W. Benjamin, director of the Connecticut Study of the Role of the Public Schools, will speak at three Oregon schools as a Centennial lec turer next month. He will be at Multnomah college here July 7, at Oregon College of Education, Mon mouth, July 8 and at Eastern Oregon college in La Grande July 9. He is a 1921 graduate of Pacific .university at Forest Grove, and the second of sev en distinguished graduates of Oregon colleges and universi ties to appear in the Centen nial lecture series sponsored by the Oregon Centennial Commission. Sfiffer Controls On Lead, Zinc Seen Washington - (DPD - Interior Secretary Fred A. Seaton says he is seriously considering stiff er controls on. lead and zinc imports. He told a news conference Monday that current curbs on foreign shipments of these metals into the United States have eased the economic plight of domestic producers but that "more remedial ac tion may be needed." Among other things, he said, he is considering exten sion of import quotas to fin ished lead and zinc products In Time for the Big 4th of July Week End, Our SUMMER SALE h Your Chance for BIG SAVINGS and A Full Summer of Family Boating. Buy Now at Our LOW SALE PRICES. Get the B EST BOAT and the BEST BOAT DEAL In Town! CONVENIENT TERMS TO SUIT YOU! TAR AMES MAR. 22 Your Daily - According To develop message tor Wednesday, read words corresponding to numbers K50-52-66 of your Zodioc birth sign. yf TAURUi APR. 21 ( MAY 21 1 Personal 2 You 3 You 4Mak 5 Can 6 Conditions 7 Do 8 Whatever 9 You 10 Have 1 1 Careful! 12 More , 13 Should ' 14 If 15 Improve 16 You're 17 Con .18 You 19 Bored 20 Don't 21 Your " 22 Improve 31 Than 32 Try 33 Within 34 Make 35 Your 36 Few 37 Buy 38 1s 39 Necessary 40 To 41 Money 42 You'll 43 Rise 44 More 45 Some 46 Spend - 47 Attractive 48 Small 49 A 50 Relations 51 Catch 52 With fT 7- 8-38-3 Hy 64-68-81-84 GEMINI pJ JUNE 22 1-27-29-53 '63-71-76 CANCat fJUNE 23 JULY 23 Hi 4-21-3CM4 147-62-74 uo JULY 24 -a AUG. 23 23 Don'f 53 And lT20-32-40-51 24 Well-wishers 54 25 Be 55 26 Can 56 27 A 57 28 Make 58 29 Jealous 59 H67-7345-8a 30 Surroundings 60 You , 9-17-25-49 '-78-82-841 Doctors i vmco r3 AUG. 24 I fHiM SEPT. 22 r Alcoholism Institute Hear Drink Problems By DICK HUMPREY UPI Correspondent Salem-(UPD-He was a rug ged 48-year-old man who had bossed 60 other men and made $8,500 a year until he decided he had crawled into the booze bottle for the last time and I went to Oregon State Hospital for help. It was his third trip. He is confident it will be his last. About 40 doctors attending an institute , on alcoholism here this week end hope it will be, too. They heard a hair-raising story in an interview conduct ed by Dr. George Saslow, head of psychiatry at the Universi ty of Oregon Medical school. Some items: The patient had lost or quit many jobs because of drink, had lost his wife, wrecked his cars, been in jail 30-40 times, seen Chihuahau dogs that weren't there, had his append dix split while drunk, had lost his sight briefly and had one arm paralyzed fora long er period. Finds Can't Drink "I can't drink like other people at all," he told the doctors. "I beat my head on the wall for a long time, but I'm convinced now." He said friends, bosses, Alcoholics Anonymous and everybody talked to him about his drinking. "You have to be about dead before you quit," he said, "something has to happen in side." Apparently that "some thing" has happened, but it will take all the man's perse- verence and all the doctors' and researchers' skill plus ad si GAZERS Activity Guid M io th Stan. -B3-37-46-. K9-72 61 In 62 And 63 Deceitful 64 To 65 Today 66 Others 67 A 68 Bolster 69 Force 70 .Many 71 Person 72A 73 Falling SCOtMO OCT. 24 NOV. 22 3-10-12-24 Cl-60-75 SAGTTTAlrUS NOV. 23 OEO 22 157-65-79-87 V. 74 Comfortable 75 Suspect 76 Approaches 77 Dazzling 78 Star - CAFUCOtM DEC 23 JAR 20 1- 6-13-150 79 Be . 80 Promotional P3-36-54 V 81 Your AOUAMUS 82 Socially 83 Dealings JAN. 21 Days And Changes Progress Or Shine 84 Romantically 85 Star 86 Finances 87 Persistent 88 Today 89 Proposition 90 Today . FBCES FEB. 20?. MAR. 21 2-43-55-59 kl-7(V83-90kj equate facilities to make him well. Two Outpatient Clinics Oregon, with 1.8 million population has only two out patient clinics-at Portland and Salem-where alcoholics can be treated without enter ing a hospital. - - : In contrast, Virginia, with five million population, has six out-patients clinics and is planning another to relieve pressure on hospital emer gency wards. Guest speaker, Dr. Ebbe C. Hoff, Medical Director of the Division of Alcohol Studies of the . Medical College of Vir ginia Hospital, told the as sembled doctors he thought Virginia's six clinics and two mental hospitals had "im proved more than 50 per cent of then patients." Hoff, considered one of the best men in his field, conduct ed a group therapy session before the two-day institute ended. Hatfield Speaks On Conservation Portland - (UPD - Gov. Mark Hatfield told the opening ses sion of the 39th annual con ference of Western Associa tion of State Game and Fish Commissioners here Monday that the intrusion of partisan politics into the realm of nat ural resources cannot be tol erated under any circum stances. He added: "We must con stantly maintain the career approach to management and preservation of all our natural UMA I 80-89V&I Attending Relief Promised North, East From Hot, H umid Weather By United Press International Forecasters promised relief from a muggy heat wave in the North and East today but said hot, humid weather would plague residents of the South and Southeast. Temperatures in the 90s and over 100 across the East and South took a toll in lives and crops, created water shortages in some communi ties and sent millions of per sons fleeing to the comforts of air-conditioned buildings. Two Deaths Reported Two heat prostration deaths were reported in New York City, one death in New Jer sey was attributed to the heat and a coroner ruled that a Hamlet, N.C., woman died as a result of a 102-degree tem perature. A canning firm shut down in Weldon, N.C., throwing 50 persons out of work, becaus the hot, dry weather had de stroyed the stringbean crop, North Carolina's tobacco crop was threatened by the plant- withering heat. ' In the Finger Lakes area of New York State, Mayor George E. Keenan declared a state of emergency in the city of Corning after a three-mil-lon-gallon reservoir ran dry. A ban was placed on laun dering clothes and sprinkling lawns and the Corning glass works was asked to turn off its .air-conditioning plant. The mayor said most homes had a limited supply of water -for drinking and other essential needs. , In New York City, two Manhattan firemen turning off a hydrant for the third time were attacked Monday night by . 25 teenagers. One "was. hit on the head with a garbage pail and one stabbed in the arm. A youth reported to police for turning on a fire hydrant in the Bronx was blamed for tossing a "Molotov cocktail" from the top of an apartment house into a group of neigh bors cooling off oh a front stoop. Five persons were burn ed, one seriously. . Ninety-five-degree weather in Indianapolis, the hottest there since Aug. 5, 1956, made a soft drink machine one of the most popular gathering spots in the Chrysler plant, A dozen - men were standing around the machine when it exploded, killing one and in juring 10. The mercury soared Mon day to 102 degrees at New resources." Hatfield- told the delegates that one of Oregon's biggest needs was to keep the public aware of conservation prob lems. . m a boat y? STORES Bern, N.C., 101 at Wilming ton, N.C., and Baltimore, Md., 100 at Tyetteville, N.C., and Washington, D.C., 97 at Louis ville, Ky., 96.1 in New York City, 95 at St. Louis and Kan sas City, Mo., and 91 as far north as Burlington, Vt. Lb-Vwi jwM WINNINGS THE WEST I fumir TMES GBEJ1T KENTUCEHT VJE&ESEZET COMES EN TWO BOFTLENGS! $A60 m Brooke SXJjtf SO PROOr ii'lij5RSl KEsnicirr ' STRAIGHT' whhkey-aiU" OLD SUNNV BftOOK CO., LOUISVILLE, KY., DISTRIBUTED BY NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS COMPANY. KENTUCKY. STRAIGHT. BOURBON WHISKEY. 90 PROOF . KENTUCKY BLENDED WHISKEY, 86 PROOF 65X GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS Siamese Twins Born in Idaho Portland, Ore.-(DPD-Siamese twins born to an Idaho farm couple, were to be flown here by air ambulance today to be studied for possible separa tion. . The twin girls, joined at the abdomen, were born Monday at Malheur Memorial hospital in Nyssa, Ore. They will be l checked by specialists here at There are two great tastes in American whiskey. Some people prefer blends. Others like straight bourbon. With the quality assur ance of Sunny Brook you can buy either. . J a Sunny Brook's round bottle is an unusual blend m Kentucky whiskies andgfhe lightest grain neutral spirits. In the square bottle is Sunny Brook's straight Kentucky $000 Pt. BLENDED WHISKEY 112 - RIVERSIDE MAIL TRIBUNE, MedforJ, Or. Tuesday, Juna 30, 195 Doernbecher hospital. The parents are Mr. and Mrs. James Stubblefield of Parma, Ida. He is 25 (Jears old, and she is 24. They have three other children ranging in age from 4 to 1. ; Charles Smith, manag of Malheur hospital, said the combined weight of the twins was 9 pounds 10 ounces. He said the babies gnd the moth? er were in satisfactory condf tion. - bourbon, deliriously mild and sunny. . . ' Round bottle blend or square bot tle straight every drop is Kentucky whiskey. v o . (fl SOUTH