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