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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1959)
1 ?i J 1 1 .1 . f - i S3 i s .:. . . . . . o . : .-. .. . . . . " . - ! ; v . 5 5 ..: . . r, . : . - -V . .. ' - : ! . ' : . . .... ' .... r V I i r 1 1 .. fbrfer Planning Busy'Schedufe . In Coming Weeks Eugene - (CPJ T Rep. Charles " O-.Pcfrter (DOre.), said hjs Itinerary lor the nexf sev.eral weeks would, inclilde two visits in southwest Oregon and a two-week trip tt the Far feast. . rhisi f t e ra o o n Jie was scheduled to sit in with the Subcommittee o n Public Lands at the Florence hearing 'on the Oregon Etines National Seashore bill. The hearing was to be conducted by Kep. Grade Pfost (D-Idaho Nov. 1 Porter said heVould Inspect the Waltarvllle Water Control District and Nov. 2 a conference of.- lumber men would occupy him in Eugene. J Going To Tokyo pe is scheduled to fly to Tokyo from Seattle NovT3. After attending the American Japanese Conference of May ors ad Chamber of Com merce presidents in Osaka .Nov. 6 hep"lansto spend the next tw,o days a O.kinawa. . TJie congressman said his visits to American overseas i military installations were to, , check on employment and morale prbblens. He said he would represent the House Committee on Post Office and Civil Service, of which'he is . araeir .it. . . Porter's return to the U.S. on Nov. 15 "will be followed 1 by speeches in Ejigene and af ter that he leaves for Chicago and yvashingtorf, D.C. . .ThoseOver 40 Heed Glaucoma Exams. .Chicago (Science SerVice) Here is what our physiciah will be reading this week in the current issue'of the Jour nal of the American. Medical Association: . fi. two-year study fit more . than 13,00a. persons shws that if you are over 40, an examination for glaucoma an eye d-'sea "that can lead to blindness is an indispen- sable part of your physical examination. 'Persons with chronic disease such as hard ening of the arteries, high blood pressure or arthritis should be particularly sure of being examined, trported Drs. .Henry Packer," Alice R. ' Deutsch, Philip M. Lewis Claude D. Oglesby andAC Cheijall of Memphis, Tenn. On the basis of a stu'dy of 100 cases; it appears" that: lu pus erythematosus may not be .as serious a disease as be lieved. -Drs. Clarence E! Rupe and Stewart N. Nickel, Henry Ford hospital, Detroit, report. edthat treatment with artifi cial hormones slows down the disease and carries "the p"a- tient through crises that once would have been fatal They also note that hypersensitivity to the streptococcus bacillus may be 'an important faor av JlT S Rumania, has a 'population of about 17,million. 'Man's earlv-Severed leig (grafted .(Back-by ilil.edii'cf egm 2nd SECTION ,'MEPFpRQ, 'OREGdN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, T959 . Pages 1-10 Back. $t airs: Qualify for. Sea Duty l! Money.!fotRelurned Br MERRIMAH "SMITH JJPI Whie House Rlporler Washington -.pPB - Back stairt atthe White House:. Now thjre's a story going around thatrit.was.so viei on the golf 'course in Augusta, Ga., one day last week when Pfesident . Eisenhower was Dlaving that the , Sfecet Ser- vice men with 'him quaSfied fr sea duty. " .. A woman reades of Iher s i 1 Miftfeegdn (Mich.) Chronicle who .signs hqj-self "Mrs. A. Publie," writi to "Backstairs at the White House?. to object rather bitterly to a recent par- agraph which said "from allj externale vddence, Eisen- hflwer on his 9th birthday! Vas in good health, ... "I donl believe this," the lady writes She goes on to say how she .reacts tnesS days when . she sees? a piftuf of the President he looks as if one of hi! .legs is in the cof-i fur and yie other on a banana peel. He looks haggard and like a ghoStibr a very tired old man. ' . Mrs. Public's letter was mailed from Spring Lfike Mich., juSt in time -to be de livered to "Backstaijs" in Au gusta'dhtihe day the Presi dent played 36 holes oftgolf SoVretTT. Paper . Attacks Beiither for Mate With NiWta Moscow- (DPD ' The news paper Trvfd p.ublished a full page article Thursday attack ing Walter P.Reuther, presi dent ! the United Auto Work ers Union. .. Rie attack was the latest in a series on Itouther'by the Russian.piss andradio Since he anS rf&er American lcftc leaders debated with Premier Nikita Khrushchev during the Pr&nier's racent visit to.3fen Francisco. Trmdis the official T ! J- orgau ox uie xvussictu -Layt; uniSns... ! . Today's a at id eincluded statements from four persons, J one . an unidentified, woman L who claimed Reuther married her in 1934 in the boviet Union, but abandoned her and .returned to the United States. Referred To Experiences Trad said the statements 3 .were from "people who per- sonajly knew Reuther . . . when he worked in the Sovi Union, at the instruction of tan aujomobile plant inJbrby, in tne tnujies. . Reuther referred o his Rus sian experienced in his. San Francisco talks' with Khrtt shchev ' second statem;nf; from a man identified as "fprmer American" Toin Roshton, at tacked Reuther for 'mendac ious filthy fabric a t o ji is" about ihe Soviet Union during the San'Francisco defoate. Anotharrb rln e.r"Amesr-J can, narry . in unuiagu, c sc jibed as a. present foreman bf the Gorky plant, allej Reuther "ferocious. In a fourth statement pub lished by Trud, Vladimir Vladimifsky, now an assistant superintendent at the )lant, called ReuthfT "greedy capi ialist traitor jvho soldevory- rthing for thirty pieces of sJ- ver.; ' ' ... Reuter maraiad her ih the &ovk,p umorr -m 1934 was. L based upon complete fabrica tion ana iaiseijeoa." Reuther said he has been a principal target for Commu nist attack and .that "this la tent .attaffck is anether. such propaganda effort, if is, based apon complo f abrication&aiid falsehood. Mail TJfrget. . He said "I have been oe ef the main targets of Ccfm-o milhist propaganda for many yeais. Since the San Fran- f cftco meeting between Soviet Premier Nikita KlyusRchev and a gr.oup;of American la- bor leaders, the Soviet press, racue, televkion and (pther media of communication have stepped, up the, tempo of their yi upaeuiuci. udiupjugu. oi lies and ystortion." - . ' 'Detroit (DPD United Auto Workers Union President Walter P. Reuther said Thurs day a Russian newspaper story slacking him andoquot ing a woman as. claiming I : Crbp fhsurance " 5aidfiayipg Off . IJoryand - (DPD Peyton R. Winn of Weston, district fed erafc crop insurance super visor, said Tiursdaythat fod- i ! -r i 1 erax crop insurance xor iciinv ers'in paying off. . Winn said many Northvest farmers in ' the past season found it was 'sometimes 4hp difference between- efl Jnk on the books and haiing enough funcfs to piant again. lany Columbia Basin rea ffarrgers, he said,tr being in demnified for drought1, . frost and plant disease cqmbina tiflns. A number of farmers in "eastern Oregon, north Ida-. ho and Washington will col lect most production cost loss s resulting from thousands of J'acres of untiarvested wheatl s and Barley. Rain spoiled jjarc of the harvest. Winn said that dozens of Linn couny laVmers will get Wqdemnity checks due to $rop losses from plait diseases like dwarf yellow virus. : . . ; : . The crowd tbaf turned out at the Augusta Airport lasw Sunday afternoon to fwve goodbye to the. President as he took, off f or0 Washington was amazing in its large size. This was the end of Eisen howers 22nd tsip to Augusta Vas President and iiis ojngg and ct)mings should be some- fwhat old hat by now. . Yet, on a sunny, but chilly and very.brfiaey afternoon,! tne largest crowd ever to col lect at the Augftsta Airport for tine President turned. out and cneered louaiyasne.weni up the ramp of js,plane. The turnout had old Au- gifstS hands puzzled. Thete was no particular puDiicny buildup jn Jhe local nevtepe-j pers eeyoaa a. xuuuu.tr otuijr giving tne time eg; nis depar The, Pfesidflnt seemed, hap rMlv surnrised" when" 'he steppefl faftn his limousirfij that brought him Ho the air- port vtrom tne Augusta tioflal Getf 'Club.. Jlisenhovcf tooR off 4iishaiespite a stiff breeze and walked teward the people who were coljected along a ropefibarer. He lifted both arms in the air. afld the crod koled with .the enthusiasm normaily assotiated with political ral The President .stlirtec" ' to ward his tHane and passed a Ufelatively small seddii which5 l-- J 1 - i 1 " i rm. couuiincu, uy aciucu cuuiit, xir shrill voung girls. "Well,, would you look at that?" he said with a chuckle. He stonned again. as he went up the steps to his pjERie. tnrew nis arms- i a cii acteristic gesture nd turned on his best 100watt smile, The crowd whooped again, From the ramp, it was easy rto'-see "that- several -fjiotrind people were along thg. ropes and manv more sitting in' their autemobiles. f Sctarry for Cbver . And most of the people re mained until the ; slipstream. rfrom the engines of the fresi dent's plane seijt them scurry ing or cover. . The President has never beeti a walloping drawing card in Augusta, which "made size f The crowd more interesting. The?e rseemed to be twjp logical the ories. One was that with only a little more than a year left in office. Eisenhower wont View? Diflerr Anchorage, Alaska- (UPD - Bartender Barl Sawdy lost his wallet nearhis roadhouse on the .Pakner Highway here. Five'dS latqrhe received tti e following typewritten Jetter? ,"My husband fouifd your vallet this pasuwek end up on1 the ifumer nignway. i am, enclosing it herewith in iiopes that these yaluible papers and identification will reach ydu m Sme lor your use. . Needless. tft sayJr. Saw- Ldv, this wallet hadnoaey.in it and 1 wanted to noury you and eive it back to you. The money is. rightfully yours. However; myhusbanls opm ion varies tfrpm mine and 1 am af a loss to get it bask to you 1'THfe.old adage of truthful ness sems to have sojjlehew faded out of our present day living but I tait you V know that this letter is writ ten ia ali sincerity, and I'm sorry I cannot give you the $50 which is yoilr money If L had picked it up you'd iiave it " The letter was igrioj, "An Old Alaskan dential trips to Georgia. ThiS Castro Valley, Calif. lUPDA" team of surgeons has graft ed back a woisonan's right leg 'which was almost severed in an industrial accident, it wasJ disclosed Thursday. The victtm, Biliy J. Smith. 25 of Hayward, Calif., recov ering in Eden hospital here from the accident, "which oc culted three months ag5. Dr. Elmer O Masman. di rector of the hospitaI,.said thai; omitn win ue aoie to waiK again within a few months, al though his right leg will be two inches .shorter than his left'because of bone an tissue j . rr j - aainage suuorea in uie acci dent. . First ftf Kind ' ' . The doctors agreed that the operation apparently vs tke first of its? kind in recorded medical history. Iriey added, however that it bore 'Jitfle resemblance" to a Russian doctor's plan tJ graft the leg a deed person on a 0-year- old girl whose leg was ampu tated. . . . The doctors Vho.prfqrmed the Jeat, a Hayward orthope'- dic surgeon and an Oakland, . - -He called the vascular sur geon and tfiey started the ope geonandthey started the op- eaation three hours and 5 mirtufes after the accident. Figst, the doctors attached the arteries and veins of the severed leg ft those of the stump, pumping life-giving1? blood back into the lgnb. .Then the doctors cut awav Lthe crushed muscle and skin, r, o fl. e i i i cieanea uie area ana suurir eed the leg bone v two inch es, compensate Ior the re movl'd muscle pd tejidbns. ! Then the muscle skin, ten dons and blood vessels swere attached to thestfimp: Since the operation the bon has been held together Uy metfflpins and ha begun to knit. ' . ' . e 6 Smith's leg muscles are be- Calif., - vasjular surgeon, in sisted their names not tie used in news dispatches. HowVr, Masman "related this account of the accident and operat'on .Smith was working at ilfe steel door of a furnace in thS LU:S. Pipe' and Foundry Co. pla"ntin rieBby Decoto when the htjavy steel hook cf a traveling crane hutled down on. hjm. Held Togelher'by Skin , The hdbk smashed his right leg'agjainl the furnace door, crashing through the bone and flesh above the knee. : . When the cofnpanj doctor attached to hip bedy only by a bit o? sJiin-aDcfctors slid the connecting skinwas vaheless, and could have been snipped awV without affecting the ing keptnetkndition by dailv sueseaueat orftrationu The company pfiysjeian ap rJied a tourniquet to the bleeding stump aild senW Smith to the Eden hospital. The orttfbpedic surgeon was j aiuuivuiicu cum, vu 0 apui v. thaKmomentedecision," decidi to try to sew 8a. theleg. M eleftric stirijulation. , FREE PARKING e SPtyAUSTS IN HOMfWAKIS 45 S. Central oKHh" Washington - (UPD - The U.S. weather scientists said Thurs-1 day more research is needed fto determine whether aySovi-J et-proposed dam across the Bering Strait between Alaska and Siberia would do more harimthan good. Another U. S. scientist ex pressed doubt tht such a dam Mjmilf? rln urViaf the Russians SQjis. nfey edifc toAi ver-Jlthflk t ould - varm te OveY-Secrefion of Adrenalin Blamed Philadelphia (Science Sery ice) Wh comrjetitive, "harid dffVing" men apparently get heart disease earlier and oft en? than mere relaxed per- secietion cf adrenalin, Dr. LMeyer Friedman of San Fran- rpisco reported her. ur. i riecunan, a proponent of the theery that "go-getting" men. are mojre likely tq suffer heart 'attacks than" othe,s, told the. scientific, sessions of the American. Heart Associa-4 tie tnat ne lounu tnai me adrenal glands of "hard dri- vor" anna-pntlv Tiroduced fmofe adaejialin and a closely I related normone, noraarena jljn, during . the working da tnan tne gianas oi coiunsir- frozen Arctic area ,Bift Sen. Ernest Cruening tht Jhe IJnited States give "prompt and sympathetic cbn- I sideration". to the Soviet pro- (Juaai. lie aaiQ lie w uuiu as& Congress in January to ap-Drey-e a S o v i e - American study of the dam an'd sug gested that Canada oe injv-ited to participate. Would JPump Water. Soviet engineer A. i, Shu- milin proposed some time ago that a 53-mile iam be built between Siberia and able erouD of easy-going men. -Studklue-snbw, re4 perteo. baf men. of aggressive he would pump .water by the behavior patterns had "six "to eight times" as muclf heart disease as those with relaxed roersonairUes. Bxcessjve pro duction of these two hormones rduring working hours sug gests .a mechanism through tvhich tne personality factor 'may operate, he Said. ' ...... - ' may have stimulated a turn- evenn out to see him .while you can." fc AlsJ), winter is approaching4 aija tne time is near wneu Sunday affernoon drives wifl no be too comfortable. Last be maSing manyinore presW Swnday was a fine day r getting but in thecountry. it i. ft ' PlEftTY OF PARKING SHOPPING IS A- FAMILY. AFFAIR. . . ' - . YOUR- "HIGH fASHION".-CENTER There is More t,of Eyrything .Down to Wh " . . . . . PLENTY OF PARKING AREA -Nonefd to spend time, gas. and effort just tookin for a place to park. Just drive in to arjy of. the 7 Park Jt Shop lots-plenty of free parking for "HIGH FAJSMON" CENJER - you'll find mqfe o Kery t the price, you" wanf Jo pay in downtown Medford . t .1 ' . .1 YOUR thing at $ in all sizes, color and the very newest styles, of coerse. everyone. . . I SEVEN BIG LOTS I I Just drive in to aiiyof -tye parking. Wts .displaying h..j PARK & SHOP Emblem. Shop where ypu see the Park Shop Emblem and .you'll receive tamps for FREE J PARKING. Downtown.. SHOPPING IS A'FAMILY AFFAIR-bring the k.dsf If s.more eon-. venient'to shop for ell your neds for the family and the home in one quick, no-strain trip. There are more than 7(J . . . downtown members of the Paik & Shop system. . . 1 1 19 and 21 South Frorft I 9th Central (RicfifTeld) 4. East Main 8th-. Between Bartlett . and Central 29 South Bartlett .1 I I. I Main & Railtoad Tracks j - . 135i North Central . Research Neeqe'djo Determirte Effect of Bering Strait Pa ia-' the short winter seasons Mhene storms erfti in the north dip far toothe Sbulh. Anything "that made the northern- winders Tnilcrer would cut down the number of storms venturing - sbuth- wgrd, and might dry P these j regions, VV exler said. 1 e CJLJD SHEED LUCAS S.UOVIAnD- Hiwav99 Central Point thousands, of cueic "miles from the , wjarm Pacific side o the dam to the cold Arctic iide.& - 0 " An&ther Russian engineer, Peter M. Bgrisov, ctime up with "another dam proposal lSsf weelj.Iifstead ft pumQjng from ihe Pacif ie to ihe Arctic, he wouldVraw cold water outfl of the Arctic. This, according to Borisov, wouldopull warm firulf Stream water bf the Arctic .from tke Atlantic sidS and impfove te. climate of Alaska, Canada and Siberia. Borisov suggest ed thafcihe United .States, and Russia bear jointly .the ccjst of $17,330,000,000. . . ' Dr. .Harry Wexler, the Weather Bureau's chief of meteorological research and Dr. TSarJ Dro'essler, program.' director lor atmospnerjc sci ences of the National Science Foundations, said much more fiiformation must be obtained rbefore it would be possible to say .whether the dam would be good or bad for humanity. Regidhs (Jould BHurt There are Dlaces la the world, such aS Southern Cali fornia and the Mediterranean regions Wexler said, whifh concefVably could be hurt by the dam. These are are dry most of the year. They get most of their mpisture difring ."a l9 . l" Illl M vJLL '. . ". W . Cable Repair Ship . Plans Announced London -(DP4- Plans to con struct a cable repair ship larger. and faster than-any now in service have been an- nouncedhere. ' The vessel is to bebuflt for Cable and Wireless . S-imited by Cammell Laird and Com- pany of Birkejihead. It will a cost one million pounds 52pi 800,000). The keel'of the vetssel is ex pectedto be laid in February, 1960, with the ship readyf8r 'service about a. year later. It will be diesel - electric propelled, with a maximum, spaed of 15 knots and a sea endurance of seven 'weeks. It will weigh 4,030 tons and be dO ieei long.- ... GLOGSTOrrS ' ' Metal . o Weather Stripping. - and Screen? ' . Estimates Gladly Phon SP 3-1014 Evening 'NEW SPACE-SAVER TUBES! Ait-HA-DWOODB, MeeP21VT-6, 21" Tablff TV Model 17YT-10, 17" Table TV Only sJ8995in Mahogany. 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