The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, June 03, 1949, Page 4, Image 4

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    Temporary Bridging
Asst. Pastor To
Serve At First
Christian Church
Gilda Gray, In Suit, Says Rita Swiped Her Shimmy
DENVER, June 3. JF Attor
neys for Columbia Pictures said
in court here that former
"Shimmy Queen" Gilda Gray's
$1,000,000 suit against the movie
corporation is legally leaky be
cause: 1. "Miss Gray has waived any
rights to privacy and has
encouraged and consented to noto
riety and attention. ,
2. "Throughout her career as
lic exposure."
Miss Gray's suit, filed ln Fed
eral District Court here, charged
that the movie "Gilda", starring
Rita Hayworth, was based on Miss
Gray's own real-life loves.
Th suit stated also that Rita,
recently married to Aly Khan,
son of one of the world's richest
men, also swiped Miss Gray's
shimmy dance in the movie.
Miss Gray, glamor girl and
dancing star of the silent screen
a quarter-century ago, now lives
on a ranch at Larkspur, Colo.
Qbc 3towsiteuiew
Published Daily Except Sunday by thaj
News-Review Company, Inc.
Enters .frond cl.it metier Mar 1. 130. .t th. fo.t efflce t
AoMburi, Ortega, under set el Harcn t, 17S
CHARLES V. 8TANTON ffim EDWIN L. KNAPP
Editor Manager
Member of the Associated Press, Oregon Newspaper Publishers
Association, the Audit Bureau of Circulation!
BcpreiloUd by WEBT-HOI.LIDAr CO., INC., erfirfl In " ' Chlcefe,
Sa rranclice, Lgi Amclei, Seattle, PorlUnd. HI. Lull.
an entertainer Miss Gray exposed
to. Dublin view her techniques (of
the shimmy) and all incidents and
experiences of her life; and
neither reserved nor protected
any quietude or privacy from pub
. . -. . n . II- Hall I'rr Vip IK. OA. lllIlthl H.M.
Arches were built as early as
th,.o month. .M. B, City C.rri.r-P.r year 110 .00 (hi. ). ""
no year, pir m.nlh J1.00. OuKlde Oreion By Mll Per jrer a.oe. Us
4,000 B.C.
months 11.75. Piroo monma
4 Th Nawi-keview, Roteburg, Ore. Friday, June 3, 194
c
GRADUATE CITIZENS
Rosebur? Senior High School will graduate a class of 182
seniors at Commencement exercises tonight.
The entire community feels an intense pride in these fine
young men and women who have completed one phase of
their preparation for places in adult society.
Each student represents an investment of several thou
sands of dollars on the part of the general public. The major
part of every tax dollar goes into our school system, and the
per capita cost of education is mounting steadily and will
continue to increase for at least several more years.
Many taxpayers are inclined to criticize the high cost of
our public school system, but it is pleasing to note that here
in Douglas County no real school need has long been denied.
Voters have been generous in their approval of new school
buildincs. increased salaries, better equipment and generally
improved educational facilities. The many students in our
schools, and particularly those receiving high school di
Dlomas. can accept the generosity of taxpayers as personal
compliments, for such large sums of money would not be
forthcoming if we did not have confidence in our young
people and pride in their achievements.
At the same time, the confidence shown by the public
places a strict responsibility upon all students to utilize
seriously and to the utmost the educational advantages pro
vided for them and to study to take their places in adult
society as citizens, justifying the expenditures made in their
behalf. ,
We can have good government only as we have citizens
qualified by education and sense of responsibility to accept
the duties required of each individual in a representative
democracy.
We stand at political crossroads today. The foundations
of our constitutional government tremble under the on
slaught of Socialism. In the trying days ahead we will need
intelligent men and women, able, through educational prepa
ration, to analyze accurately and, imbued with a determina
tion to discharge every responsibility of citizenship, alert
so that the privileges guaranteed by the Constitution to
every individual shall not be abridged nor that any au
thority rightfully resting in the individual be delegated to
demagogues.
Our government today Is spending billions of dollars to
maintain adequate military power to discourage attack by
enemies from without. We spend, too, huge sums to combat
subversive forces from within attempting to replace our
present form of government with untried and visionary
practices or absolute substitution with foreign ideologies.
In view of the threatened dangers, our greatest hope for
preservation of representative democracy lies in a well edu
cated, well informed, intelligent population.' Every penny
spent for education is far more effective for purposes of
defense than dollars spent for guns and armaments.
But as we train a soldier to identify his enemies and to
use properly the offensive and defensive equipment placed
in his hands, so we must, in our educational system, teach
our students to recognize the enemies of our form of gov
ernment and to utilize educational weapons in their country's
defense.
We would urge upon the young men and women graduat
ing today from our high schools, universities and colleges,
and the students being promoted from one grade to another,
to recognize the fact that the diplomas placed in their hands
are but awards of merit for lessons learned in the science
of citizenship; that each promotional certificate and each
diploma is an expression of confidence from a community
of adults who depend upon the recipients of those docu
ments to hold and preserve for the future the heritage
passed down from generation to generation.
We would urge that our young people realize that the
weapons of education are not to be used carelessly, but are
to be used militantly to defend and support their govern
ment and its society.
If this responsibility is faithfully discharged no one
will ever have cause to regret any part of his investment
in our. public school system and in the boys and girls and
young men and women who pass through our educational
institutions.
f 1 tf l i1- -' " t- -i
(NEA Telepholo) 4
REUNION "Oh, God, I hope she pulls through," prayed William J. 8
K-opymo, wavy cnier storeitecpcr, as he reached the Iron lung In a Los
Angclea hospital of hl pollo-strlcken wife, Marlon, after a 6000-mile
mercy fllaht from Guam. It wits their first reunion In 18 month, and
doctors hoped his. presence might do what medicine has failed to
accomplish.
Wmm B Vuthnett S. Martin If t7J
It's all In the point of view so much easier;
whether one calls 12,000 feet I cahlns."
pressurized
Radio System
To Aid Operation
Of Taxi Service
The latest Innovation to provide
service lor patrons using taxi
service Is .the installation of two
way radio service which has just
been completed by the Roseburg
B & B Taxi Co.
Managers Virgil L. Sanders and
H. VV. "Sandy" Sanders announc
ed that an aerial pole for sending
has just been set up above the
central office at 226 N. Jackson,
where the radio equipment is lo
cated. Each of the taxicabs have
been supplied with short wave
sending and receiving equipment.
The radio service will operate
within a radius of 15 miles. Fed
eral permit has been secured and
a license has been obtained. The
company operates four cabs in
the Roseburg area on a 24-hour
basis.
The service, the manager ex
plained, will make It possible to
Keep in close contact With the cab
drivers at all times, and will pre
vent the necessity of their return
ing to the office after each re
quest to pick up their calls.
For example, thev Dointed out.
a cab driver who has just deposit
ed a passenger In an out-of-the-way
place may be contacted by
radio, in case someone is to be
picked up in the same area. This
will not only shorten the time be
tween the call and the arrival of
the cab, but will also prevent un-
necessary driving.
REV. RAE KLEINFELDT
To be assistant pastor at First
Christian Church in Roseburg.
Rae and Mrs. Kleinfeldt and
two children, Sherrll and Gaylen,
have moved to Roseburg. The
Rev. Mr. Kleinfeldt is to serve as
assistant to the Rev. Kenneth j
Knox, pastor of the First Chris-1
tlan Church. He will head the
youth program for the Roseburg !
church.
A graduate from Bend Hlsh
School in 1938, he entered the
University of Oregon and later '
transferred to Northwest Chris-!
tian College, Eugene, to prepare
iur ine ministry.
State champion In the mile run
for three consecutive vears while
attending high school, Kleinfeldt '
participated in all major sports !
while attending Unlversltv nf
Oregon, and was particularly out- j
standing in track and basketball.
He was graduated from North-1
west Christian College in 1944 1
with a B. Th. degree. I
wnne attending N. C. C. he
served as student-minister at
Dora and Port Orford. During i
me summer or ism, ne served as
assistant minister for Central
Christian Church, Pocatello, Ida.
He has since held ministries at
Corning, Calif., and Sutherlin.
During the period of his serv
ice at Sutherlin, he conducted a
successful program for boys
while all departments of the
church were advanced.
. In Roseburg he will serve as
minister of youth and will assist
in the other work of the church.
the Kleinfeldts are at home
at 4i!u t. 1st Ave. N.
In the Day's News
(Continued from Page One)
Into the woodshed and gave him
a good working over with a hair
brush.
"As the twig Is bent, the tree's
Inclined." It seems obvious that
Allabakhsh Jr., has been bent In
the wrong direction and needs
straightening up.
...
THIS wmj to be screwball day
In the British court news.
A Judge In Cardiff (Wales) dis
misses a charge that a man had
been drunk and disorderly In a
public place namely, a taxlcab
with this ruling:
"WHEN HE HAS PAID HIS
FARE, AN ENGLISHMAN'S
TAXI IS HIS CASTLE."
a trifle,
Didn't the taxi driver have a
share in that particular castle?
In defense of cab drivers In gen
eral, it ought to he added that
they have to put up wlih a lot and
ought to have SOME protection.
IN these days, a columnist who
didn't make some reference to
Communism In each day's stint
wouldn't be kosher. So here goes:
In Bucharest (Romania) one
Matyas, Communist chief of Hun
gary, charges that the Yugoslavs
(Tito's outfit) have established a
network of spies throughout East
ern Europe and are turning over
Information to the British Intelll
gence service.
When thieves fall out, honest
men come into their own. When
different kinds of Communists get
to SPYING ON EACH OTHER,
It may be a sign that a better
world is in the offing.
mayuh I've ridden once too
ften in taxis with soused 1 RACK In Michigan some 17 years
characters. Anyway, it seems to .Dago, one Rene Demeerleer
me that the judge's foot slipped I popped off a gasoline station at-
high, or low, flying. For Instance,
one stewardess, when we were
at that flight level, remarked:
"I don't like this low-altitude fly
ing. It takes It out of you so!" and
added, when 1 expressed surprise,
'Oh, the passengers don't mind
it. They don't do any work!"
This stewardess had been fly
ing for years but had asked for
West Coast duty to "see the coun
try." She was a former Army
nurse, of the Saipan detail. "I
like the Honolulu run best," she
said. "Your passengers settle
down In nice, comfortable berths,
slwp, have breakfast and
they're there! Why anyone," she
laughed at the Idea, "should want
to fly the ocean In the daytime I
can't Imagine! Monotonous. Noth
ing to see!"
I asked about the "low-flying:"
"Oh," she said, "It Is hard on a
girl to carry trays and do the
other things sometimes we are
very busy without much time for
A flight captain remarked he
liked the Honolulu run, too. "On be investigated.
Very Few U. S. Employei
Await Loyalty Check
WASHINGTON, June 3.-OPI
FBI Director J. Edear Hoover
said today that less than one half
per cent of the federal emnlovps
and job-seekers who required d
lanwi loyally cnecKs stilt need to
Radio Stations Given
Right To Take Sides
WASHINGTON, June 3. OP)
The Federal Communications
Commission Thursday today re
laxed its long-standing rule
against radio stations taking sides
on public questions on th air.
The action was taken in a
new statement of policy with
respect to "editorializing" by
broadcasters, which was forbid
den in a Commission opinion
adopted eight years ago. Four
commissioners joined in the new
policy, one dissented and two
did not take part.
The Commission said Thurs
day that it now believes that
the individual radio station own
er may use his own microphone
to project his own views on con
troversial issues, provided that
he does not use the privilege in
such a way as to give his sta
tion's listeners only one side of
the question under discussion.
tne big planes,' said he, with a
wave of his hand as if it were a
mere trifle, "All the flight cap
tain has to do is fly the plane.
He has an engineer along to wor
ry about the engines . . . and a
bigger crew. Oh, yes, I like flying
the ocean best. Nothing to it. All
you have to do is fly the plane."
I was privileged to have a look
at the instrument control board
of a DC-4. I almost wished I
hadn't seen It! How can all those
dials be watched! My astonished
eyes imagined there were, a hun
dred of those shining dials! "You
do have to watch aoout four of
them all the time," said one who
did It. "They're always talking
about simplifying the technique."
"Talking! You said It! "said an
other one who watched the dials.
"But when?"
So even In the glamorous (?)
world of the airlines work, there
rest at eight to twelve thousand! are problems and "gripes." But
feet. The twenty-thousand level is find one who doesn't love It!
iber of trades. He got to be head
Hoover said his bureau has
processed 2.541.717 lovaltv forms
Of this total 2,531,936, or"99.6 per
ii-iu, i.nve ueen sent oacK to the
Civil Service Commission marked
"no disloyal data."
The total processing Includes
1,7.2,455 persons actually on the
payrolls and 709,262 prospective
appointees. Full field Investiga
tions have been ordered in 9,394
cases, of which 8,717 have been
completed.
The chief volume of work re
maining for the bureau is the con
tinuing stream of applications for
first employment with the govern,
ment.
tendant who objected to being buckled down to work in the
held up and robbed and was 1 prison school. He studied law,
churned with murder. He was ne- """. ii.su.iy ami m.nv
cused, convicted and sentenced In
Uifc, DAi. ,,.ose t0 b, jp0l.ls editor of the
Briefing a long story, the Su- prison paper.
preme Court has Just ruled that The (is,wk.h say!l 0( him that , ' unlikely
inai was too qun-K, a.m uuuugn a i ",e It,ft the pi.ls0I, e(iucat(,d
series of technicalities that are!man."
too Involved for us laymen to
Democracy Little Known
To Russ, Gen. Smith Says
NEW YORK, June 3.-.P)-Lt.
Gen. Walter Bedell Smith, former
ambassador to Russia, says Prime
Minister Satlln once told him:
"We do not want war any more
than the West does, but we are
less interested In peace than the
West and therein lies the strength
of our position."
Smith told the Chamber of
Commerce of the State of New
York last night that "the Russian,
people have what they want po
litically." "They have no real understand
ing ot democratic processes and
the secret police is much more el
licient than It ever was during
the Czarist regime or anywhere
Roseburg Student Takes
Graduate Scholarship
UNIVERSITY OF ORGEON,
Eugene, June 3. (Special)
Nathan Stiewig, son of C. W.
Stiewig, 1020 W. First St., Rose
burg, is one of 12 University of
Oregon students who has ac
cepted graduate scholarship and
store service awards for next
year In the University of New
York, the University of Pitts
burgh, and the City College of
New York. The scholarships pay
from $500 to SS0O each.
The students will work part
time in selected stores in New
York and Pittsburgh while do
ing graduate work at the schools.
Upon completion of the year's
work they will receive their
master's degree.
librarian of the prison school. He ln ,ne world."
oiiiiui, nuw vuiumanuer ot tne
First Army, said anv u oris in?
against the present Soviet regime
race out here, Demeerleer has I ,. ' ' , . .
,, . ... . , ,, . i he seems to have been a hoodlum
t
just walked out of jail a free man
and is on his way to IVtroit
where a Job ln an automobile fac
tory is waiting for him.
w hen he entered It.
Hi
ERE'S the story I want to
tell:
When he plugged the station
attendant, Demeerleer had only
a common school education, and
Prison Term Handed To
Woman On Dope Charge
PORTLAND, June 3. -(.')
Mary Watts. 41, who was ar
rested In a hank's saletv deDosit
in ..... , ... vault pulling opium and J4000
AH, far too often our prisons , a sa(e x, pleaded
prove to be training schools : guilty to possession of narcotics
in crime. Much too frequently, Thursday.
convicted persons enter them as , sh,f wa sentenced to 2 years
apprentices and leave as skilled I ln ,he Kfderal P"""ntiary.
and finished criminals. Va,er delivered to the citv
If Inthe Michigan penitentiary iof Home by the great system
there has been an execution to m l''eiucts in tne first ten-
tus-vr A 11 k
Trucker-Father Loses
Race To Save His Child
LOS ANGET.FS .inn. ?J
Truckdriver James Telford lost
ins cross country race with -death.
Mcninpitis snuffed nut the Ufa
of his eight-month-old daughter,
margie, in Laiitornla Lutheran
Hospital before TelfnrH orrk-orf
by plane from Minneapolis where
ne uau iinaiiy Deen located.
The bahv heramn lit chnnlK,
after Telford. 30 lft t n An.
geles earlier this week on his
transcontinental truck run. He
was notified after an Intensive
search and immediately hopped
a plane. But too late. The Tel
fords have two older children.
The Roman citizen of the First
Century A.D. had about twice
as much water delivered In the
city for his use as had the
citizen of Glasgow in 1928, ac
cording to one estimate.
F
even that much seems to haveithl. trade ml... It i. it..r.iin,, lur' A.u., nas been estimated
. 1 " - -... .I,,,.,.
been on th sketchy side. But he i Indeed.
day.
has
92.000.000
gallons a
Phone 100
If you do not receive
your News-Review by
6:1S P.M. call Harold
Mobley before 7 P.M.
Phone 100
FRESH SEA FOOD
All types of fish, crabs ond oysters In
season.
Open daily from 10 a. m. to 7 p. m.
and weekends from 1 0 a. m. until
9 p.m.
SEAFOOD MARKET
Winston
(At Junction of Hwy. 99
and Coos Bay Hwy.)
Bank With
A Douglas County Institution
Home Owned Home Operated
Member Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp.
Douglas County State Bank
SPECIAL
FIR PICKET
Kiln Dried and Cut to Length
Now is the time to build
that picket fence
DENN-GERRETSEN CO.
402 W. 'Oak Phone 128
Hard of Hearing
. . Removes Selfaonsclousnoss Nobody
knows that you are hard of hearing
HIM IT IS
NO RECEIVER
BUTTON
IN THE EAR
YOU'VE
'. WAITED
FOR THIS)
HO NEEB
TO WAIT ANY
. LONGER!
5i
NO TULTAll SUTTON TO SHOWI 1.2
rjT And note Ibt Pbantomold (invisible) is combined with the tiny
i'tvi t?tf ONIUNIT OHtol thtWarlJ't'imalUit U,rn Aiji
evcuwnp monopac ' '
Yoo r usured of aniarpaued
hearing quality for both coat tad
folutnt. But best of til, vita roar friends I
won't notice that roo art wearing a J
hearing aid. Yoo owe it to rouritl to I
lee this acweet bearing improvement
and convince rouraeif that now
for the first time von really cao
cooceaJ roar deaioejs.
Mr. Mitchell of 305 IOOF Bldg.. Eugene, is a member of
J. N. Taft and Associates of Portland, who have been serv
ing the hard of hearing since 1934. Fresh batteries for all
aids.
Free Beltone Clinic at
Umpqua Hotel
Friday, June 10th
ZZ
STOP MOTOR TROUBLE
BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE
Rusting, leakage or a motor "knock" can lead to serious
trouble. Slow pick-up and sluggish performance mean
wasted gosoline. Drive in soon for an efficient motor
tune-up by automotive experts. Inexpensive repairs now
can save you trouble and money later.
Umpqua Auto & Implement Co.
444 N. Stephens phone 752
4