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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1949)
, U. Of 0. Library Comp ME MS Ml Jl ll 28 Out Of 75 Tht Weather Partly cloudy and coaler to day. Fair Wednesday. Sunstt today 7:50 p. m. Sunriso tomorrow 4:33 a. m. Aboard Known To Be Saved i 3 ' M "" y ii Yy--.;.;,, ouji like ipt ViKUWnurs Starlight Roof" for a mere 18 store for New York youngsters this summer. The Madison Square Boys' Club just opened a teen-aqe niqht club on its rooftop where boys and girls can dance and get Here, waiter Edward Monserrat Roseburg High School Band Leaves Tomorrow For Rose Festival Gaiety Roseburg High School band, 80 strong, will depart by school bus lor Portland at 5 a. m. Wednesday to participate in the Portland Rose Festival. Director C. A. Ricketts left today for the Rose City to make arrangements lor the band's arrival. Chaperons and other members making the trip will bring the total party to around 100. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS THERE'S A trace of what news paper professionals call "color" in the news as this is written. Here in Oregon two supposedly desperate criminals are loose from the state penitentiary. Two men broke into the Benton Coun ty jail, frisked it for guns, found three, took them, along with am munition, released an inmate who is a several-times convict from his cell, and the three vanished into the night. ... Everyone with a spark of Imagination jumps to the conclu sion that the jail-break was the work of the two penitentiary es capees. The idea certainly has a fascinating Jesse James flavor. THE jail delivery "had its amus ing side. Two men were in the Benton County clink. One of them wanted to stay and stayed. Not only that, but he yelled bloody murder through the bars of his cell, calling all good citizens to rally to the chase. Everybody thought he was (Continued on Page Four) Ditch-Trapped Worker Saves Self And Partner DALLAS, Ore., June 7. UP) ' One workman dug himself free and then summoned help to res cue his ditch digging partner yes terday when a 14-foot wall of dirt collapsed. The ditch is on a city pipe .line project. L. W. MeOrt. Portland, buripd to his waist, scrambled free and 1 then helped dig out Llmer Lark ins, also of Portland, who was completely buried. Larkins suffered a broken shoulder bone but was not other wise seriously hurt. He had moved into the ditch to help Mc Gert shore up the sides of the ditch. ONE CAMPAIGN OR SEVERAL? Chamber Of Commerce Questionnaire Deals With Method Of Raising Funds In an effort to reduce the number of fund raising campaigns here each year, questionnaires have been mailed to members of the Roseburg Chamber of Commerce to learn their desires as to how such campaigns shall be conducted. "Regardless of the popularity 1 CATh" :SSJh S'l'r.- "' .nd raising campaign?- are lime-consuming for both the solicitor and the party being so licited. A multiplicity of drives are exhaustive of manpower, ir ritating, costly, and ultimately doomed to failure." Answers are sought to these questions: 1. Would you prefer to be so licited just once each year for a donation to cover your partici pation in all projects you have been supporting? 2. Would you be willing to do nate, or pledge to pav on a quar v. 1 ' . iliv. terly basis, a sum equal to thel total amount you have been do- Chamber of Commerce and the nating to cover your participation i Roseburg Community Chest be in all projects" you have been i lieve there should be reduced supporting? number of fund raising cam- 3. As a step toward realization paign. Preparation of the ques of your desire to broaden the 1 tionnaire "evidences the sincerity scope of vour Community Chest, i of those responsible for an im would vou like to have it Include1 provement In the control of local the following agencies In the an-1 drives for funds." 1 Muiic ana aancing ar rne junior cents admission. That's what's in soft drinks three nights a week. serves one of the tables. While the big affair In which the band will participate will be the territorial band jamboree in Multnomah stadium Thursday night and the big parade Friday morning, other activities are on the schedule. Wednesday afternoon, shortly after Its arrival, the band will parade through the streets of Port land. They have been granted permission to go In and out of stores, up and down escalators and in general serenading the populace of Portland's main busi ness district. Thursday will be given over to rehearsals in preparation for the jamboree that night. The band will have , 12 .. minutes . during (lie evening performance. "to" go through. Its lormations. ine group will step lively from one forma tion to another, while playing appropriate tunes. The band will take part In the big parade Friday, and on Sat urday the members will be treat ed to a day at Jantzen Beach. They will return to Roseburg Sunday. During their stay in Portland they will be quartered at Lewis and Clark College. Rodeo Court To Deal Penalties Prominent citizens were to feel the mighty rap of Paul Bunyan this afternoon, in the first Rodeo court to be held in front of the Umpqua Hotel. It was the first step to enforce the edict that all citizens shall wear western dress in the coming two weeks. Jack Josse, bull of the woods of the Umpqua Valley Clan of Paul Bunyan, named a number of citizens who were likely to be hailed before the Keeper of the Consequences to answer charges such as Chief of Police Calvin H. Baird, City Manager M. W. Slankard, and Harold Hickerson, Chamber of Commerce secretary. Two or three other courts are also to be held by the Paul Bun vans in the days preceding the Douglas County Sheriff's Posse Rodeo here June 17, 18, and 19. Everyone is expected to wear a cowboy costume to boost the rodeo spirit, said Josse. American Kea Lross, American Cancer Society, Infantile Paralys is. Society for Crippled Children and Adults, Oregon Tuberculosis and Health Association, Oregon Heart Association. In most instances, states the questionnaire. Community Chests have proven to be time and ener gy saving mediums in reducing campaign costs. Consequently, there is now a tendency to broad en the scope of the Community C'hest to include other fund rais ing projects now conducted on a stale and national basis. Directors of both the P.oseburg Established 1873 Business Zone Status For Block 47 Will Be Ordered Ordinance At Council Given Two Readings Site Of Airport Will Be Enlarged; Annexation Petitions Presented WHAT COUNCIL DID Indicated creation of new business zone. Moved to buy more airport land. - Received annexation peti tions. Granted liquor licenses. Made Terrace Avenue deci sion. Decided to build city garage. Ordered city books' audit. Extended lease on city air port. An ordinance giving final ap proval to the transfer of Block 47 from residential class 2 to business status was passed through a firt and second read ings by the City Council Monday night. The block is bounded by Main, Kane, Cass ' and Lane Streets. The change, of zoning had been requested by the American Le gion, which plans construction soon of a new hall, and by the Methodist Church, which also contemplates future expansion. Protests had previously been reg istered at hearings before the Council and Planning Commis sion by residents in or adjacent to the block, but no one was pres ent last night to orally oppose the action. Third and final readings of the ordinance will come up St..Jhe' next meeting.1 Other ini porlant business included recom mendation by the Airport Com mittee of purchase of two tracts of land containing 16 and 50 (Continued on Page Two) Suit For Damages Is Nearing Jury The trial of Marjorie G. Davis, administrator of the estate of Lll ith Gail Jenkins, against Bernard Fenwick and Flegel Transfer and Storage, which opened in Circuit Court Monday, was continued to day and was expected to go to the jury some time this after noon. The plaintiff, whose case was presented Monday, is suing for $10,000 damages, as the result of a truck-car accident in which Lil ith Jenkins met her death in front of Club 99 near Winchester last summer. Also fatally injured in the accident was James Ar thur Bales, driver of the car. Lumber from the truck-trailer, owned by Flegel Transfer and op erated by Fenwick, allegedly struck the car at the sharp corner, forcing it against the building. The defense blames a mechanical failure for the accident. Voters Reject Tax Plan For Repairing Roads' TILLAMOOK, June T.-4m Tillamook County voters In Dis trict 1, comprising the area out side of incorporated towns, have rejected a tax proposal to pay for repair of winter damaged roads. I he election resulted yesterday in 106 "no" ballots and 71 "yes. The proposal would have made up to $120,000 available for the work. Judge Harland Woods said the County Court would run out of highway money soon because of the deplorable condition of the routes. Without the special tax, the county must wait until next year's budgets are made up. Escapee From Oklahoma Prison Nabbed In Oregon OKLAHOMA CITY, June 7. UP) George Kimes. convicted bank robber and last of the south west's bandit chletains. who walk ed away from the Oklahoma Stale Penintentiary at McAlister 11 months ago, has been arrested at Burns, Oregon. The announcement was made by Warden Clarence Buford of the penitentiary, who is at the State Capitol today. Buford has telegraphed Oregon officials to determine if Kimes will waive extradition. Passer Of Worthless Check Given Probation Don Hamilton, 28.' PoMland, f Headed guilty to a charge of pass ng a worthless check, when ar raigned before Judge Carl E. Wimberly Monday. He was sen tenced to one vear In the slate penitentiary then placed on pro bation. Hamilton, allegedly had f liven a worthless check at a serv ce station at Reedsport. ROSEBURG, NEGRO DISINHERITED Estate Of His White Wife Is Left To Others LOS ANGELES, June 7. UP) A Negro chauffeur is entitled to all his 90-year-old white wife's $50,000 estate, his attorney says, even though she disinherited him in her will. Thomas Griffith, the attorney, said yesterday that Allan L. G. Woods, 28, the Negro, plans to cbntest the document. It and a codicil were drafted before the marriage, Griffith pointed out. And since Mrs.i Woods, known as a traveler, lecturer and club woman; has no other relatives, the attorney added, her husband is entitled to the property under the California law of succession. Mrs. Woods, whose estate is estimated at more than $50,000, died May 28, some five months after her marriage to her chauf feur. Her 1945 will, filed for probate yesterday, contained a codicil canceling an original bequest of her home to Woods. The docu ment left personal effects to Mrs. Isabell Bishop, Brentwood, Calif., and $500 to Jesse Bramette, a servant. The rest was left in equal shares to Stanford Univer sity and the University of Cali fornia. Woods married Mrs. Adriana Eugenia Nicholson in one of the first inter-racial unions after the California supreme court held them legal. At the time of the wedding, she told reporters she wanted Woods. to have her property. ' , . Gunman Sfayers J Of Minnesota Officer Caught WASHINGTON, Kas., June 7 UP) Two of three Minnesota gunmen, wanted for killing a policeman, kidnapping and rob bery, were captured near here early today after their . car crashed into a washed out cul vert. The third gunman surren dered yesterday. The pair was oaptured after one of them had limped a quar ter of a mile to a farmhouse for help after he, a companion gun man and a man, believed to be a hitchhiker, were seriously hurt in the wreck. Sheriff Bill Smith said one of the gunmen identified himself as Allen G. Hartman, 20, and told him his companion's name was Bistrom. Hartman said he did not know the name of the third man. At Marysville where the three were taken, Sheriff Kale Thomp son identified the other gunman as Carl Bistrom, 27-year-old for mer convict. The third man was identified through a Nebraska driver's license as Bill J, Beatty, 21, of Tekamah, Neb., who is be lieved to be a hitchhiker who had been picked up by the gunmen in their wild flight. The pair have been sought since Saturday in the killing of a -Minneapolis suburban police of ficer and the kidnapping of a Mandan, N. D., police officer who sought to question them. Subse quently they kidnapped five other persons but released them, too. Convicted Man Slashes Cellmate And Wrists PORTLAND. June 7. (JP) Manslaughter convict Thomf s L. Cumrnings, Seattle, slashed his own wrists in Multnomah County jail and injured a cellmate dur ing a weekend dispute. Jailers reported todav that Cumrnings cut cellmate Dale Wil liams about the throat with a razor blade. He then cut his wrists, but not seriously. cumrnings, sentenced to 15 years for the gun death of a companion in a hotel, is to be sentenced today for a robbery conviction. Driver Loses Arm When He Sticks It Out Window PRINEVILLE. June l.-J!P George Roberts Jr., 19, stuck his arm out an automobile window while driving yesterday and lost it. The car and a lumber truck sideswiped at a curve southeast of here. His arm was so mangled mat it nad to oe amputated at the elbow. Express Guards Robbed Of $19,000 Payroll NEW YORK, June 7.-'F-Two guards of the Wells Fargo Ex press Co. were robbed of $19,000 In payroll funds bv two armed men today on the Columbia Uni versity campus. OREGON TUESDAY, JUNE Murray, CIO Chief, Volleys Back At Lewis Compromise Charge On T-H Law Repeal 'False'; Senate Still Battling WASHINGTON, June 7. (IP) CIO President Philip Murray today accused John L. Lewis of "rumor mongering" and "lack M responsibility." He made the accusation in de nial of a statement by the United Mine Workers chief yesterday. At that time Lewis said he had heard that Murray had agreed to a "pusillanimous compromise" on Taft-Hartley Labor Law repeal. Lewis, in a message to all sena tors, said he had heard reports that Murray and AFL President William Green had agreed to "four oppressive amendments" for inclusion in a new law. Referring to Lewis as a "rule-or-ruin union official," Murray said the Mine Workers leader's statement contained "false and malicious libels" concerning him and Green. A spokesman for the AFL yes terday also denied Lewis' state ment. Murray said that "considering the source," Lewis' statement would be ignored except that it was sent to senators on the day when Taft-Hartley repeal debate began. Murrav's message, also sent to Senators, said the Lewis state ment, "admittedly based upon rumor, rainrr Tni") rac is- (Plot ner demonstration of that lack of re- (Continued on Page Two) Brothers Escape On Way To Prison BAKERSFIELD, Calif., June 7 (P) A general broadcast alarm was out today for two con vict brothers who escaped from deputies with the vow that they would not be taken alive. The two prisoners, La Vern Speer, 23, and his brother, Ger ald, 28, overpowered two offi cers near Moffett Field yesterday as they were being taken to San Quentin Prison to serve terms for armed robbery. Deputy Sheriff George Whit ing said the two freed themselves as they rode In the rear seat of the officers' car. He said they apparently cut the straps which bound them with a razor blade they had managed to conceal. They slashed the deputy who was driving and kicked the other one in the head. Disarming the offi cers, the brother forced the dep uties to drive them 200 miles back to Bakersfield. There, the pair unloaded the officers' pistols and returned them. Late last night, state highway patrol officers said a cafe was held up north of here and that the gunmen were believed to be the same two. They fled north by car. DOUGLAS COUNTY Advances In 10 Years From 19fh To 4th Position On Oregon Payroll Records Douglas County, which In 19.lt? stood In lflth position among Oregon counties In percentage of state payrolls, advanced In 1948 to fourth place. Only Multnomah, Lane and Marlon Counties have larger payrolls than Douglas. The State Unemployment Com pensation Commission, reporting new high payroll records in 35 of Oregon's 36 counties In 1948, finds that Douglas County, where 72 percent of the $35,511,981 pay roll came from the timber In dustry, last year swppt past Linn, Klamath and Coos counties in percentage of payrolls compared to the state total of $9fi2.749,620, barely short of one billion dol lars. Douglas County's covered pay rolls doubled In 1947 over 1946 and then gained 30.4 percent In 1948 over 1947. Douglas county s payroll in was i,nio.3Dr, ai compared with the more than $35,50u,i)i)iJ reportea 'asi year, Payrolls actually total morej tnan ine reixjrieu hiiiijuiiib hi (Ju ly those concerned with unem ployment compensation "cov ered payrolls" are Included In the commission's report. Multnomah Slumps Multnomah County was the onlv county In Oregon which failed to set a new high payroll record In 1948. Multnomah's 7, 1949 NEW U. S. TREASURER Mrs. Georgia Neese Clark, 49-year-old divorcee, above, of Rich land, Kan., has been nominated by President Truman fa be Unit ed Statei treasurer, the first woman ever to be named for that position. She fs the Demo cratic National eommitteewom an of Kansas. Rental Decontrol OKd At Ashland A CUT AWT Tim T tJV T"A. control of rental housing was en- Council after a public hearing on ine proposal. It was the first such decontrol move In. Oregon under the new law. The council voted to ask Gov. HaoaId, M,.!fnr In nelitinn' the National Rent Control Agency to nil. ine remni neiv. miyu&i.-u eaijiy in. rne wmi. I Medfoifl area landlord? who ap noaral Unfa with AaMflnri land lords Indicated similar action would be proposed lor Mecuoru in the very near future. nn,.vt i Mnhpp Portland, state rent control director, and R. A. Cook, Medford rent control offi cer, were among the 175 persons iUa huoi'lno Onlv one tenant spoke out, and he said he fav- . , I ,A ilia ored aeconiroi anu .ui-m-vu landlords would be "fair." t unrtinrH renrespnt at Ives said the controls no longer were justi fied. Some argueo inai uiwi homes involving higher main- t aVMnfKl WPI-P Still held under the 'law while new homes with small upkeep were nee of controls. n,.Kna .tin nni tnkp a nositton Hll"rc uiu on the proposal beyond staling 1 l . 1tUnl.arl nnt. mat ine new iw uim - trols and assured landlords of adequate profits. Hunt For Convicts In Portland Area Given Up pnpTt.ANn Junp 7. (P) Po lice todav abandoned posse hunts east of here for the two Oregon convicts who escaped the state prison on Memorial Day. Multnomah County Sheriff's Capt. Earl Stanley said officers worKing ine ait-a nave ii'h nun.. ed another likely clue since two vagrants seen near Troutdale In hp lifp.termpr John O. Pinson and cellmate Wil liam P. Benson. CLIMBS total of $442,426,303 was below the wartime high of $545,000,000, although the 1948 figure was 6.2 percent above 1947. Gains in 1948 over 1947 ranged from .4 percent in Clatsop Coun. ly to 47.1 percent in Crook County. Next to Douglas County, Lane County had the most spectacular gain. From payrolls to $7,833,092 and fourth place ten years ago, Lane County swept to $77,697,695 and second place In 194tf. twelve otner counties twasb Inpton. Clackamas. Tillamook. yamhill, Lincoln, Polk, Marlon, Linn, Benton, Coos, Jackson and Josephine.) also helped Western Oregon s swift economic advanc With lumber and logging directly contributing nearly half, this part of the state reported $.164, 807,581 In covered wages last year as against $17,864,622 in 1938. Their proportion of Oregon s pay rolls climbed from 201 to 38 per cent, while Multnomah County declined from 56 to 46 per cent (69 per cent In 1943) In ten years. 133-49 Conciliation Service Aid In Strike Sought Union Official Disputes Employers' Statement Regarding Wage Scale Aid of the U. S. Conciliation Service in settling the meatcut ters' strike has been asked by the union, tt was announced Mon day by S. W. Barker, union repre sentative from Portland. There was an apparent stalemate in ne gotiations today, as the strike moved into its sixth day. In a special meeting of the Roseburg Central Labor Council last night, members unanimous ly approved the position of the Meatcutters Union, when It was disclosed that "the erroneous statement of the employers had misled the public," reported El don Ogle, secretary. Ogle said it was learned the meatcutters are asking a start ing wage of SI an hour, with $1.75" per hour as the journey- mans rate after a three-year ap prenticeship. He added the meat cutters are not asking that Sat urday be a premium pay day, but that they expect a staggered five day work week to allow the mar kets to remain open as long as necessary without paying over time. On the basis of a 40-hour week, this $1.75-an-hour wage scale asked by the meatcutters (as re ported by Ogle) would bring them 57U a weeK. the meatcut ters demanded $75 for a 40-hour week when they went on strike last week. Barker could not oe reached by telephone for com ment this morning, as to whether the meatcutters nad roaucea their demands. Slgn-Ups Reported When the strike started last week, the mpateutters" rejected an employers oner oi a ooosi (Continued on Page Two) Thirteen Doctors At Georgia State Hospital Ousted MILLEDGEVILLE, Ga., June 7 fP) Thirteen of the 15 doctors at Georgia's huge mental hospi tal were fired yesterday and threatened with trespass charges if still on the premises this after' noon. The mass d smissal was a "You can't quit, you're fired" affair. Dr. T. G. Peacock, medical su perintendent of the 10,000-patient hospital, presented hhi and 12 other resignations to State Wel fare Director Jack f orrcster. Forrester hurled them aside and handed Peacock 13 letters of dismissal. He sa d he had 11 other physicians to take over the Institution Immediately. The re signing doctors had offered to remain for a limited time, with or without salary. The welfare director ordered the doctors out of their state- owned, rent-free quarters within 24 hours. The facilities are need ed, he said, for the new doctors. The exchange of resignations and releases climaxed a contro versy which began brewing May 1. On that dale Forrester ap pointed T. A. Dechman superin tendent In charge of the Hospi tal, second largest of Its kind in the nation. In a statement, the doctors de nlored the "habit" of state offi cials In making the institution a "political dumping ground. Dechman, thpy said, had created "turmoil and chaos." Forrester In turn charged the doctors with "acts of Insubordina tion and disloyalty." Daylight Saving Gets Approval At Corvallis COItVALLIS, June 7 (Pi no., Ilnrht time will mnvp Into the upper Wiillamette Valley for the first time at 1 a. m. Sunday, when Corvallis adopts the fast summer schedule. The decision was made by the City Council last night after a group of retail merchants ap peared to urge ii. nemon t-ouiny has not yet decided definitely whether to change. Last year the couritv offices moved up their clocks aluo. Previously the runner soutn city In Oregon on daylight time was Albany. Sex Murderer Dies In Nevada's Gas Chamber CARSON CITY. Nev., June 7. IA') Laszlo Varga was executed early todav for the rape-murder of a Presbyterian minister's wife. As he walken to ine ivevana prison gas chamber, the 23-year-old Hungarian refugee said, "At last I'm happy." There was no violence such as marked his 14 months In prison since ine nruiai slaving oi mi. Billet Rhae Morning, 22, of Wells, Nev. Puerto Ricans Comprise Most Of Victims; Other Crashes Kill 48 Persons SAN" JUAN, Puerto Rico, June 7 i!P) A plane Jammed with Puerto Rican men, women and children bound for the United States crashed in the Atlantic early today and 47 persons are missing and feared dead. ' Officials said 75 persons, in cluding a crew of five Ameri cans, were aboard the two-motored C-46 plane. The U. S. Coast Guard reported 28 known sur vivors. Nineteen of the passengers were small children or Infants, and 19 were women. One Amer ican crewman. Al Cockrell of Pittsfield, Mass., Is reported miss ing and feared dead. The plane left San Juan a few minutes after midnight and two minutes later radioed back re questing permission to make an emergency landing. Then noth Ing more was heard from It. Of ficials said apparently It had trouble gaining altitude because of an adverse wind. The plane, enroute to Newark. N. J., via Miami, was operated by Strato Freight, Inc., a charter service with headquarters at Bradley Field, near Windsor Locks, Conn. Attaches at the airport said It was raining hard when the plane took off. The C-46. a Curtis Wright Com- -mando, was designed for the Air Force as a cargo craft and was used extensively in the China-Burma-India Theater during the war. The maximum capacity was 50 troops or 10,000 pounds of cargo. The plane sank within six min utes and the pilot, Captain Lee Wakefield, said he believed one half or more of the passengers (Continued on Page Two) Chambers Admits Telling 7 Lies NEW YORK, June 7. (IP) Whlttaker Chambers admitted to day that he lied seven times be fore the Federal Grand Jury which indicted' AlEer Hiss on two perjury coufyls. Chambers, oiie-tlme courier for a pre-war Soviet spy ring and slar government witness in the trial of the former high State Department official, made the ad mission to read the grand Jury witness sland. A few minutes previously Fed eral Judge Samuel H. Kaufman said he found his trial testimony inconsistent with his grand Jury testimony. He granted Hiss at torney, Lloyd Paul Stryker, per mission to raad the grand Juhy minutes. Stryker, cross-examining Cham bers, read seven portions of grand Jury dialogues, fcach time he ask ed Chambers if the testimony he gave was true or false. Each time Chambers replied that it was false. He admitted he had committed perjury on each of the 3cven occasions. In general Chambers' answers to the grand jury denied specific knowledge of government em ployes engaged In espionage ac tivities. Committee OKs Atlantic Treaty WASHINGTON. June 7 fP The Senate Foreign Relations Committee today called for ratifi cation of the North Atlantic Pact as the best, way to avoid World War Three. In a formal report to the Sen ate, the Committee declared that tallu;e to ratuy tne pact -wouia have disastrous consequences abroad." "The Committee strongly be lieves," the report said, "that it would be in the best interests of the United States and indeed, the entire world, to sustain and en courage the momentum of con fidence that has been building up in Europe, by ratifying the treaty at an early date." The treaty was signed here April 4 by the United States, Canada and 10 European nations. It will not become binding on this country until ratified (ap proved by a two-thirds vote) by the Senate. Frankly poised as a warning to Russian aggression, the treaty pledges the members to consult and to give each other aid In event of aggression against any one of them. Fire Sweeps Range, Grass Lands In Washington MOSES LAKE, Wash., June 7. UP) Fire-fighters worked to day to control five wind-hurried blazes sweeping over thousands of acres of erass and rangeland In Grant county. Two major burns had swept last night over more than 30.000 acres and three smaller fires still burned uncontrolled. Levity Fact Rant By L. T. Reirenstetn Suggestion to Unclt Sam to as hi Irritation over known Communists: Show 'em the 'gate' In Invostl-gatt.