The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, July 13, 1949, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    2 Th Newi-Reriew, Roseburg, 0r. Wed., July 13, 1949
Service Clubs'
Support Asked
For Scout Units
Scout Executive Rollle Quam Is
appearing belore several local
service clubs this week urging
their support In promoting the
organization of new scouting
units in Douglas District.
According to Quam the new age
limit, which reduces cub scout
ages from nine to eight years,
scouts from 12 to 11 years and
senior scouts from 15 to 14 years,
will require many new clubs to
accommodate the new scouts.
The first of a series of special
training meetings will be held
Wednesday, July 20, In the Hotel
Umpqua, when a group of Eugene
scout leaders will be here to con
duct the course. As many adults
as possible, whether or not they
have had previous scout experi
ence, are urged to attend the
meeting.
Quam, appearing before the Kt
wanls Club Tuesday noon and
Toastmasters Club that evening,
said that the number of troops in
the Douglas District has been in
creased from 29 to 43 since he
took over a year ago, and the en
rollment is up about 40 per cent.
There are now about 1,000 scouts
In the district, but this number
may well be doubled and even
tripled, considering the eligible
number of boys o( scout age. At
least 60 units will be needed In
this district, but the problem now
Is securing leaders, he said.
Roy Barnhart, organization
chairman, and his committee are
devoting much time to In-sure all
bovs of the required age who de
sire an opportunity to participate
in tne program.
Steel Union Accepts
Strike Delay Proposal
(Continued From Page One)
The Weather
U. 8. Weather Bureau Office
Roseburg, Oregon
Fair and continued warm
day, tonight and Thursday.
Highest temp, for any July....
Lowest temp for any July ..
Highest temp, yesterday.......
Lowest temp, last 24 hr.....
Preoipitation last 24 hrs
Precipitation since Sept. 1
Precipitation since July 1...
Deficiency since July 1..
to-
109
40
91
. 59
0
.29.84
. 0
. .20
Fight Aboard Plane
At Issue In Disaster
(Continued From Page One)
Brannan Farm Plan
Splits Ranks Of Demos
(Continued From Page One)
that rigid supports
maintained under the
President had by-passed the Taft
Hartley labor law.
Republic and Bethlehem then
chimed in with rejections. They
echoed U. 3. steers reasons.
Bethlehem Steel told the Presi
dent In a telegram:
"We do not believe that any
such question, affecting as It
does, the welfare of our country
should he dealt with by a board
which Is not established in ac
cordance with the provisions of
the federal law (Taft-Hartley)
which expressly describes a pro
cedure for the handling of such
matters."
Plants Won't Close
U. S. Steel and Bethlehem, the
nation's two largest steel pro
ducers, said their rejection of the
resident proposal did not mean
however,
could be
law.
Gore disputed claims of over
whelming Democratic support for
the Brannan plan trial run ana
predicted a bi-partlsaa group will
ram through nis sunsutuie Dm
keeping the "time-tested" pres
ent law.
Sneaker Ravburn set the cru
cial debate to begin in the House
on Monday.
Wheat Quotas Canceled
Meanwhile, it was revealed that
assistants apparently jumped the
gun on Secretary urannan to
dav in announcing abandonment
of plans for invoking rigid mar
keting quotas on the laou wneai
crop.
The Production and Marketing
Administration, depart menial
agency which administers crop
production and price support pro
grams, sent telegrams to its state
Held otnces late yesieraay siai
lug that quotas were off because
of a deterioration In this year's
crop.
But Brannan's office said to
day the secretary, who must set
tle the matter, had not yet made
his decision. Aides conceded, how
ever, that there Is little likeli
hood he will decide to go ahead
with quotas.
Brannan is expected to an
nounce his decision after grain
markets close today.
tlnue In accordance with contracts
which do not expire until next
year. The rates of pay and Insur
ance provisions of the pacts were
roopenea tnis year, ine contrails
permit a strike this summer if
agreement on those clauses is not
reached.
Replying to the President,
Bethlehem said: "We will con
tinue operations of our plant in
accordance with our collective
bargaining agreements. Those
they would halt ooeratlons If the agreements remain In effect until
steelworkers did not strike. April 30, 1950, In the absence of
Both said operations would con- a strike."
Announcement ....
I wish to announce I have moved to Sutherlin In my
new building. I will carry a complete stock of ;
' ' Dress and Work Clothes.
H
MAX SCHWARTZ
Clothier and Tailor
Sutherlin, Ore.
Sutherlin, Ore.
of Long Beach, Calif., said she
saw the fight. She said she saw
a man hit the man next to him
just once.
Stewardess Vicky Zelsdorf said
In a Long Beach hospital that
she owed her life to the tussle.
She said she gave up her seat to
the man who was struck. The
man in that seat was killed. She
said the two men had been fight
ing the day before also.
When Mrs. Zelsdorf saw they
were going to crash she threw a
blanket across her knees and ab
domen. Doctors said this was
her maternal Instinct to protect
her unborn child, which they
hoped to save. The stewardess
was seriously injured.
CAB Chief Peyton arrived on
the scene 90 minutes after the
crash. He said the plane was
making a normal approach for
a landing at Lockheed and was
on course, except that it was too
low. He said the altimeter was
working and that "there was no
apparent malfunctions of the
engines or structural failure of
the aircraft."
He has recommended a formal
hearing and said investigation at
the scene will continue several
days.
"I believe we know what caus
ed the crash." he said, adding that
the Informalion would come out
at the hearing. He declined to
disclose the reason before then.
Bodies of 40 Killed In Crash
Near Bombay Are Discovered
BOMBAY, India, July 13. UP)
The rain-soaked underbrush on
Ghatkopar Hill today yielded the
homes of 4U ol the 45 persons
killed yesterday In the flaming
crash of a royal Dutch (KLM)
airliner on Bombay island.
Thirteen of the dead were
American news correspondents.
The bodies of all but one of the
correspondents Fred Colvig of
the Denver Post have been iden
tified. Hundreds of police slogging
through monsoon rains contin
ued the search for the five miss
ing bodies. Luggage aboard 'he
Ill-fated plane has been recovered.
Ine plane, a Constellation,
crashed on the 800-foot high hill
while preparing to land at an
airfield 1ft miles north of Bom
bay. Controller of airdromes
Shumshere Jung said the field
was "perfectly okay" at the time
of the crash and that other air
craft had made takeoffs a short
time before.
The American consulate re
ceived instructions from the U.
S. Slate Department to huve
seven of the bodies of the cor
respondents cremated at the re
quest of relatives who want the
ashes sent to them.
Sabotage Fear Denied
In Hong Kong, Mrs. Dorothy
Brandon of the New York Herald
Tribune, denied that she had re
fused to hoard the plane because
she had feared it would be sabo
taged. She said she wanted It made
"very clear that I did nA sus
pect sabotage." '
In Manila yesterday, William
R. Mathews, publisher of the
Tucson, Ariz., Star, said Mrs.
Brandon had told him she would
not board the plane at Batavla
because "It's going to be sabO'
taged as sure as you live."
Mrs. Brandon said In Hong
Bessie Wakefield
Of Elkton Dies
Bessie Wakefield, 70, resident
of Scottsburg and Elkton for the
last 30 years, died July 12 at the
home of her daughter, Mrs. G. V.
Rooke, where she had been stay
ing for the last six months. She
was born Nov. 19, 1878, In Lane,
Kan., and came to Oregon in
1919 settling near Scottsburg and
Elkton. She was a member uf
the Eastern Star and of the Re
bekah Lodge of Elkton.
Surviving are four daughters:
Mrs. Loree Bryson, Dixon, Calif.;
Mrs. Wllma Rooke, Roseburg;
Mrs. Lucille Fisher, Pittsburg,
Calif.; Mrs. Betty Driggs, Red
Bluff, Calif.; a son, David Wake
field, Roseburg; a sister, Mrs.
Kate Cain, Elkton, and 13 grand
children. Funeral services in charge of
the Roseburg Funeral Home will
be held Thursday, July 14, at 1
p. m. In the Methodist Church in
Elkton. Interment will follow In
the Elkton Cemetery.
Earl C. Richmond
Claimed By Death
Earl Case Richmond, 76, resi
dent of Oregon since 1919, died
at his home on E. Douglas St.
July 12 after an illness of six
months. He was born Feb. 13,
1873, in Manchester, Mich., and
came to Oregon 30 years ago. He
had made his home in Roseburg
for the last six years. He was a
member of the Presbyterian
Church and very active In his
Sunday school class.
Surviving are his widow, Mar
lon Louesa, Roseburg; a son,
Stirling Case Richmond, Rose
burg; a granddaughter, Mrs.
Helen Weber, and a great-grandson,
Gregg Allen Weber, both of
Roseburg.
Funeral services will be held
In The Chapel of The Roses,
Roseburg Funeral Home, Thurs
day, July 14, at 10 a. m. with Dr.
Morris Roach officiating. Vault
Interment will follow in Masonic
Cemetery.
Mrs. Blanche Boyer, 76,
Of Dillard Passes
Mrs. Blanche Delliia Boyer,
76, of Dillard, died at the Barc
lay Rest Home Monday, July
11. She was born in Kansas July
3, 1873. She came to Oregon in
1903 and has made her home
at Dillard the last 26 years. Sur
vlvlng are a brother-in-law, Ira
Boyer of Dillarc; a niece, Ada
Hixson, of Brockway, and a
nephew, Ira Boyer, of Camas
Valley.
Funeral services will be held
at the chapel of the Long and
Orr Mortuary Thursday, July 14
at 10 a.m., with Rev. Walter A.
MacArthur of the Methodist
Church officiating. Concluding
services will follow in the Civil
Bend Cemetery.
Mrs. Mitta Schneider,
Lookingglass Route, Dies
Mrs. Mitta Schneider of Look
ingglass Route, Roseburg, r?d
at Mercy Hospital Tuesday, July
12. She was born Sept. 26, 1883,
at Nashport, Ohio, and was mar
ried to Adam N. Schneider April
19, 1905, at Zanesville, Ohio.
Surviving are the widower,
Adam N. Schneider of Looking
glass Route; three sons, William
Clem of Roseburg; Carl Allen
and Harrie Henry of Kirkland,
Wash.; two sisters, Mrs. Grace
Leddy of Fairmount, W. Va., Mrs.
Hallie Kreager of Ohio, a,nd two
brothers, William and . Ruben
Montgomery of Ohio.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced later by Long and
Orr Mortuary.
ACTIVE CLUB TO MEET I
The Roseburg Active club will
meet Thursday at 7 a.m. for;
breakfast at the Shalimar room. !
Reports from the Active Inter-
national Convention attended by
several members last week In
Portland will be heard. j
Mr. And Mrs. Hovey Return
From Eastern Journey
Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Hovey of
Shoestring returned last week
from a 10,000 mile trip through
Canada and eastern points in the
United States.
During their trip they visited
In ten different cities with rela
tives of Mrs. Hovey, some of
whom they had not seen for 20
years. A nephew and neice, Mr.
and Mrs. E. H. Lamm, returned
with the Hoveys to Oregon for a
short visit, but have returned to
their home In Alton, 111.
Visiting in 25 states and Can
ada, the Hoveys agree that Ore
gon Is still the best state to live
in. They concluded their lengthy
trip by spending several days at
the Edgewater Lodge In Wald-port.
Phone 1261-R
For repairs on your
typewriter or adding machines.
KEN'S OFFICE EQUIPMENT
631 S. Stephens '
Young of the scorpion are
brought forth alive and are car
ried by the mother for a short
time.
House, Commercial and
Industrial .Wiring
Electrical Trouble Shooting
Motor and Appliance Re
pair Free Plck-Up and Delivery
Service
17 Years Experience
ACE ELECTRIC
Licensed Electrician
316 E. 2nd Ave. N. Ph. 1095-L
Forest Fires Occur
With Wave Of Heat
(Continued from Page One)
0MCt on
Cow
v3
sSsc
Til
eaM t r'tifWW.t--v
V i
Enjoy the whiskey that's
I . . . a
Casting around for Kentucky wh
key enoyment? You'll net your
self satisfying drinking pleasure
"over on the Sunny Brook tide'
IOOK KM THIS WATCHMAN
ON IVEIY IOIIII
Kentucky Whiskey A Blend
1 L
6.4!
NATIONAL DISTIUCKS PROD.
It PIOOF tS CHAIN
CORP., NEW YORK
NEUTRAL SPIRITS
two others, and some felled tim
ber. ,
The state kept alert against
fire hazards again today, as an
other day of high temperatures
and dangerously low humidities
prevailed.
But the wind direction gave
hope to foresters. What they
leared most was a stiff east
wind that would spread any
mall blaze; and the forecast
was for northwest breezes.
Temperatures hovered in the
nineties over much of Oregon
yesterday, and a maximum of 100
was reported by the slate forest
patrol at Grants Pass.
Medtord and Ontario record
ed 94; Klamath Falls 92; Red
mond, Roseburg, Burns and Pen
dleton 91; Salem, The Dalles,
ami Eugene, 90; La Grande 88;
and Portland 86. Only Ihe coast
was cool, with temperatures in
the fifties.
Portland Is using more than
120,000,000 gallons of water a
day and householders have been I
asked to observe alternate-day
sprinkling.
Glen Morrow, general manager
of the water bureau, said the
long hot, dry spell Is putting such
a heavy drain on the water sys
tefn that pressure is falling off.
There Is plenty of water in the
Bull Run reservoir on Mount
Hood, however, he said.
Yoncalla Church Group
Enjoys Beach Picnic
Members of the Yoncalla
Church of Christ enjoyed an all
da meeting and basket lunch at
Hecetea Head, on the beach Sun
day. Several trucks and cars
drove to take care of the crowd.
Those attending were Mr. and !
Mrs. Hay Hotter and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Brant and daugh
ter, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brant and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Mc
Michael and family, Si and Don
Wise, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Eden,
Billy Benner, Mrs. Eola Raper,
Mnna, Vernon, Wanda, Barbara,
Elclon Raper.
Approximately 100 square miles
of territory are covered by Mount
Rainier, Washington, third high
est peak in the United States.
Kong, however, that she and
Mathews had made up their
minds In New York, belore the
correspondents' journey had be
gun, not to make the return trip
with the others. She told an in
terviewer she and Mathews were
the only ones among the party
who had planned to go north
after the llatavia tour.
AT HELPFUL ASSOCIATED DEALER
AUTO-TRUCK
GENERAL
LIABILITY
FIRE
See our All-in-One Blanket Policy. It
covers you for anything the law may
hold you responsible for. It is tailored
to cover a small or large property
holder.
Paul H. Krueger
District Agent
636 S. Stephens St. Roseburg Phone 21 8
We've Something to Crow About!
Our excellent stocks of ruggedest, attractive Fitite Shakes.
Just what you need to add year 'round beauty and attrac
tiveness to your home. So reasonably priced tool
18" Prime Coatad $13.25 per sq.
16" Prime Coated 12.75 per sq.
Natural : 10.00 per iq.
(Less Undercourse)
ORDER YOURS THIS WEEK CALL 128
DENN-GERRETSEN CO.
402 W. Oak St.
Phone 128
Handy new kitchen utensil!
T8A7S-
... . " vj'z'ir vsrr m
It's the handiest gadget you've seen In
years! Makes a dozen rooking jobs easier!
Strong, gleaming slcel . . . heavily chromium
plated, llright red wood handle. You'll use
yours every day. Anil you ran have one
nbfolulely jrcel Just fill out the coupon in
this, advertisement, present it In person at
our store. Get your FREE Kitchaniajig today!
1 1 v
I I ! -52-
MB
ACQUAINTED WITH
KELVINATOR'S NEW
"ALL 7" ELECTRIC RANGE
See with your own eye why you get more for
Tonrmoney in a Kelvinator electric range! Get
"All 7" of these time-saving, step-saving, money,
saving features!
1. SnsMtiM IrtmM licliuri
I Mm Imi III M
L EitttimiSKfot Cntnl Pwl
I Fsst 7 hit trim Ma
7. IM iihr (J (mm
1. MnttkhtlMst
I tfKlw m IhI Ins
rzco -------
It Entitles You To Your
Free Kitchamajigl
I
I IS nt m J STL T" -
1
IT
222 W. Oak
Phone 348
Easy Terms
Free Delivery
IIP! WAIU ASSOCUTIO Oil COMPANY
V
4