The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, September 14, 1949, Page 10, Image 10

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    10 The News-Review, Reitburg, Ore Wed., Sept. 14, 1949
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PICASSOTURNS TO C I A Y r.bio ricto
(rifhl)i famous Spanish artiit, model a ststue in rlar at a work,
naa looks on la a pottery factory at VallaurU, French Riviera.
Oregon's Bus-Stop Law
To B Strictly Enforced
would not be Issued to offending
motorist!. "Any educational pe
riod is past, and our officers will
SALEM CP) Stale police 'enforce this law the same as any
Germany's Fresh Attempt
To Build Democracy Is Now
Underway At Bonn On Rhine
superintendent H. G. Maison said
that Oregon's law requiring mo
torists to stop when school buses
do Is being strictly enlorced.
other law," he said.
He recommended that pupils
still use caution In getting on and
Maison said mere warnings 'off buses, however.
Hermitage
Imtudy fliistey -A Blend
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KINTUCST
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A Gentleman's Whiskey from Kentucky
86 PROOF
Nitionil Distillers Products Corporitlon, N. Y. 65 Crtln Neutral Spirits
By DEWITT MACKENZIE
AP roralsn Nw Anilrit
Germany's (resh attempt to
establish a democracy is under
way in the fine old university
town of Bonn on the Rhine,
where her new parliament Is
holding its first sessions.
It is a heroic effort, surrounded
by appealing difficulties. Ger
many is only the shadow of her
former self, the victim of her
own misdeeds. The country is
physically divided, for only the
western areas occupied by Ameri
can, British and French military
t -ces are included In the govern
ment. Russia is holding out In her
zone and is said to plan the es
tab''shment of a communist gov
ernment which will become a
satellite of Moscow.
Strange Adventure
Thr.t is the materia! with which
the young parliament has to start
work. And in large degree it is
an adventure into strange sur
roundings, for Germany's experi
ence with democracy, in the ac
cepted sense of the term, has
been meagre. Her last attempt in
that direction rested in the ill
fated Weimer republic which
bridged the few brief years be
tween the autocracy over which
the Kaiser presided and the Hit
lerian dictatorship of evil
memories.
The world will watch this re
birth, of a nation hopefully but
not without misgivings. Twice
within a century Germany has
made aggressive war which has
plunged the whole globe into con
flict. Inevitably the question
arises whether there is danger of
her making another gamble with
war.
Mil: ary Check Needed
' course that contingency will
be taken care of so long as the
allies keep a military check on
the country. But lasting peace
can come only with the establlsh
m:nt of real democracy and in
ternational brotherhood. That is
the task which confirms the new
government at Bonn.
There is no reason, as I see it,
to doubt 'that it is possible to
achieve success. The Germans as
a whole are not a warlike folk.
On the contrary they are indus
trious, home-loving people who
want peace. Their weakness in
the past has been that they were
susceptible to regimentation and
were, victimized by the Prussian
warlords.
I think their attitude may be
summed up in a little story told to
me years ago by the late Sir
Austen Chamberlain, famous
British foreign mlnlsler, concern
ing the making of the historic
peace of Locarno, In w hich Cham
berlain participated.
Pact Guaranteed Peace
This pact, signed at Locarno,
Switzerland, on October 15, 1925,
d' ring the time of the Weimer
republic, pledged Germany, Bel-
Igium, France, Britain and Italy
jnv'tually to guarantee the peace
I in western Europe. After the
i powers had agreed to the terms.
but before the treaty had been
signei. Chamberlain, Foreign
.Minister Aristide Briand of
France and Foreign Minister Gus
tav Stresemann, held a little par
ty of celebration among them
selves. Incidentally that was, I
t lleve, Chamberlain's birthday.
As. the three sat about a tea
table In a private room, congratu
lating one another, there was a
knock at the door and a German
secretary entered with a tele
gram for Stresemann. The latter
read the message and tossed it
over to his colleagues. It was
from the German loreign office
and ordered Stresemann to delay
signing the treaty.
Chamberlain and Briand, ter
ribly shocked, passed the message
back without comment. Strese
mann sat and stared at it for
ling minutes. Finally his close
cropped, bullet head came up and
snapped out of the corner of
his mouth to the secretary:
"Tell them to kiss my foot. I
sln."
So he signed for peace. And we
have a right to hope that his is
the spirit of the new Germany.
.:
CLUBHOUSE TO BE DEDICATED Pictured ebove it the new clubhouie te ba dedicated
Sunday, Sept. IS, by the Cottage Crove Rod and Cun club. Mayor Al Flegel of Roieburg
will Join with other mayors of nearby towni in the dedication program. State Game Diree
tor Charles A. Lockwood will be the principal speaker. A large delegation from tha Roie
burg Rod and Gun club is expected to attend tha dedication and to participate in the 16
yard and handicap shoot during the morning hours. (Picture courtesy of Cottage Grove
Sentinel). '
Bit Communist Troop
Conctntratiom Reported
CANTON. Sept. 1 -t.Pv Big
Communist troop concentrations
are reported building up 140
miles from Canton. Elsewhere in
South China and in the air over
Red territory the Nationalist!
claimed success.
Army sources said Red. Gen.
Liu Po-Chengs 14th army was
moving into Kiennan. Lungnan
and Tingnan which form a 35
mile arc 140 miles northeast of
this refugee capital.
The troop movements wera
part of preparations for what was
expected to be a big flareup of
fighting In South and Central Chi
na. The three cities being streng
thened by the Reds are Just in
side Kiangsi province along the
border of Kwangtung. Canton's
Erovince. They have been held
y Red guerrillas.
North of Canton the National
ists claimed gains eastward from
newly receptured Jucheng in Hu
nan province.
Red Leader Asserts
Lincoln Was Communist
NEW YORK, .P Abraham
Lincoln, says a Red leader was
supported by Communists.
Not only that, Michigan Com
munist Chairman Carl Winter
testified, hut Communists were
among founders of the Republi
can party.
This caused Federal Judge Har
old R. Medina to start with sur
prise. "The Republican party was
founded by Communists?" asked
the judge.
"Not at all," said Winter,
"Communists participated."
The witness, testifying In his
own defense at the conspiracy
trial of himself and 10 other top
Red leaders, said American com
munist clubs dated back to 1850.
He said the -party today Is
carrying on traditions of Lincoln,
Thomas Jefferson and other
great Americans.
The defendants are accused of
conspiring to advocate forcible
overthrow of the U. S. Government.
15 Roman Catholic
Priests Are Arrested
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia,
Sept. ll(-p Church and diplo
maiic sources said 15 Roman
Catholic pries's have been arrest
ed in the past two weeks in a gov
ernment move to smash a secret
church 'network of communica
tions linking priests and bishops.
"There is no doubt about it,"
one informant said. "That's why
the arrests were made."
The source declared, however,
that the church's communication
system was not formed for po
litical purposes.
Catholic and diplomatic
sources said the church was forc
ed by the government to set up
some kind of communication sys
tem to keep the clergy, informed
of its moves. The Communist
government has deprived the
church of normal means of keep
ing in touch with priests, by ban
ning pastoral letters, confiscat
ing printing equipment and clos
ing down the church press.
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TB Chest X-rays
May Find Many
Cancers Of Lung
PORTSMOUTH. N. H. (JPy-r
Chest X-rays to find tuberculosis
can save many lives from lung
cancer, a Boston surgeon said.
The chest pictures for TB can
turn up lung cancers at an early
curable stage, he explained.
Lung cancer is the second most
deadly form of cancer. It is out
ranked as a killer only by can
cer of the stomach and intestin
es. Lung cancer is so lethal main
ly because It's caught too late.
Dr. Richard H. Overhold of Tufts
medical school told the American
Cancer Society's conference o n
cancer detection. It is often far
along before there are any signs
that it is there.
But now hundreds of thousands
of people each year are getting
chest X ravs in mass survevs to
find TB eai ly. This work is being
done by tuberculosis associations
unions, industries, and public
health agencies.
The pictures show healthy
chests and chests that might be
affected by tuberculosis. But
some show silent shadows that
might be lung cancer.
One study found that 40 per
cent of these silent shadows not
due to TB or other troubles were
cancers of the lung, Dr Overhold
reported.
lie urged that the cancer soc
iety consider methods of cooper
ating with tuberculosis associat
ions and other agencies so that
all such cases could be checked
up soon and followed closely.
If you want to vary the flavor
of green snap beans add a little
chili sauce about four table
spoons of melted butter or mar
garine and use this as a dressing
for the beans. Season well with
salt and freshly ground pepper.
Survivor Relates
Tale Of Seeing
Relatives Drown
NANTUCKET ISLAND. Mass
(jPlt One of two survivors told
of watching nine relatives and
friends drown Friday night after
their cabin cruiser was smashed
to pieces In raging seas.
Alfred Allenby, 23, was the only
one of a lashed-together group of
10 life-jacketed picnickers to
reach this island alive. He swam
and drifted 10 miles in IS hours,
watching the others die one by
one.
The other survivor, Russell
Palmer, 23, of Falmouth, flopped
onto Dionis beach an hour before
Allenby was pulled from the surf
and gasped first news of how the
38-foot Constance swamped the
night before.
Palmer captained the ill-fated
craft. He became separated from
the others when he returned to
the cruiser for a line. He made
it to the beach alonit.
Those young Allenby watched
drown were his parents, the Rev.
and Mrs. Hubert Allenby of Fal
mouth; his fiancee, Emily Fos
ter, 21, of Falmouth; his brother
Leighton, 20; his sister and
brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Nairn of Rochester, N Y.,
John lladley, 19, of Falmouth;
Jane Mange, 19, of Staten i
land, N. Y., and Patricia Dick
onson, 18, of Verona, N. J.
All the bodies were recovered
or washed up on the beach with
the wreckage of the Constance.
The group spent Friday at an
outing. After furious seas stopped
one engine and filled the cabin,
they Jumped overboard.
Shirley May France
Wants Another Chance
NEW YORK. Sept. 1
Shirley May France said she will
try again next summer to swim
the English channel and "I'm
going to make it."
The 17-year-old Somerset,
Mass., high school girl, who was
pulled from the channel Just short
of her goal a week ago, arrived
at La Guardia field from London
Shortly after midnight.
Commenting on her unsuccess
ful swim, she said "the tides
didn't bother me. It was the cold
ness of the water."
"Next time, I'm going to start
earlier," she told newsmen.
Distillery Explosion
Causes Huge Damage
PEORIA. 111., Sept. 14-OD An
explosion in a six-story still at
the Hiram Walker and Son Inc.
distillery plant early Tuesday
shook nearby buildings and caus
ed damage estimated by com
pany officials at $.500,000.
In critical condition at hospital
are Louis Schrader, 33. of Peoria,
and Oliver Thomas. 32, of Wash
ington, 111., both still workers.
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Trumpeter Swans Said
Now Showing Increase
WASHINGTON tPl The
trumpeter swan, once all but ex
tinct, has increased to a U. S.
population of 451. the Fish and
Wildlife service said today.
Several hundred more make
their homes in Canadaand south
eastern Alaska.
In 1935, hundreds more made
their homes in Canada and South
eastern Alaska.
In 1935, when refuges were
established to protect the birds,
the flock was down to 73.
The latest population figures:
Red Lock Lakes refuge,
Mont., 329, Including 80 cygnets
or Young Swans; Yellowstone
Park, Wyo.. 90, including 23
young; National Elk refuge. Te
ton county, Wyo., five; Malheur
refuge. Southeastern Oregon, and
Ruby Lake refuge, eastern Ne
vada, 27.
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