The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, September 30, 1949, Page 1, Image 1

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U. Of O. Library
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Miss Muriel Mitchell New
City Librarian, Suceeding
Hilda Reizenstein, Retired
Miss Muriel Mitchell, recently of Yreka, Calif., will become li
brarian of Roseburg's Public library Oct. 1, succeeding Mrs. Hilda
Reizenstein, who will retire after 25 year" service. MIm Mitchell,
long experienced In library work, this month relinquished her posi
tion at Siskiyou county, Calif., librarian, with office headquarters
at Yreka.
: ' : vis. .
MISS MURIEL MITCHELL
Htsds City Library
Forecaster For
Roseburg Slated
Status of Roseburs'i U. S.
Weather Bureau office is soon to
he raised, with the assignment
nere or a rorecaster.
Morria A. Arkin, Eugene, tem
porary observer-Jn-charge, said
forecasts for the Pacific North
west arc made up in Seattle. A
local forecaster will have author
ity to modify the weather predic
tions to sun local conditions.
At the present time, an observ
er is in charee of the local office.
Arkin has been on temporary
auiy nere since me recent depar
ture of Thomas A. Hill, former
observer-ln-charge, who is now
at Tacoma, Wash., where he is
attending the College of Puget
Sound.
Hill is to complete his studies
In Tacoma, and at the University
of Washington in Seattle, leading
to a master's degree In meteorol
ogy, said Arkin. He will not be
reassigned here.
Goodrich Rubber Strike
Settlement Agreed On
DAYTON, O., Sept. 30
Negotiators announced today
they had agreed to settle the 34-day-old
Goodrich rubber strike
of 16,000 workers.
The strike over wages and
pensions affected production
workers in Goodrich plants m
Akron, Tuscaloosa, Ala., Cadil
lac, Mich., Clarksvillc, Tenn.; Los
Angeles; Oaks, Pa., and Miami,
Okla.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
WINSTON Churchill, the old
war horse of Britain, asks par
liament to throw out the Labor
government which rode Into pow
er on a landslide in 1945. He says
dramatically:
"Most of us agree that it is
high time for another parliament
and that all our difficulties would
fhave a much better chance of be
ing solved in a new house of com
mons." (Obviously, when he speaks of
"most of us" he means "most of
us Conservatives." It Is a funda
I mental of politics that the party
in power NEVER thinks It is
' time for it to be thrown out?
HfHAT is this big debate all
IF about
Well, here are the political me
chanics of it:
In Britain when the govern
ment (which Is what we call the
administration) fails to get a vote
of confidence in parliament a new
(Continued on Page Four)
"SCIENTIST X" IDENTIFIED
Minnesota U. Professor
Gave Atomic Secrets To
Communist Spy, Charge
WASHINGTON, Sept. X.IJP The House Un-American Ac
livities committee today named Joseph W. Weinberg, University
of Minnesota professor, as the "Scientist X" accused of slipping
Wartime atomic secrets to a Communist spy.
In Minneapolis, Weinberg got out a statement saying "I am
not the person" referred to in previous committee reports as
"Scientist X." He also said he had never given secret Infor
mation to any unauthorized person.
The committee recommended
n a report that the Justice de
partment prosecute Weinberg on
charges he lied under oath in:
1. Denying Communist party
membership and attending young
Jommunist league meeting?. 2.
Knowing communist leader Steve
Nelson. 3. Knowing Nelson's sec
re'arv, Bernade" Dovle.
Nelson, the committee: says.
A native of Kansas, Miss Mit
chell was graduated in 1933 from
the school of lihrarianshlp at Uni
versity of California, following a
masters degree in modern lan
guages received at the Univer
sity of Colorado.
Her library work spans a pe
riod oi lb years, all in cauior
nia. These services were succes
sively in Eureka, El Centro, Wat
sonville, Santa Barbara and last
ly at Yreka, where she was em
ployed for three and one half
years. Her longest service was
at W'atsonville. where she was
city librarian for seven and one
half years.
At Yreka. Miss Mitchell was
also active in the Business and
Professional Woman's club and
In the Siskiyou County Historical
society. She is of the Presbyter
ian failh and admits to a hobby
of collecting antiques.
She has bought a home In Cio
verdale addition, where she will
reside with her mother. Mrs.
Frances M. Mitchell, who was a
librarian for ten years in their
former home state of Kansas.
Assisting Miss Mitchell in op
erating the library will be Miss
Clementine Armson, a graduate
of the College of St. Catherine,
St. Paul, Minn. She succeeds
Mrs. Ruth Hansen, resigned.
Efficiency Praised
Mrs. Reizenstein's service,
which has won unstinted praise
for its efficiency, covers the en
tire period in which the public li
brary has been city-operated
since its inception in 1924. The
library was evolved from a modest-scale
reading room conduced
for three years previously bv vol
unteers of the Roseburg Wom
an's club, wilh donated material.
The free-service phase of the
library is confined exclusively to
residents within the city boun
daries; its ultimate extension to
the entire county is contingent
upon county contribution of the
necessary funds. Under presert
regulations, non residents of the
city obtain the library's service
by payment of a membership
fee.
Mother Indicted In
Delinquency of Son
SALEM, Sept. 30-UP)-A moth
er who neglects her child can be
charged with contributing to the
delinquency of a minor.
So Mrs. Vera Evelyn Mills, 33,
found out here yesterday. She
was arrested by deputy sheriffs
after the Marion county grand
Jury Indicted her.
The indictment followed police
Investigation into a series of mi
nor thefts blamed on eight boys
and two eirte. Police said the
youths one of them Mrs. Mill's
16-year-old son had confessed
prowling autos and houses, gam
bling and committing morals of
fenses. The bovs range in age
from 8 to 16. The girls were 11
and 14.
Photographer Killed At
Mock Amphibious Assault
BOSTON, Sept. 30 UP) Morris
Fineberg. 56-year-old veteran
Boston Post photographer, was
killed and four others, includinz
three naval officers, injured yes-
teroay in a mocK marine and
navy amphibious assault on a
Boston bathing beach before
thousands of spectators.
Fineberg was struck by a frag
ment from an exploding mortar
while photographing the demon
stration staged at Carson beach
in South Boston as part of the
Marine Corps league national
convention.
Packages Said Taken
From Baby Stroller
Candy wasn't taken from a
baby, but what might be consid
ered the next thing to it was :he
taking of packages from a baby
stroller.
Chief of Police Calvin Baird
said that Mrs. Byron Woodruff
reported she had left her stroller
on the street, while she took the
baby upstairs to the office of her
husband, Dr. Woodruff, Wednes
day. When she returned a few rhin-
utes later the packages were mis
sing. "was engaged In securing infor
mation regarding the develop
ment of the atomic bomb Irom
Scientist X."
That was back in 1943. the com
mittee adds, when Weinberg was
employed at the radiation labor-
(Continued on Page Two)
The Weother
Portly cloudy today. Fair to
night and Saturday.
Suntot today 5:57 p. m.
Sunrise tomorrow 4:10 a. m.
Establishtd 1873
Berserk
K:Y.Hopkins
Attacks Men
In Engine Cab
Hammer And Live Fusees
Used By Deranged Man
Until He's Knocked Out
PORTLAND. Sept. 30 (.P) A
wild fight in the cab of a speed
ing locomotive brought death to
a berserk brakeman early today.
The engineer and the fireman
were attacked by lighted fusees
and beaten with a hammer as
the Southern Pacific freight train
roared north through the night
to Portland.
The brakeman died at a Salem
hospital this morning, apparent
ly of injuries suffered In the
fight to subdue him.
He was identified as Kenneth
W. Hopkins, about 35, Portland.
Engineer Brent W. Campbell,
58, told this story to Detective
Sgt. Dan Mitola after bringing
the 70-car train here:
Hopkins boarded the train with
the rest of the crew at Eugene
and remarked he was not feel
ing well.
Later, while the freight was
on a siding for a passenger train,
he flagged down the passenger
train. Then he boarded the
freight locomotive and intro
duced himself for a second time
to Campbell and Fireman Ben J.
Mackowiac. 24, Portland.
After the train started, Hop
kins began lighting fusees warn
ing flares waving them in the
air and discarding them. The
engineer ordered him to a seat
in the cab and told him to "take
it easy."
As the train began to pick up
speed after leaving Salem, Hop
kins suddenly reached over the
engineer's shoulder, Campbell ex
plained, and yanked the throttle
wide open. At the same time he
Jabbed a lighted fusee into Camp
bell's side.
Campbell set the emergency
brake and whirled around. As
(Continued on Page Two)
Steel Industry
Braces For Strike
PITTSBURGH, Sept. 30. (.P
Big Steel and the CIO got to
gether with federal mediators to
day In a last ditch try to stave
off a nationwide steel strike at
midnight.
But even as they met. the news
was not good.
l-rom coast to coast, and from
the gulf to the border, the gi
gantic steel industry banked its
nres in readiness tor tne strike.
And thousands of Philip Murray's
United Steelworkers Jumped the
gun in wildcat walkouts.
The issue is a pension-insurance
program. The union wants steel
firms to adopt the formula set
down by President Truman's fact
finding board. This Is a 10-cent-an-hour
contribution paid entire
ly by Industry. The union says it
is the minimum they'll take.
Big Steel rejected the proposal.
Instead it offered a pension-insurance
plan toward which em
ployes would contribute.
Murray and his 500.000 steel
workers wouldn't take that. They
say:
"We've given up demands for
a pay increase as ordered by the
fact-finding board. Now Industry
must yield."
Wife Of Governor Of
Illinois To Ask Divorce
SPRINGFIELD, III., Sept. 30
P Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson
said today he and his wife have
separated and that he will not
contest a divorce.
In a statement issued by his
office here, the governor said:
"1 am deeply distressed that
due to the incompatibility of our
lives Mrs. Stevenson feels a
separation is necessary.
"Although I do not believe in
divorce, I will not contest it. We
have separated with the highest
mutual regard."
Stevenson, 48-year-old Demo
crat, is serving his first four
year term, which ends in 1952.
The Stevensons were married
In Chicago on Dec. 1, 1928. Mrs.
Stevenson Is 40. They have three
sons.
$7 Billion Foreign Aid
Bill Sent To President
WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 ."
Congress sent to President Tru
man today the second of two hills
designed to pump S7.124.000.000
Into foreign recovery and mill
!ary aid.
The president's signature was
the only thing needed to start the
dollars working In the giant ef
fort to defeat Russia in the cold
war.
The Senate completed action
last night on a S5.809 990.000 pio
gram to holster the economies of
western Europe and other friend
ly nations.
S. P. Co.
W ' m.. ; M, ij , i i . n
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i;Am
BANNED Dr. Glenn Short
liffa, a professor at Queen's
university, Kingston, Ont., has
been denied entry to the Unit
ed States to accept a post as
associate, professor of romance
languages at Washington uni
versity at St. Louis. The United
States Immigration servic ad-
ised him he had been tem
porarily excluded "as a person
whosa entry is deemed to b
prejudicial to the public in
terest of the United States.
(AP Wirephotol.
Canyon Mi.
Road Job Bid
Is Accepted
PORTLAND, Sept. 30 P)
Kuckenberg Construction
Co., Portland, submitted tht
low bid of 11,182,634 for work
en tht Canyonvllla project en
Highway 99.
Tha Bureau of Public Roads
hera recommended that tha bid
be accepted.
Tha work. In which tha stats
is cooperating. Includes grad
ing and paving 6.2 miles of
highway south of Canyonvllla
between Roseburg and Grants
Pass. It will require about on
year to complete.
Thirteen bids, opened hers
yesterday, were submitted.
The work, when completed
will be another link In the de
velopment of Pacific Highway 99.
The section, extending south
from Canyonville, will connect
with the new, wide highway
which already has made such
traffic hazards as Sexton moun
tain a thing of the past.
The Canyon mountain section
has been one of the worst re
maining strips. Information re
ceived is that the new highway
will follow much the same route
as the present road, but it will
be straightened by means of cuts
and fills. The roadway will con
sist of two wide lanes, with four
lanes provided for passing of
slow moving traffic on the steep
er Inclines up the mountain.
Kuckenberg has the present
contract for construction work
now underway on the North
Umpqua road on the Roseburg
side of the Forest Service
boundary.
The Canyon Mountain strip
runs through federal lands, and
as such has been handled as a
federal project, through the Bur
eau of Public Roads.
Seven Persons Die
In Fire; Four Hurt
KANSAS CITY. Sept. 30-P)
A fast. moving fire roared through
the interior of a two-story frame
house in northeast Kansas City
early today, killing seven persons
and Injuring four.
Approximately 20 persons lived
In the house, many of them aged.
Many of those who escaped fled
from the flames In their night
clothes.
The Red Cross identified the
dead as:
Mrs. Florence Richards, 85.
Mrs. Cora Andrews. 68.
Owen Richards, 45, who was
blind.
Lorraine Ellis. 1".
Mrs. Myrtle M. Hershey, 25,
and her two children. Myrtle Ma
rie. 9 months, and Cletus M. Her
shey Jr.. 26 months.
Mrs. Ed Bayse. 69. the owner,
rented part of the house to old-
I age pensioners and to the Her-
sney lamuy. one was injurea.
ROSEBURG, OREGON FRIDAY, SEPT.
Brakeman Killed
Congress Gets
Fresh Threat
From Truman
President Insists It
Must Stay On Job Till
It OKs Full Program
KANSAS CITY, Sept. 30-.l
President Truman confronted
Capitol hill opponents today with
a new threat to keep Congress In
session until it enacts his entire
"Fair Deal" program.
And, if that course fails, he
said the Democrats "will win
with that program" in 1950 ajid
again in 1952.
In fighting words, he sounded
the keynote for Democratic ora
tors in next year's congressional
campaigns at a testimonial din
ner for the party's national chair
man, Willim M. Boyle Jr. Boyle,
like the president, is a Jackson
county Missourian.
The president, speaking last
night at the end of a program In
which a long list of talkers. In
cluding vice-president Barkley,
preceded him, also:
1. Promised to battle for
measures to raise the country's
income to $300,000,000,000 annual
ly and establish "an income level
in the country of $4,000 per family
per year" which he said "is not
a pipe dream."
2. Hinted that Barkley, a fre-
( Continued on Page Two)
Trio Feared Dead
In Plane Crash
OLYMPIA, Sept. 30 OP)A-A C
R2 "flying boxcar" crashed and
burned in a heavily forested area
five miles northeast of McCleary
last, nighty - . -
Search parties combed the tim
bered area throughout the night
In hopes the plane's three occu
pants might have parachuted, hul
an officer at McChord Air Force
base expressed belief the bodies
were In the wreckage.
Capt. William Pratt, public In
formation officer at the McChord
Air Force base, said the plane
took off from that field on a rou
tine night training flight.
The crash scene was located a
quarter mile up a logging road,
about two and one-half miles off
the secondary state highway be
tween McCleary and Shclton.
State Patrol Sgt. Stacey Matt
son said the wreckage was
strewn over from two to five
acres of wooded terrain. Fire
started by the crashing plane
subsided after a forestry service
fire wagon from Shelton and the
fire department from nearby El
ma responded. It continued to
burn, however, early today.
Motorist Dies In Crash
In Crater Lake Park
KLAMATH FALLS, Setp. 30
l.V) James Partick Bowles, 22
of Renicia, Calif., was killed out
right early this morning when
his car missed a curve Inside
Crater Lake national park and
smashed into a pine tree.
A companion, Bart E. Estrada,
25 of Caiipatria, Calif., was un
conscious and suffering from a
broken leg, shock and exposure.
He was brought to a hospital
here.
Papers belonging to Bowles In
dicated he had recently worked
at Enterprise, Ore.
STRIKE PARTLY EASED
Coal Diggers West Of
Mississippi Ordered Back
To Pits By John L. Lewis
WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS. W. Va., Sept. 30. iff) John L.
Lewis today ordered Pennsylvania's 80,000 hard coal miners and
22,000 soft coal diggers west of the Mississippi to go back to work
Monday.
As far as these men are concerned it ends a walkout started
Sept. 19.
The move was announced In a tana,
telegram from Iewis to presi- Soft coal production in these
denls of the affected United Mine
Workers' districts.
The telegram said:
"The suspension of mining In
the western and anthracite ar
eas is not now vital to the pend
ing wage negotiations."
It said the action was take l
"to minimi loss to all parties.
The teleeram was released here
hy L'MW Vice President Thorn -
as Kennedy.
In the absence of Lewis, Ken-
nedy heads the union bargaining
team in contract negotiations
with northern and western soft
coal operators.
The order affects the three
UMW anthracite districts In east
ern Pennsylvania and seven bitu
minous districts covering Wash
ington. Iowa. Kansas, Colorado,
New Mexico. Oklahoma. Mis
souri, Wyoming, Utah, and Mon-
30, 1949
Reluctant Federal Jury Finds
Tokyo Rose Guilty Of Treason
On Only One Of Eight Counts
i V
A
n r
9
y
TOKYO ROSE, real' name Mn. Iva Toguri O'Aquins, shown
leaving federal court in San
just after the treason caie was turned ever t the jury,
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 30. f.-P) Stony faced, Iva Toguri
d' Aquino heard herself convicted of treason last night for telling
American troops their ships had been sunk In Leyte gulf and
they were "orphans of the Pacific.
Arson and Check
Charges Jail Two
Lee T. Clayborn, 49, Sutherlin,
has been committed to the Doug
las county Jail to await grand
jury action on a charge of arson,
reported Sheriff O. T. "Bud"
Carter.
Clayborn was arraigned Thurs
day In the court of Justice of
Peace Ward C. Watson at Suther
lin, and his ball was fixed at
$2,000. Clayborn was arrested by
Sutherlin police.
Manuel Thrush, 51. charged
with drawing bank checks with
Insufficient funds, has also been
committed to the county Jail, re
ported Sherill Carter, inrusn
was arrested at Myrtle Creek
Thursday, and upon arraignment
before Justice of peace A. J.
Geddcs, he asked for a prelimin
ary hearing on the charge.
Charles E. Cooper, wanted by
Lane county authorities on a
check charge, was arrested
Thursday at Myrtle Creek, and
is being held In the county Jail,
said Carter.
slates is estimated at less than
10 percent of the national total.
The hard coal districts produce
some 57.000,000 tons of hard coal
each year.
Kennedy said the western pro
duction goes largely to domestic
markets. Mines west of the Mis
sissippi, he explained, do not
, romnete with the big eastein
1 fields and the action was taken
to meet special problems in the
west.
Reports of an end to the an-
Ihrarlte strike were heard yester
day but union officials declined
comment at the time.
More than 400.000 soft coal min
ers in the ntrth, west and south
still will be idle. Contract nego
tiations at White Sulphur Springs
and at Bluefield. 90 miles away,
have been thoroughly bogged
down.
i
230-49
In fight
rranence with U, S. marihal
A somewhat reluctant federal
court Jury of six men and six
women brought In the verdict aft
er tour nays deiinrratlon. A sur
prised "Oh! ... of apparent dis
appointment, swept the court
room. 'Iva Los Angeles-born and ed
ucated remained as stole as she
had during the 12-week trial.
Head bowed, she said nothing. No
tears. Later she told her attor
ney "I can't understand It." An
appeal Is planned.
October 6 was set for sentenc
ing. The minimum sentence
would be five vears imprison
ment and a $10,000 fine; the max
imumdeath. But the govern
ment did not ask the death pen
ally. Foreman John Mann said the
Jurors would have liked to acouit
the 33-year-old woman known to
ois as lokyo Rose, but "we did
the only thing we thoueht pos
sible under the Judec's instruc
tions."
Actually, she was convicted on
only one of the eight counts in
the Indictment. That one related
to her broadcast from Radio To
kyo in Ortober, 1944, about the
Levte Gulf baltle.
Kenklchl Okl. an official of Ra-
(Continued on Page Two)
Hunting Season Opened
For All Of Oregon
SALEM, Sept. 30-UP) Oregon
hunters could enter the woods to
dayeven in the northwest part
of the state to make camp lor
the start of the hunting season
tomorrow.
Gov. Douglas McKav lifted late
yesterday the ben that would
have kept hunters from the north
west section of Oregon. He said
rains had wiped out the last dan
ger of new forest fires.
The U. S. forest servire at
Portland announced that camp
fire permits will not be required
on any national forests in Ore
gon except the f remont forest.
Some logging slash areas on the
! national forests will remain
closed for a while longer, how
ever. Law Easy on Driver Who
Tried To Run Over Wife
EDMONTON. Alta., Sept. 30
(JP Because a U. S. Air Forre
lieutenant tried to run over his
wife with an automobile 10 days
ago, he was given a six months
suspended Jail sentence yest r
day and fined on three other
charges.
Jark Lewis of Denver, Colo.,
admitted to police that he at
tempted to run down his wife as
they returned home after a par
ty. They have since reconciled.
Lewis was fined $50 and cots
on a charge of daneerous driv-
i Ing. J20 for Illegal (loisessinn l
S liquor and $20 for wilful damage
I the latter to a mailbox and win
1 dow struck by the car.
Union Winner
Of Battle To
Ban Unloading
The Dalles Port Cancels
Contract; Orphan Barge
Now Seeks New Haven
THE DALLES, Ore., Sept. 30
(.D An orphan pineapple bars
from Hawaii was looking again
today for a port, loser In another
bout with CIO longshoremen.
The Dalles Port commission or
dered the barge and Its S800
000 load of pineapple to shove off
to prevent any further outbreak
of labor violence.
Jubilant longshoremen assert
ed they were making good their
boast or six weeks ago when
the pineapple left strikebound
Hawaii that they would make
the barge another "Flying Dutch
man," destined to sail years
without finding port.
Earlier the longeshoremen'i
roving picket platoons balked the
barge's attempts to find a Puget
Sound port where It could unload.
Then the barge slipped up tha
Columbia river, arriving here
last Saturday before pickets
could catch up. But the unload
ing was delayed and Longshore
men apparently won their battle
Wednesday by swarming 200
strong onto the dock. They rough
ed up ten carge workers and
truck drivers, wrecked unloading
equipment, and tossed 100 cases
of pineapple into the river.
inis led tne port commission
to cancel Its agreement last
night with the Hawaiian Pine
apple company for unloading on
the commission dock. A clause
permitted cancellation In case of
labor violence. The action came
before' the company had moved
any pineapple from the water
front. Taamatsrs Look Elstwhera
A com pan v spokesman. A. K.
Tobln, protested that the Long-
snoremen nad been permitted
to Intimidate an American com
munity through a display of vio
lence and brutality." Another as
serted The Dalles had been sub
jected to a "reign of terror."
Still another, R. M.Botley, was
reported in Seattle today to con
fer with Dave Beck, vice-president
of the AFL Teamsters, on
the possibility of attempting to
unload elsewhere.
The elsewhere may be at soma
(Continued on Page Two)
Collision Sends
Two To Hospital
Two persons are In Mercy hos
pital today as the result of a heau
on collision on the North Ump
qua Highway about six miles east
of Roseburg Thursday afternoon.
State Police Sgt. Lyle Harrell
reported that Mack E. Brown and
his daughter, Barbara Jean of
Glide both sustained injuries as
the result of a collision of their
car and truck and trailer, operat
ed by Frank Joseph Bistak, Rose
burg. Their condition was listed
at the hospital today as good.
According to the investigating
officer's report, Bistak was fol
lowing a string of four cars. The
first one slowed to make a turn
off the highway, but Bistak, In ap
plying his brakes was thrown tnt9
the left lane of traffic, where his
vehicle struck that of Brown, who
was traveling east.
Bistak was cited for operating
In the left lane of traflic
U. S. Navy Refuses Aid To
Ships Held At Shanghai
WASHINGTON, Sept 30 OP)
Adm. Louis Denfeld, chief of
naval operations, declined today
to provide American naval in
tervention for release of three
United States merchant ships
held at Shanghai by Nationalists
gunboats.
Denfeld, replying to a request
from the owners, wired that you
will appreciate that the employ
ment of United States navel for
ces under the present circum
stances Is not In accord with
United States government po
licy." Officials noted that while the
United States and Britain haven't
recognized the nationalists' right
to keep ships out of Shanghai
unless they can maintain a tight
blockade, neither Western na
tion has thus far shown any in
clination to use force.
Hungary Apes Soviet In
Cutting Yuogslavia Tie
BUDAPEST, Sept. 30 (JPt The
Hungarian government renounc
ed todav its pact of friendship
and mutual aid with Yugoslavia.
i The Communist press In Ro
mania indicated that other So
viet satellites soon would follow
suit. It seemed likely that all the
satellite nations would take the
cue from Moscow, which scrap
Tied her treaty of friendship with
V'ugoslavla yesterday.)
Like Moscow, Hungary said Ti
to's government had violated and
"defamed" the Dact and made it
woi thless.
Livity Fact Rant
By L. T. Retotnitel
Perhaps, at Gov. McKay de
clares, Harry Bridget isn't run
! nmq the state of Oreqoa, but
the longshoremen's victory at
I The Dalles demonstrates, that
Ifheir leader rates about 100
I ct. lit remote control.