4 The Newa-Revlew, Roseburj, Ore Thurt., Oct. 6, 1949 Published 0 illy Exoept Sunday ly thi Newt-Sevie Company, Inc. teler.4 I. wnl UIUI M.r I. H IM efflee l.uii. Oi.i.a. set tUrek i. Ull CHARLES V. STANTON EDWIN L. KNAPP Editor Sij" Manager Mimbir of th Associated Press, Oregon Newspaper Publisher Asaoeiatlon, tha Audit Buraau of Clreulationa BaeraMal.e ? KSf.B)OU.ID CO. INI:, alllc. H t.rk. Cklceie. aa tiiKim Ui lla. r.tll.aS at. Laala. Urn ai.eia. st.se B Cll, l.rri.r-r.r tr Ili.M la "'. u! ... ai.aia ii. aa o.inia ot.i. Br mil r t iaa. us ika 14. H ir. a.aik. IM Business Men Divided On Asking U.S. To Guarantee Their Investments Abroad By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK. Oct. 6. UP) Some businessmen oppose asking Uncle Sam to guarantee returni on their money If they Invest abroad. Some of the public do, too. Although they may have no money of their own to invest, they can see how they might, ai Uxpayen, be called upon to toot the bill. Thli is the isiue In dispute this week over President Truman's point four plan to export Ameri can technical and financial aid to underdeveloped areas now can m(n, he investor, and the vou Induce American! to Invest tnrrign and, tte to help, abroad the way the world is And no, too cU)te a reRPnlblance t0ly-. ... . . i 'to the American private enter The Idea of the Investment prise lyslem which we recom Jo raise standards of living In d , ' he world mrlai fflAHflltt tn I Via la mret-T a - I and thereby keep the communists j out. But even witn tne rea aiom bomb blast still tingling nerves in Washington, o m e economy minded congressmen are display ing coolness toward the Idea of guaranteeing private Investments abroad. Looks Like Handout That some businessmen are cool, also, might seem strange. On the face of it, the guarantee measure being brought up In con gress looks like a handout from the public purse to the American businessman. If the businessman j tional Foreign Trade council are makes money on the foreign In-1 urging that no nation get the pro vestment, fine. If he loses, the! posed American aid until It has taxpaying public, whether they I signed a bi lateral treaty assur like It or not, will make up the ling "fair and nondiscriminatory losa. What would the investor treatment for American enter have to lose? Some say, plenty, prises and American Invest They figure that if the govern- jments," as the WFTC spokesman ment guarantees the citizen's put It. However, some olher bus money. It It going to want to su-iness observers even question the pervlse (he investments In the; real value of what they call fair first place, set up rules for them, promise treaties. Irrigated Public Land In Idaho Opened To Homestead Entry To Yets By Drawing BOISE, Idaho Forty-five hun dred acres of Irrigated public land, consisting of 50 farm units in the Black Canyon area of the Boise Federal Reclamation Pro ject in Southwestern Idaho, were opened for homestead entry by veterans of World Was II and others Wednesday Oct. i. Region al Director H. T. Nelson announc ed. The Bureau of Reclamation Is taking applications for the new land beginning now, he said. Qualified war veterans both men and women an da small number of homestead relinquish ers, who homesteaded or filed desert land entries In the area many vears ago, which they la ter relinquished in anticipation of project development under the Carey Act, will have highest pre ference for the units. Application blanks are being mailed todav to some 4,.V)0 or more persons who have written the bureau asking to be notified when the Black Canyon land is opened to homestead entry. Oth ers who wish application blanks may obtain them by writing the Bureau of Reclamation. All ap plications received by 2 p.m. on Jan. 3. lflM will be considered as simultaneously filed. The farms will cost the win ners the small government home stead fee and irriagtion construc tion charges. The latter may be repaid over a period of years. Interest free. The homestead area Is situated Immediately north of Caldwell and Middlelnn, Idaho. The unils vary in size from approximately 51 to 138 Ir rigable acres each. All of the land la either still In sagebrush or was burned off a number of years ago. Adjacent cultivated Huddle On Coal Strike Called By Government WASHINGTON. Oct. 5 (.Fi The government today called John L Lewis and soft coal op erators to a meeting Friday in an effort to end the three-week mine shutdown. Cyrus S. Ching, head of the Federal Mediation service, said the coal situation has "reached the place where It Is appoi ach ing a crisis," that requites the intervention of his office: The operators are meeting with Iwii and his United mine work ers negotiators at Bluefield and White Sulphur Springs. W. Va., but Ching said a mere report of progress in those talks would not suffice to call off his Friday meeting here. Ching said any report of pro gress in the West Virginia talks would be "very encouraging." but "it would have to he verv definite for him to drop his own call for an operator-union ses sion. Dryly, Ching remarked that he was not acting on the spur of the moment since contract ne gotiations have been underwav for the South since May and for the rest of the Industry since June. Ching said that "although there is a lot of coal at some points, even today some people are af fected by the coal shutdown and land regulale collections. The end result, they fear, would be un- Guarantee Demanded Then what would these bus inessmen prefer? Some of them are telling Congress this week that the only way to get private capital to Invest abroad is to se cure a fair deal for it from foreign governments. Given an even break, they say, American bus inessmen are smart enouph to get along without a government crutch. . At least two Important business groups the United Stales Cham- oer or commerce ana me ja lands are largely adapted to dairying and other types of live stock farming, including the pro duction of alfalfa, pasture, clo ver, wheat, oats, barley and peas. Experience Required The public land units will he awarded to qualified entrymen In the order In which their names are publicly drawn by lot from a bowl at a date to be set later. Applications will be reviewed by a local examining board to de termine whether the persons ful ly qualify for homesteading ir rigated public lands. To qualify, applicants must meet certain minimum requirements. In gen eral they must have two vears of farm experience, $3,500 ln li quid capital or assets useful In development of an Irrigated farm, good character and indus try, and the physical ability to do the required farm work. Applicants also must mpet the principal qualifications of Feder al homestead laws. Bolh men and women are eligible for home steads. However, a woman, if married, must be head of a fam ily. Successful applicants must within six months after their homestead entry is approved establish residence on the land and must cultivate at least half I he Irrigable acreage In their farm unit for two vears before receiving full title to the land. Full details of the opening are contained in Public Notice No. 41, Payette division of the Boise project. These, together with ap plication blanks and instructions for filing, may be obtained hv writing to the Irrigation mana ger, Bureau of Reclamation, No tus, Idaho. the longer It goes the worse It gets." Asked If President Truman might use the emergency powes of the Taft-Hartley act to halt the coal strike, Ching said "we re mediators." Ching ventured the opinion, however, that an emergency would arise in the coal strike he fore It would In the steel strike. He said "no formal moves" are. contemplated immediately in the steel dispute. Priester Attends Meet Of Forensics Assn. ORKGON STATE COI.I.EGF Corvallia (Special i- Frank lh-ir.. ter of Roseburg, senior In ed-1 urn I ion. w as among 'Ive OSC ! representatives attending the an nual meeting of ihe executive! committee of the Intercollegiate I Forensics associatinn of Oregon j recently at Cenige Fox college1 in Newberg. PrieVer is extem porary manager at OSC. At the meeiing the group de rided to hold a Willamette Valley Forensics institute at Willam ette university Nov. 5. Topi -s selected for the State F.xtem poiary contest to he hold In De cember at Linfield rollege are "The Present Crisis In '.atmr Re lations." for men, and 'The In dustrial Future of the Pacific Northwest," for worrjen. Persona 6J years and move of age have the highest traffic death rate of any age group. JSg!$ya Hjl Viaknett S. Martin f yV ' "There Is no other of Oregon's coastal parks, possibly no other place in the entire nation, that presents such an unusual combi nation of natural and structural features, within so small an area as Is Included in this unusual com posite picture: Devil's Elbow state park. To continue quoting W. A. Langille, state park historian: "Looking from the bridge deck (Highway 101, thirteen miles north of Florence) the attractive Hecate Head lighthouse rests prominently on the elevated out er point, lis light 205 feet above tide, with Its gleam flashing eve ry ten seconds, visible over an ocean radius of 21 miles. On the north side of the cove, about mid distance between the bridge and the lighthouse are the llghlkcep er's trim quarters. . . "This Is a rare and unique sit uation where a state park is pic turesquely linked with a pleasing stream, flowing beneath a high, beautifully arched, primary high way bridge, directly connected with a lengthy tunnel where the In the Day's News (Continued from Page One) pleased w ith their showing and Is convinced of his army's ability to defend Yugoslavia. At the end of the practice maneuvers, he says: "We are prepared to defend this country to the last breath, regard less w hence the attack comes. . ." He then adds: "It pays to live, but it pays to die as one should." a a THAT is rugged talk. But down In the Balkans rugged talk has often been followed by rugged deeds. History leaves us In no doubt on that point. Besides Tito might figure it would be better for him if the shooling started now. He is a little dictator who is quarreling with a big rile-; talor. In such clronmstancos, you never can tell Just w hat dictators j will do next. j If shooting starts In the Bal-1 kans, It vein he apt to spread. a MEANWHILE The dispatches tell us that: "Gunfire ind death broke the brief calm In the strife-scarred mine fields as the twin strikes of 900.000 . steel and coal workers ground on at a staggering cost of 30 million dollars a day." I a a THE gunfire came at Pikeville, In Tennessee. It seems that members of the miners union Landscape and Plant with Confidence Our 40 yeare of esperlence assures you quality. Fair and Honest Treatment Satisfaction Guaranteed Lawns, Cat Leveling. Spraying Tree Surgery, Pruning Jack May Landscape Co. Phone 17)2 J 1J30 Harrleon Street Playing Hard To Get ocean waves cast their spune be neath the bridge and tunnel end. In the foreground is a cllffed cove, a lighthouse headland, off shore rocks and islets, backed by the wide, wide, restless sea." There are 97 acres in the park. Several acres were given by the Stonefleld family: given land eaualled 14 acres: purchased, 81 acres. . ! Hecate Head dates back In his tory to August 17, 1775, when Capt. Bruno Hecate (Spanish pron. "ay-thay-tah, says Mr. Lan gille) was the first to see the mouth of the Columbia river. He landed, according to Gaston's His tory of Oregon, "about Ti miles south of the entrance of the Straits of Juan de Fuca, erected a cross, and took possession of the land In the name of the King of -Spain, July 14. 1775. He and his party were, the first Europeans to set foot on the coast of the Oregon country. Roseburg to Drain, 39 miles; to Reedsport, 50 miles; to Hecate Head, 34 miles. Nice turn around point for a Sunday drive? were walking up a trail toward a nonunion mine. Their leaders ! say they were on a peaceful mission. Suddenly shooting started. It came from men hidden behind bushes, and when it died down three men had been wounded, one of them seriously. Two more men i are missing. The dispatch adds: "State Pa trolman Harold Wede says slrik i ing VMW workers are In an ugly mood over the Incident and there i is talk that they will arm them- I selves." I THE dispatches go on: "More trouble Is ahead In the steel picture. The 500.000 men who fabricate the raw Iron and i steel after it comes from the mills are members of Murray's union I I CIO). Their contracts begin ex ! piring October 15 and the CIO national president says they too ; w ill strike, if necessary, for free pensions and insurance." "Dock workers quit their Jobs on the Great Lakes In support of ! the steel walkout . , . Packard HARRY C. STEARNS Funeral Director Our service if for oil and meets every need. Any distance, any time Licensed Lody Assistant. Oakland, Oregon Phone 472 or 542 Motor Co announces a two-day suspension on Thursday and Fri day because of si eel shortages . . . railroads are getting ready to lay off more men; already they have furloughed 40,000." And so on. a a a IT seems highly probable that as Stalin and his crew in the Kremlin read the news from America these days they chuckle and rub their hands In glee. What they DONT UNDER- STAND is that If the pinch comes we'll forget our internal quarrels and work together as we did In the last war and the war before that. It must seem to them that everything they've hoped for is coming true. DID YOU not NOW at your grocers you can buy whipped cream ready to eat an instant topping for Pies, Cakes, Puddings, Fruits and Salads. It's called Reddi-Whip Reddi-Whip is freshly whipped, ready-mixed wholesome cream. In a convenient metal container. No deposit, no return on the container. Buy some this week at your grocers Keep in refrigerator until you're ready to use. Use Reddi-Whip and you'll never again whip your cream the old fashioned way. Actions Of Vishinsky, Other Reds Speak Louder Than Their Words By BRUCE BIOSSAT Two months ago a pair of American students cycling in Ger many were arrested by Russian authorities. They were held prisoner until Sept. 28. In that interval, the two youths told U. S. officials, they were confined in what they described as "dungeons." What had they done to offend the Russians? The two cyclists stuff, but Vishinsky is working on sld Soviet authorities thought the well-worn but not exactly they were spies. The basis for this stupid theory that repetition often suspicion w as the fact that the drives ideas home, lads had innocently ventured into j Tnat i( why It pays to refresh the Russian zone on their sight-!our minds from time to time on seeing trip. "We did not realize: the story of Russian actions as how serious this was," said one. 1 contrasted with Russian words. This was a comparatively mild Any time you get to thinking Instance of a practice that goes that mavh Vishlnskv and Co. are on all the time along the border between the Soviet and the west-1 ern zones of Germany. A more striking example came to U. S. notice a few weeks ago when an American soldier was released by the Russians after long imprison ment. What had been his offense? He boarded the wrong streetcar In Berlin. It took him into the Soviet sector of the city, where he had no desire to go. Whereupon he was arrested as a spy suspect. Th. mini r.t inirf im.rirl. authorities that in an effort to force a "confess on" from him i the Russians beat him brutally a number of times and gave him tne water treatment. This last is a little something , ,ne color system, gave the infor dreamed up by our eastern friends i mation at the Federal Communl to induce a certain humility In ' cations commission television persons who are being grilled. . hearings. The prisoner is made to stand for Dr. Goldmark testified that the 24 hours In a room filled with ! $220 receiver would produce "an water to a height above his knees. I effective 10-Inch size (picture) As we have suggested, Ind-; dents of this sort are rather com mon place. The only reason for taking note of them is to rem'nd Americans here at home w hat the Russians are really doing. Now that the United Nations Is meeting again in New York, Soviet Foreign Minister Vishin sky has his handy propaganda sounding board against which he can shout the evils of "warmon gering" Americans and British and proclaim the virtues of his native people. You hear a lot of chatter about the Soviet Union's peaceful inten tions and the wonders of the "people's democracy." It's old PHONE 100 between 6. IS and 7 p. m.( if you hove not received your News Review. Ask for Horold Mobley. YOU KNOW.... CAN BUY WHIPPED CREAM WHIPPING cream WHIPPED cream talking straight and it is we Americans who are the culprits, jut close your eyes and visualize that young soldier standing knee- deep in cold water. For boarding tne wrong streetcar. Video System Cost Is Estimated If Approved WASHINGTON. Oct. 6. l-P) Columbia Broadcasting system said Wednesday that if Its color television system is approved, 10- ncn cumr receivers can De retail ed for about $220. Dr. Peter C. Goldmark, CBS research director who invented enlarged. from a 7-inch tube" and that the set would receive Dependable! Performance! V 2SSTON CHAM SAW Designed and built by Dinton, America's foremost saw manu facturer, this is the saw you need to lower your costs and step up your production. It's easy to operate, and built for trouble-free service, let us give you all Hie facts about the Disston Chain Saw with Mercury Gasoline Engine. Come in and talk it over. CARL J. PEETZ Phone 279 920 8. Stephens I SIMPLE AS 1-2-3 7. Shake container well. 2. Remove guard turn container upside down. 3. Press tip sideways cream is ejected in the quantity you wish. Simple directions on every container. One container makes nearly a full quart of whipped creom distributed IVM 1 I.Mtt-lUir . Deer Causes Car Wreck; Officer Badly Injured KLAMATH FALLS, Oct. 5 Kla math County deputv sherlf Wil lis Pankey, Bly, is 'in a critical condition here today suffering from injuries received when his car overturned late Monday six miles north of Bly. State police Sgt. Mark Sullivan, passenger In the car, was less seriously In jured. Both men are in Klamath Valley hospital here. The hospital reported Pankey had laDsed Into unconsciousness. He suffered possible internal in juries and severe bruises. Sullivan was reported to be suf fering only from body bruises. Shortly before the accident, the two officers had investigated the accidental hunting death Sunday of Donald Lee Balcomb, Eugene, on a ranch near Bly. The officers were returning to Bly when Pan- -key swerved his car to avoid hit ting a deer in the road. The car struck a soft shoulder and overturned. either black-and-white or color. The CBS official expressed doubts tbout the rival color sys tem previously presented by : Radio Corporation of America. Black bear now roam wild in 34 of the 48 U. S. states. MOTORISTS 55c by ! n inni II rmxm l LtaZeaW aVJ aUW '