The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, October 10, 1949, Page 4, Image 4

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

    4 Th News-Review, Roteburg, Of. Mow., Oct. 10, 1949
Published 0 ,l!y Except Sunday ' Y th
Newt "evie Compony, Inc. '
(aural alaaa aialla. Mat 1. ' " f"'J '
aaaaaarf. Uriioi. aaaar ael af Marca X. laii
CHARLES V. STANTON p. EDWIN L. KNAPP
Editor mrtJP' Manager
Member of the Associated Press, Oregon Newspaper Publisher,
Association, the Audit Bureau of Circulation!
ei MT-MULLIO CO., INC. alllrta la Naa '. Calcafa.
aaa tiaaaiaaa Laa Antalaa. aula. ralllaa. IL I. aula.
Lbal Kiel ION Aim-la Unnn-tl Mali ra, Trails M, ala aiaalha U .
lb. .a aaaalai lt.M Bi I II! C'arrlar-Par rrar lla.M 'i aaranral. Iriatbaa
aaa real, par mania ll.ai Oal.iea Orafaa Br Mall Far aa l
nanlba 14 H iSraa maalha II 1
Getting Lions To Look In
A Lens, Photog's Problem
By HAL BOYLH I "When I make a picture, I try
NEW YOKK l'l Winston to make it an embodiment of the
Churchill once K'umbled to man at the height of hl life. I
Yousut Karsh, "You can even I try to bring out the humanity in
make a roaring lion stand still to him, the Judicious blending of
be photographed." 'the good and bad. And I'm not so
It was a reluctant tribute' to a : Interested In whether people like
sensitive young Armenian who 1 their picture as In whether peo
has become one of the greatest l'l know them do.
lens artists of our time. He has ; Shaw Interesting
made everybody from Joan Craw-I Karsh says the most Interesting
ford to Pope Pius "look at the 1 man ?Ypr photographed was
birdie " I Bernard Shaw. Shaw began his
, . (interview by remarking:
And after 13 years of stalking what youArmpnan?
eelebiities wit h his "neia, iTha,. , KOod . r hf,VP ma ny good
Karsh has a matchless gallery of ! Armenian friends. But you know,
portraits.. 0. coui-,,., the only way to keep
But It has taken considerable Armenians healthy and strong is
doing to get them, for famous ito exterminate them once In a
people often are more difficult to while."
photograph than babies. . The late General John J. Per-
Churchill was a case In point, i shing, rising from a sickbed for
Karsh ambushed him In Ottawa jhls last portrait, said, half-joking-in
the House of Commons Just ly, half-wistful:
after Winston had made a stirring "Take a picture the American
wartime address. Still flushed ! people will remember for a nun-
from his speech, the premier
didn't want his picture taken. Ke.
luctantly he paused before the
camera and lit a long cigar.
Lifts Stogie
When Karsh held out an ash
tray, Churchill only clamped his
law more firmly on his stogie.
Karsh Impulsively reached out,
murmured "forgive me, sir." and
plucked the cigar from the lips of
the astounded statesman. Then
he stepped back and clicked his
camera on Churchill a- glower
ing lion at bay.
The result was an unforgettble
portrait. It caught the spirit of
besieged Britain in one Indomi
table face.
Karsh doesn't try to catch his
(uniects in odd poses.
Why should I pick on a man i
when his fork' In his mouth?"
he said.
Production Costs
Seeds In Oregon
Net return per acre to grow
ers of chewing and alta fescue
and of highland bent glass aver
aged almoat the same in 19 K
s but all far outstripped the acre
returns from perennial and com
mon rye grass, according to re
sults of cost -of production studies
just published by the O.S.C. ex
periment station.
Studies of the five grasses were
made the same season for pur
poses of comparison, though the
results for each grass have been
Issued as separate mimeograph
ed circulars of information.
A sixth circular of information,
"Comparison of the Cost of Pro
ducing Various Grass Seeds by
Soli Classes." brings together ihe
resutls of the separale surveys
and points out the significance
of the findings,
Won't Replace Rye Grasses
On poorly drained valley soil,
for example, alta fescue In solid
tnads averaged $32 net per caie
while common rye grass averag
ed $15 and perennial rve grass
$11. This was In spite of the fact
that cost per pound fur produc
tion of alia was about twice that
of the rye grasses.
Even so the men of the agri
cultural economics department
who made the studies do not ex
pert alta fescue to replace the
rye grasses, since stands are us
ually more difficult to establish,
there is wider variation In re
turns, and since a steady market
for t lie rye grasses exists year
after year.
On hill soils alto fescue in solid
stands gave an average net re
turn of $71 per acre compared
with St!0 for highland bent grass
and $." for chewings fescue. Axe
rage vields were :tJ2, Ki-I and 252
pounds per acre respect ively.
. Nine fields of alto fescue grown
In rows and cultivated averaged,
for all soils, titi pound of seed
Czechs Free U. S.
Student After
5-Day Detention
PRAGUE, Oct 10 (.pi a!
26-year old American student,
here on a scholarship as a guest
of the Czechoslovakia guwrn-;
ment, said Friday he was arrest-1
ed as a suspected spy, kept I n
solitary confinement for five
davs and fed on "slop".
The story was given to news,
men bv Savel Kliachko, of Palo
Alto, Calif. He s;iw correspond
ants at the American embassy,
w here he reported his case t o
officials.
He said except for "the slow
torture of not having anyone t o
talk to or anything to read." he
was not mistreated by the txilioe.
Kliachko, a student at Colum
bia University's school of inter
national affairs, came to Prague
this summer on a Czech scholar-
ship to study ht Charles univer
sity. He said he divided to tour
Slovakia and that his itinerary
was approved by Cedok, the nat
ional tourist oi k-amation.
On Sept. 29, he said he arrived
In the Slovakian town of Nicha
Joyce, near the soviet border.
He said he was In the city only
four hours when a ixHiccman
picked him up in a store, asked
for his papers and brought him
to headquarters of the security
police.
idrert years.
Karsh said one of his most dif
ficult subjects was Lord Beaver
brook, because of his restless
energy. But "the Beaver" was so
pleased with hi portrait he ex
claimed: "You have Immortalized me."
Karsh mentioned the Incident
to an acquaintance of Beaver
brook, and the man said:
"Karsh, are you sure that was
a good idea."
At 40 Karsh has photgraphed
most of Europe' monarch and a
majority of the world's top states
men, diplomats and military
leaders.
"But the man whose portrait I
would like most to make Is
i&iann, ne sain, a gooa picture
of Stalin might help to explain
J him to the world. He has never
I faced an unbiased camera."
Of Five Grass
Are Compared
per acre, the study show. Al
though the net cost of production
per, pound under these condi
tions was 9.6 cents compared
with 7.6 in the solid stands, the
higher yields made the net re
turn per acre $1.16 compared with
an average of $57 for solid stands
on all soil types.
Supreme Court
Says To 'Forget'
Gerhart Eisler
WASHINGTON, Oct. 10-tR
The Justice department told the
supreme court It might as well
forget about Ihe case brought be
fore It by Gerhart Klsler, t h e
ball-Jumping Communist.
Eisler has taken public office
In the Soviet zone of Germany,
and in all probability never will
return here, said Solicitor Gen
eral Philip B. Peiiman 'n a for
mal motion filed with the high
trinunai.
The fugitive Communist was
sentenced to a year in Jail and
fined $1,000 after he refused to
be sworn as a witness before the
house committee on un-Americni
activities. The charge was con
tempt of Congress.
He appealed to the supreme
court, sat in the court chamber
while attorneys argued his case,
then fled from the United States
before a decision was announced.
While apparently irked at this
turn of events, the Justices split
. to 4 on what to do about it.
The majority said the case would
not remain on the docket, but
would still be technically before
the court. Their legal language
ordered the appeal "left off the
docket until a direction to the
contrary."
, a n I
Sartiett "earS
fr U cl iaaJcrs, headed by us, will seek to
KJJ MOrinWeST WO make lt a WESTERN snake with
Yq 22 States an ""iicornrnun'st w,s'orn cm-
Northwestern pears Bart
lefts from Washington and Ore
gonwill appear on school lunch
and welfare institution menu is
22 states this winter slates
I mm Ivlawart to Wyoming, and
trmn Minnesota to New Mexico.
This widespread use of the
northwest's bountiful B.irtlett re
sults from a Cnifcd States Ie
IMi'tmcnt of Agriculture purchase
program, plaivd in eflect to ab
soili a surplus of the fruit that
threatened to overflow the mar
ket. Under existing legislation,
purchases were limited to outlets
ih.ii could be found for the fruit
in school lunch and eligible wel
fare insfiiiitiiiii feeding pro-
giams
mil t
Even so, more than 234.
ocs of Hartletts were
bought in the northwest, bring
ing glowers S.1OI.OO1), at $2.15 per
bov
I'lin-hascs In Oregon amounted
to l'st cars more than 11.1000
box i anil growers received
ncarlv S.Ml.OiYl. In Washington,
purchases totaled It') car or
nearly 121.000 boxes - - and grow
ers were paid approximately
$260,000.
The News Review Classified
Ads bring best results. Phone
100. . 1
But Maybe The Other Boys Don't
.jtgl ' S3l.
. S s I PROSPERITY OF ALL THE
Did you ee the meteor that
flashed across the heavens in
daylight the other day, and could
you give details of said meteor
a It looked to YOU? If so. Dr.
J. Hugh Pruett, University of Ore
gon extension astronomer, would
like to hear from you. Run don't
walk to nearest postoffice with
your letter!
I'm a bit hazy about what hap
pens after he receives your let
ter, along with about 500 others,
but he plots the line of flight
somehow, , having mathematics
and so on to help him, and then
when the converging lines point
the spot, he marks a big X there,
grabs a shovel, gets In his car,
and proceeds to dig at the spot
marked X . . . always provid
ing "X" Isn't half of Mt. Hood,
or some inaccessible spots In the
wilds of the Cascades.
In all of this he is aided and
abetted by "the red headed" Mrs.
Hope Pruett twhom McMinnvllIe
folks recall as F. Hope Sully) and
such others as share his enthusi
asm. Me? I'd rather stay snug
and warm by our blazing log fire.
In the Day s News
(Continued from Page One)
TWO GERMANY'S one commu
nist and Russian, the other anti
communist and Western.
w
HAT will that mean?
Did you ever hear of the
Joint snake? Well, the Joint snake
was supposed to fly Into pieces
when hit with a club. When the
menu. U.C., f,u .. uir jw.m.
back together again and the snake
was as good as new.
From here on out, the German
Joints w ill seek to come back to
gether Into a whole German
snake. Russia will seek to make
it a snaKe w un a coitiuiuiiim ius-
sian complex. The Western pow-
pH-.
As long as the struggle goes
on. WAR WILL HOVER IN THE
OFFING.
ETS take a look at Germany's
historic perspective.
Ever since Caesar and his his
torian, Tacitus, first encountered
them some 20 centuries ago, war
has been the trade of the
Germanic tribes.
LOOK AT GERMANY NOW
Then take down your In.-,. ....
book for a look at Germany after
Napoleon got through with her.
After that, check up on Germany
after World War I.
You'll come to the conclusion,
I think, that in Germany' case
war hasn't paid.
N
OW for the moral:
Take a long look at our Ameri
can industrial system. It is the
greatest the world ever produced.
With six per cent of the world's
people, we produce about 40 per
cent of the things the world uses.
AFTER FIRST PRODUCING
Bi Viahnett S. Martin I
in
Blazing, that Is, If I don't get so
interested In whatever is rolled
Into this typewriter that I sit
here till I'm half-frozen, and then
discover "that fire is out again!"
The Pruett have several tele
scopes: one is a 10 inch which Is
a big and complicated looking af
fair. Their observatory, the Ever
green observatory, is at 1832
Longvlew, Eugene. Longview?
Not bad for the street an as
tronomer lives on?
They have two cats, "a sweet
pair" says Dr. Pruett, called Mose
and Felix, weight 16 and 17
pounds, respectively. They are as
sistant "astronomers"; at any
rate, they keep the Pruetts com
pany and who shall say they
don't see stars, too?
But about that meteor you saw
or may see in the future: Dr.
Pruett would think you were Just
wonderful as an observer is you
Included time, durations, size,
color, noise and most Important
DIRECTIONS and angular
heights of the appearances and
disappearance points! You'd be
surprised at the variations he re
ceived! But all help and so,
send yours!
THESE THINGS, we have divided
them up among ourselves. A a
result of HAVING A LOT OF
THINGS TO DIVIDE UP, our
average standard of living Is the
highest the world has ever
known.
BUT
Our great Industrial system Is
now torn by Industrial strife.
Modern industrial strife Is a
form of war. It has all the trap
pings of war. It involves PRO
FESSIONAL high commands. It
has DISCIPLINED followers.
5id1 sppks (o ,nfl.ct d.irnilKe
on the other side in order to w in. !
As in the case of shooting war,
this strife, if continued long
enough, will DESTROY THE
It's a fact . . . most re
pair work can be done
in one day. Drive in
now.
HANSEN
MOTOR CO.
Oak Stephens Phone 446
I Fast Service I
I It's a fact . . . most re- I
Like To Fish
s
OME day (some FAR DIS
TANT day, I fear) the peoples
of this world will learn to live
and let live.
They will learn to live by the
principle of the Golden Rule.
When they do, they will find
that lt pays in dollars and cents
as well as in the satisfaction of
the TRULY more abundant life.
PLUMBING
The plumbing in your home is all Important.
Avoid trouble and expense in the future by getting
good plumbing and competent
mechanics from the . , .
COEN SUPPLY COMPANY
EVERYTHING FOR
Phone 121
Get Ready for Winter
Need Fuel Oil?
Your Answer to:
if Quick, Efficient, Courteous Service
ic Quality Richfield Furnace ana Stove OA
if S & H Green Stamp with Each Purchase
That's Easy
Just . . .
New Rust Proof
Heatlnf Oils
Eliminate
Rust in Your
Fu Tonk
Ticket Printer
Meter Register
Antomatie Fill-Up Service
All "S & H" Green Stomps may be ploced in the
some book regardless of where you receive them
ond only nationally known standard merchandise
is given in exchange for "S & H" Green Stamps.
Visit and redeem your filled books in the "S & H"
Redemption Store 713 S. Stephens, Roseburg.
Ken Under
Bear Grabs Boy,
Mom To Rescue
With Fingernails
TAMPA. Fla.. Oct. 10.-.TV
Nabbed In the seat of his britches
by a city pa-k bear, 20-months
old Johnny Lango wa nursing'an
ailing sitter Friday.
He might have been bitten ser
iously instead of just painfully
if his mother had not jabbed her
fingernails Into the bear's nos
trils until the animal let go.
Susie, a 300-pound Canadian
black bear, wa caged, but she
could poke her snout through a
small opening between the end of
a gate and the post of the next
section of fencing. -
Johnny bacxed up to the open
ing. Susie clamped down and
Johnny began to scream.
Mr. Joseph Longo, only a few
feet away, rushed up and clawed
at Susie's nose until the bear
loosened It's hold.
Johnny got his wound three
Inches long and an inch and a
half wide titched up and went
on home.
RIGHT TIME TO CUT HAY
DAVIS, Calif.-UP The best
time for cutting vetch and oats
for hay has been determined by
Professor B. A. Madson and L.
G. Jones on the Davis campus
of the University of California.
Vetch is best for hay when cut
in full bloom. Oats makes good
hay if cut when the grain is In
the soft-dough stage.
Advertisement.
New Hearing Device
Has No Receiver
Button In Ear
Chicago, III. Deafened people
are hailing a new device that
gives them clear hearing without
making them wear a receiver
button in the ear. They now en
joy songs, sermons, friendly com
panionship and business success
with no self-conscious feeling that
people are looking at any button
hanging on their ear. With the
new invisible Phantomold you
may free yourself not only from
deafness, but from even the ap
pearance of deafness. The mak
ers of Beltone, Dept. 40, 1450 W.
19th St., Chicago 8, 111., are so
proud of their achievement they
will gladly send you their free
brochure (In plain wrapper) and
explain how you can test this
amazing invisible device in the
privacy of your own home with
out risking a penny. Write Bel
tone today.
33C
THE BUILDER
Floed and Mill Streets
CALL
RICHFIELD
Phone 554
Day or Night
Distributor
Serving
Roseburg,, Sutherlin, Oakland, Myrtle Creek, Canyonville, Riddle
Phone 5S4
Scientist Predicts Atom
War Is 20 Years Away
ROME, Oct. 10 Upy Atom
Bomb Scientist Enrico Fermi
predicted that if the United States
maintain atomic supremacy
over Russia there will be no war
for 20 year.
"American supremacy is pre
dictable up to 20 years if we work
hard," he said in an interview.
"As for me, I expect to sleep as
well as my insomnia permits. I'm
a fatalist by nature, anyway."
Bank With ' ,'
A Douglos County Institution
Home Owneci Home Operated
Member Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp.
Douglas County State Bank
FARMERS
Local claims service is your assur
ance of fast repairs when your car
is damaged.
LOW RATES
. . . on collision and liability cov
erage gives you standard protec
tion at substantial
SAVINGS
Liability oCverage
$5000-10,000 bodily injury.
$5000 property damage.
No Extra Charge for Age, Mileage or Business Us
Over 800,000 Western Motorists Insure and Save Through
Farmers Standard Form Nonassessable Policies.
t rAtt.ias
e. IMWuaaY X
Farmers Insurance Exchange
r x
K&r ff r
Richfield
PHONE 100
between 6.1S and 7
p. m., if you hovt not
received your" Newt
Review. Ask Jor Harold Mob''
Paul H. Krueger
636 S. Stephen
Phone 218
flMQ
Each six months
Current Rates -
Plus
$5.00 Nonrecurring
Fee at Beginning
of Policy
The West's Leading
Auto Insurance
-..,, Carrier '
We Give
G.;. , i ;tT.ps
Oil Cere.
8