Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 31, 1949)
The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. Mon., Oct. 31, 1949 2 in nvy' (HEA Telrphato) CALF LOVE Beverly Brennan, queen of the Grand National Live stock Exposition, plays with one of the calvea to be exhibited at the 8an Francisco Cow Palace when the Exposition opens on Oct. 28. Jaundice Cases Not Increased No additional cases of yellow jaundice have been reported from the Glide area, Dr. E. J. Wainscott, county health officer, said today. He and county neaiin nurses were to go to Glide school this afternoon to complete the lnnoculatlons of those exposed to the disease. Saturday, Dr. Wainscott re ported, there were 78 cases with 35 definitely diagnosed aa jaun dice, known medically as infec tious hcpltitls. Total of 497 per sons had received the serum ln noculatlons Friday evening. Dr. Wainscott and his assis tants did not go to Glide Satur day afternoon, because of the dif ficulty in contacting 50 to 60 ad ditional children who were to re ceive the lnnoculatlons. School busses were not operating and rural telephone lines were out of order. Navy Will Be Reduced To Keep Within Budget (Continued From Page One) Man's Death Arouses Suspicion Of Slaying (Continued From Page One) vicinity of Pruner bridge, reported finding the body to Riddle Police Chief William Taylor, who in turn relayed the Information to the sheriff s ofllce here. Deputies Bennett and Worrell said the body apparently had been thrown over the south side of the bridge, at a point 40 feet from the cast approach. Deputy Coroner Marlon Env mett removed (he body to Long and Orr funeral parlors at 1 p. m. Sunday, for subsequent inves tigation. The body was identified by A. W. Bruton, Myrtle Creek, stepfather of the victim. Results of the autopsy will be released lSter, Davis said. Roseburg Police Chief Calvin H. Baird aided in classification of the victim's fingerprints. Funeral services for Tucker will be held at 2 p. m. Wednesday, at the Myrtle Creek Methodist church. Interment will follow at the Odd Fellows cemetery. Ar rangements' are In care of Long and Orr. Tucker, born May 13, 1902, lived nearly all his life in Myrtle Creek. He moved to Springfield about one month ago, where he was em ployed In a machine shop. He Is survived by his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Burton, Myrtle Creek and three sisters and three brothers. They are Mrs. Ethel Krause, Springfield; Doris Humphries, Enstslde, Oregon; Mrs. Violet Watts, Sacramento; Harold Tucker, Tucson, Ariz.; Cecil Tucker, Eastslde and Earl Tucker, Canyonvllle. The deceased was a member of the Myrtle Creek Eagles lodge. Marshall Plan Nations Get American Warning (Continued from Page One) quantitative restrictions on the movements of goods, monetary bariers to the flow of pavmonls, and, eventually, all tariffs are permanently swept away. "The fact that we have In (he United States a single market of 150,000,000 consumers has been Indispensable to the strength and efficiency of our economy. The creation of a permanent, freely trading area, comprising 170,000, 000 consumers in western Europe, would have a multitude of help ful consequences." Hoffman's speech climaNod numerous recent demands that Europe do something more posi tive toward unification while the American aid program is still in effect. As Hoffman spoke, the OEEC council had on its agenda a rhi. Ish proposal for all member stales to eliminate trade quotas on 50 per cent of their commerce with other members. with the uproar over the dismis sal of its top officer, Admiral Louis E. Denfeld, as its chief of staff. Other Officers Face Trouble , Meantime, the possibility ap peared that other Naval officers who fought the unification prac tices may be in for trouble. It was reliably reported that the Navy Inspector general's of fice had opened an investigation of "OP 23,1' a Navy term for op erations Division 23. This group has been called a strategy cen ter for the campaign to effect changes in unification policies. Aides of the Inspector general. Rear Admiral Allen R. McCann, were said to have taken over files of the group. . McCann's office apparently was acting under instructions trom nlgherups. The little known OP 23 group officially Is the organization, re search and Dolicv division of the office of the chief of naval oper- anona. u is neaoeo ny Lapt. A. A. Burke. The unit's listed duties cover a broad field permitting It wide latitude. . Pineapple Gees South By Railway THE DALLES, Ore., Oct. 31 UP) Five empty boxcars were on a riverfront dock spur today, waiting loading work to resume In the five weekold canned pine apple dispute. Union Pacific railroad officials climbed into a shifting engine cab Saturday to spot the five cars on the track and pull away five loaded cars that Brother hood trainmen earlier had refus ed to handle. A freight train later picked up the cars and hauled them to Port land. There they were transfer red to the Southern Pacific and sent southward to San Jose, Calif., canneries. Police were investigating rock weighted warning notes tossed on the porches of railroad workers last week. The notes said "hands off the strikes. Stay out of strike bound area. You recognize those picket line or you won't want us to call on you again." These were in words clipped from newspapers and taped to brown wrapping paper. One was thrown on the porch of Engineer W. W. Caldwell. An other was found at the home of Engine Foreman Jack Davis. The reference to a ghost picket line referred to a court order pro hibiting CIO Longshore picket ing. The pineapple was brought here by barge from Hawaii's strike-bound waterfront last month. Mrs. H. J. Hickerson's Father Passes Away Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Hick erson were called to Portland Saturday by the death of D. B. Schroeder, 69, father of Mrs. Hickerson. Mr. Hickerson, secre tary of the Roseburg Charnber of Commerce, and Mrs. Hicker son went, to Portland immediate ly following a report of Mr. Sen roeder's sudden death. He had been In ill health for several months. Former proprietor of The Ocean House, Gearhart, for many years, Mr. Schroeder had made his home in Portland for the past seven years. Surviving, besides the daugh ter, are his widow and a son, Richard Schroeder, manager of the Astoria Marine Construction Co., Astoria, Ore. Vice President To Wed Mrs. C. S. Hadiey (Continued from Pago One) gratulate the couple, while photo graphers' bulbs flashed. i certainly deserve to be con gratulated," Barkley commented. I regard myself as greatly hon ored by the announcement Mrs. Hadiey has just made," Met During Cruise Barkley and Mrs. Hadiey met last July 8 while she was visiting Mr. and Mrs. Clarke Clifford in Washington. Clifford was a presi dential aide. The two were lntr duced during a cruise down the Potomac. Mis. Hartley's husband, who died in 1945 at the age of 42, was general counsel for the Wabash Railroad Co. She has two daugh ters, Jane, 14, and Anne, 17, who Is a student at Sophie Newcomb college, New Orleans. Barkley is a widower. His wife, whom he married in 1903, died in 1947 In Washington. There were three children, David M. Barkley, Mrs. Max Truitt and Mrs. Doug las MacArthur II, wife of a nephew of the general. The nation's No. 2 Democrat crossed party lines in his selection of a bride because Mrs. Hadiey is or was known as a republican. In 1910 she worked at Wendell Wlllkie's campaign headquarters here. Funeral Services Held For Thos. J. McGinnis Funeral services for Thomas Jefferson McGinnis, 74, Azalea, were held Saturday at the Long and Orr Mortuary. The longtime Azalea resident died Oct. 26, following a long ill ness. Services were conducted bv Rev. Walter A. MacArthur and burial took place at Civil Bend cemetery. McGinnis Is survived bv three brothers; David, Azalea, and John and George. Washington. He is also survived by a niece, Mrs. Ada Burchnann, Azalea. Cancer Society Leader Sees Hope For Control NEW YORK UP) Some of America's leading medical au thorities how see hope in the fu ture for complete control of cancer. Dr. Alton Ochsner of New Or leans, elected president of the Aemrican Cancer society, said new discoveries Indicate that eventually even advanced cancer can be controlled. New developments In hor mones and chemotherapy the treatments of disease by chcml! cais snow grear promise, ne said. Hls hopeul opinion was backed by Dr. Cornelius P. Rhoads, direc tor of the Memorial Cancer cen ter here, who said that five years of research suggest that chemi cals may be the cancer solution. All repeated, however, that these hopes are for the future and that there Is yet no cancer "cure." Dr. Ochsner succeeds Dr. C. C. Nesselrode as president. Is Mount Hood Cooling? Survey May Be Proof PORTLAND CP) Is the once-active volcano, Mount Hood, slowly cooling off? A Reed college project is trying for the answer. The college's science bulletin today reported that Dick Morrow is analyzing gases from the fumaroles the volcanic vents high on the moun tain to determine changes since 1936. In that year a college thesis by Fred Facer said the mountain was slowly growing cold. Mor row's studies, correlated with those by Facer, are expected to give the answer. Truman Asks Americans To Observe Armistice WASHINGTON (,T Presl dent Truman today railed on all Americans to rededlcate them selves this Armistice dav "to the cause of peace throughout the world." In a proclamation he asked that the United Stales flag be displayed on all government buildings November 11 and that the public observe the occasion In rhools, churches and other gatherings. MERGER ANNOUNCED RARTLF.SVII.LE. Okla rw 31.-(.l')The Phillips Petroleum Co. announced todav the mri-aor with Its subsidiary, Wasatch Oil Co., will he completed Nov. 1. in inc making lor more than two years, the consolidation will give Phillips the present assets of Wasatch, which operates In Mon tana, Idaho, Washington and Ore gon. The announcement said all Wa satch Installations are expected to he manned by the company's present personnel. a mm i Rural Phone Facilities Expansion Bill Signed WASHINGTON l) Presi dent Truman has signed a bill authorizing a loan program to ex pand rural telephone facilities and said it will fill a long-felt need and "strengthen our pri vate enterprise system.!' The measure provides for loans on the same principle now used by the electrification administra tion which will administer the new law. Congress already has provided $25,000,000 to start the program. "The need of our farm people for adequate telephone service at reasonable rates is second only to their need for dependable, low cost electricity," Mr. Truman said in a statement. He said the importance of the new act Is apparent because to day only 40 percent of the na tion's farms have any kind of tel ephone service. DISTRICT PROPOSED EUGENE (.?) The city council has appropriated $1,000 for an engineering survey to de termine the feasibility of a metro nolllan sewage disposal district. Springfield s city council has been asked to contribute $1000 to the survey. The proposed district would encompass that city and its fringe areas. For " I ops" on Dralnboardl Sea Phil Durnom I Linoleum Laying and Venetian Blind . 920 S. Main 1336-J COMMUNITY KINDERGARTEN Registration now being held for November In the First Bap tlit Church, Sunday School bldg. Phone 1599-R-4 Tacoma Bandit Repeats Hold-Up TACOMA, Oct. 31 UP) A slim, nervous bandit, apparently the same man who obtained $705 in a hold up at Tacoma's New Yorker cafe last May 24, hit the place again last night to the tune of $546. The man, unmasked except for a piece of adhesive tape across the bridge of his nose, approach ed the cafe's cashier, brandish ing a pistol and telling her to "give me all the paper In the till." When, the cashier, Palma Mc Gowan, was apparently too slow in opening the drawer he com manded: "faster faster!" Police, called to another cafe "robbery" at the same moment In an apparent decoy move, said they believe from the description the man was the same who held up the New Yorker last spring. Julia L. Leep Of Oregon Pioneer Family Dies. Julia Louise Leep, 89, life-long resident of Oregon, died after a long Illness Oct. 28. She was born June 28; 1860, In Eola, Polk county, the eldest daughter of Franpis M., and Anna C. Stewart, who crossed the plains In 1851. She was married to James Ves ter Leep Dec. 25, 1884. He died In 1914 in Myrtle Point. She was also preceded in death by a son and a daughter. She was a mem ber of the Seventh Day Adventist church of Myrtle Point. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Georgia Bennett, Roseburg; a son, Harold T. Leep, Roseburg; three grandchildren and four great grandchildren. Funeral services will be held In The Chapel of The Roses, Roseburg Funeral home, Tuesday, Nov. 1, at 2 p. m. with Elder J. J. Robertson officiating. In terment will follow.-., in Civil Bend cemetery. Fannie McKean McCuistion Of Dixonville Passes Fannie McKean McCuistion, 89, resident of Dixonville, died Oct. 29 after a short illness. She was born April 10, 1860, In Amador county, California, and came to Oregon 72 years ago to live. She was a former resident of Hood River, coming to Roseburg a year and a half ago to make her home with her niece, Mrs. Bessie Ingram. She was a mem ber of the Baptist church. Funeral services will be held in The Chapel of The Roses, Rose burg Funeral homo, Tuesday, Nov. 1, at 10 a. m. fvith Dr. E. B. Luther officiating. Interment will follow in Oak Creek cemetery. Life Saving Youth Will Receive Boy Scout Medal EUGENE, Oct. 31. UP) Le roy D. Mann, 13, who rescued a 15-year-old pal from drowning last June, is being honored with a Boy Scout gold medal.' Only four- such medals were awarded throughout the country. Leroy, who lives in Lane county, was swimming with Gerald La Plant, 15, to a raft In a slough June 13. Gerald started to drown. Leroy pulled him to the sur face, loosened his death grip, floated him to shore on a loose plank, and revived him with ar tificial respiration. DIAPERED FOR GAG SOUTH PORTLAND, Me., Oct. 31 (.T) A grown man in diapers and nothing elsewalked calm ly along Main street early today. It was just a gag, he told po lice. The towel, neatly pinned where his pants should have been, was a Halloween costume and he was wearing It home from a party. Police speeded him home by patrol car. ' -v The Weather U. S. Weather Bureau Office Roseburg, Oregon Fair and continued warm to-' day. Tuesday, fair, except for morning fog. Highest temp, for any Oct. 96 Lowest temp, for any Oct. ..... 22 Highest temp, yesterday .. 7t j Lowest temp, last 24 hrs 44 1 Precipitation last 24 hrs. ... 0 Precipitation since Oct. 1 .... 2.35 j Precipitation since Oct. .. 4.31 Excess since Sept. 1 14 (now! The nwri to everyday Insurance problems By KEN BAILEY QUESTION: In trying to get my car a little closer to the wall of my garage, I split the door frame. I can't find any thing in my property damage Insurance policy which covers this situation. Can you tell me if the insurance company should pay for the damage? ANSWER: No, the property damage policy pays only for damage to the property of othersnever the property of the insured person. 6 if ynu'll artfMaM ymir own insur ant qut1lonn ti thia nfflrv w.'H try to aiva you h .-orrwt iinwm nri thrr will h ri tharta ar abll laMaa at anj kin'. KEN BAILEY INSURANCE AGENCY 313 Pacific Bldg. Phone 398 t'f W llpivVprices happen Every Day at MRIFTY P1R1WKYS Penney Stores are thrifty places to shop, because pay for its actual merchandise value ... you carry you get the best possible merchandise at the lowest all the value home under your arm! For Savings possible price. Penney's do not have charge EVERY day, Shop Penney's. accounts, no time payments, no deliveries. All vou Remember 47 Shopping Days Until enmrmoi SWEATER HIT Short Sleeve Slipover to Wear Under Jackets and Coats 98 WOMEN'S ALL-WOOL TWIN SWEATERS TWO-IN-ONE VALUE 5.90 New Shipment O New low Price M Here's a new shipment of the' warm, fine gauge, smart-looking sweaters that have been so popular this fall. 100 all wool material gives wonderful wear. Green gold, grey, lilac, red, brown and white in sizes 34 to 40. WOMEN'S NYLON PULLOVERS So Easy 098 To Wash L Wonderful, wearable nylon. They wash easily, dry in a wink, keep their shape. Colors are yellow, white, lilac, green, black, pink, grey and brown in sizes 34 to 40. Hurry, at this low price they'll go fast. Double wear, double value ... at a single tiny price! That's what you get in this all wool novelty stitched cardigan with matching slipover. Wear them separately or together . . . they're smart any way, anywhere. Blue, pink and grey in sizes 34 to 40. WOMEN'S ALL-WOOL BOXY CARDIGANS 3.98 THE NO. 1 FAVORITE A perfect gift for Christmas! All wool boxy cardigans priced way down low. You know how versatile they are . . . how "right" they are for school activities. Yellow, red, pink, blue and white in sizes 34 ' to 40. GIRLS' PULLOVERS 1.98 Girls' 100 all wool slip overs with short sleeves that are school-time favorites. Versatile, go every where style in flattering colors of pink, blue, green, red, aqua and brown in sizes 7 to 14. GIRLS' ALL WOOL CARDIGAN SWEATERS FOR THRIFTY BUDGET 198 Boxy cardigan sweaters just like big sister's ... a big Penney value at just' 1.98. Cozy warm, all wool in a big choice of classroom colors of red, copen, green, aqua and yellow in sizes 4 to 8. A perfect gift for Christmas and practical, too. FUSSY RAYON CREPE WOMEN'S BLOUSES MANY NEW STYLES NEW LOW PRICE 198 This favorite style fussy rayon crepe was much higher priced when offered before. At 1.98 NOW, it's SENSATIONAL! Lace trimmed Peter Pan collar, pleoted front. White, aqua, green, pink and red in - sizes 32 to 38. GIRLS' TWIN SWEATER SETS 4.98 You get double wear, double value in Penney's all wool novelty stitched cardigan with matching slipover. Smart colors. Perfect Christ mas gifts. 7-14. GIRLS' ALL-WOOL CARDIGANS 1.98 Cozy warm cardigan sweat ers .. . at big savings. Red, copen blue, kelly, light navy, maize. Get a couple for Christmas gifts. 4-8. RAYON GABARDINE WOMEN'S SKIRTS Crease resistant rayon gabardine skirts with novel hip pleating. Smartly fitted, they go so well with blouses and sweaters. Dozens and dozens of other styles to choose from, too. Black, teal, wine, brown and grey in sizes 22 to 30 , Many, many other styles S2.98 and $3.98 4.98 BOYS' ALL-WOOL LETTERMAN SWEATERS Little boys' heavy-weight all wool letter man coat sweaters just like big brothers. Two contrasting stripes on left uleeves. Give them for Christmas! The newest thing out, fh AA in small boys' sweaters! Wine, green and 4 UK blue in sizes 4 to 10. Wl V BOYS' COWBOY DESIGN SLIPOVER SWEATERS 100 all wool boys' sweaters with large . cowboy design. Slipover style with long sleeves. Two-tone colors of wine with white and navy with white in sizes 4 to 8. These gay designs would make any little fellow happy 2.98