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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 4, 1950)
? U. of 0. Library COMP Lugene, Ore. rn 1 -,; WHO DOES WHAT BEVERLY ANN and JOHNNY WEST, aged five and lix years, sit proudly on Royal Nord bikes which their, father sent them all the way from Belgium for Christmas. The two are children of Mr. and Mrs. John West of 404 East Second avenue, North. Mr. West has charge of the appliance department at Mont gomery Ward. At the time he Belgium as a member of the command. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS ON the last day of the year which, by the way, happens to be also the last day ol the week and the last day ot the month) this dispatch conies from Prague, the capital of Czechoslovakia. "In a New Year gift to the nation, the communist-led Czech government today abolished gaso line rationing for private cars, cut the free market price of meat and clothing and liberalized pro visions for shopping in rationed shops." I'M getting to be a suspicious old bird which is one of the curses of getting older. When you're young, you're apt to as sume that what CLAIMS to be pure and lovely IS pure and lovely. As the years creep up on you, you Incline more and more (Continued on Page Four) Dedication Set For Green School Dedication of the new Green school and open house will be held at the new building Friday at 8 p.m., under sponsorship of the Green Parent-Teachers as sociation. The dedication and program will follow a brief business meet ing of the P.-T.A. Enrollment at the school totals 215 pupils, with a staff of nine teachers and W. E. Stonebraker as principal. The new building, designed by architect Cleo Jenkins, Corvallis, consists of nine completed class rooms, two unfinished rooms used temporarily as an auditor ium; one lunchroom, a kitchen, an inner office and an outer of fice. E. A. Shannon, Roseburg, con tractor, built the school. THIEVES, BEWARE! LOS ANGELES, Jan. 4 UP) Thieves who took a small box resembling a cash register from the mechanical research labora tory may be picking it out of their teeth one of these days. The box Is an Instrument used for testing earth strata for under ground oil pools. It contains 27 dynamite caps, and If any at tempt is made to open it, the box will explode, laboratory of ficials said. LUMBER MARKET GOOD Douglas County Industry Emerged From '49 Slump. Regained Full Production By LEROY INMAN Lumbering business in Douglas county had its ups and downs during the last year, but the and of 1949 showed a marked trend toward stabilization. The industry snapped out of the big lumbar slump, which brought uncertainties a -year ago, and the market is reported generally good. The demand lor lumber nas kept most local operations con tinuing at full force during the winter months. However, some logging and mill operations have been forced to close temporarily because of weather conditions, and the local office of the Ore gon State Employment service reports a considerable amount of seasonal unemployment at the present time. Compared with the big indus trial developments of 1946-4748, the year 1949 had little to brag about, and Indicated, for the pres ent at least, a tapering off of in dustrial expansion. A survey shows that, while sev eral smaller operations were sus pended following last winter's Wnr. ordered the bicycles he was in American Graves Registration listrar CVA Request Again Put Up To Congress WASHINGTON, Jan. 4 UP)- President Truman asked Con gress again today to create a Co lumbia Valley administration in the Pacific northwest. In his state of the union mes sage to Congress, he listed a CVA among "important resource leg islation which should be passed at this session." "Through wise government pol icies and government expendi tures for the conservation and development of our natural re sources," he said, "we can be sure of transmitting to our chil dren and our children's children a country far richer and more productive than the one we know today." It was Mr.. Truman's second request for an agency to develop the Pacific northwest. Last year he made the proposal in a spe cial message to Congress. Bills for the purpose were Introduced and long hearings were held, but there was no legislative action. A bitter fight over the proposal is likely. Opponents contend it would give the federal govern ment absolute control over eco- (Continued on Page Two) Cordon Urges Funds To Complete McNary Dam """ WASHINGTON, Jan. 4 -MP Senator Cordon (R-Ore) said to day Congress should provide funds to complete McNary dam, across the Columbia river be tween Washington and Oregon, as soon as possible. Power from this dam and the chief Joseph dam farther up the river in Washington, he said, is badly needed. He said that next in importance in Oregon is pushing to comple tion of the, Willamette river basin flood control projects and the Hungry Horse dam in Montana. 40 YEARS FOR MURDER OGDEN, Utah, Jan. 4 UP) Richard Dix Pack, 24, Focatello, Idaho, was sentenced Tuesday by District Judge Charles G. Cow ley to serve 40 years in the state prison on a second degree mur der charge. Pack was charged with- first degree murder for the strangula tion slaying of Shirley V.; Scott, 26-year-old Seattle, Wash., wom an whose nude body was found in a closet of a Twenty-Fifth St. hotel on Aug. 19- general slump and for other rea sons during the year, a number of new enterprises have risen to take their place. Larger lumber and logging works successfully weathered the slack period and are now in full production. Principal among the new In dustries of Douglas county open ing during the year was the As sociated Plywood's sawmill. The mill reportedly employs 74 men, in addition to the 85 men pre viously employed in logging op erations. New Operations Listed A list of new lumber and log ging operations and the approxi- ( Continued on Page Two) The Weather Cloudy to partly cloudy with showers of rain or snow today, clearing tonight, Increasing cloudiness Thursday. . Sunset today 4:51 p. m. Sunrise tomorrow 7:46 a. m. Established 1873 2 OSC Stan McGuire, Bill Corvallis Die In Tragedy Toboggan Carrying Pair Breaks Lose From Auto, Swerves Into Another CORVALLIS, Ore., Jan. 4 UP) Two tobogganing Oregon State college students both prominent athletes were fatally hurt when hit by a car on the campus last night. Stan McGuire, Portland, foot ball end named AP lineman of the week for his stellar play against Michigan State last fall, died at 7:11 a.m. today. Bill Corvallis, 21, also Port land, a pitcher for the Santa Bar bara, Calif., farm club ot the Brooklyn Dodgers last season, died minutes after the toboggan in which they were riding swung from its tow car into the path of Kanother automobile. He was a Junior in the businessitechnology school. McGuire was to have captain ed Oregon State's football team next fall. He died without regain ing consciousness after the 11:30 p.m. accident. Accident "Unavoidable" City Policeman W. P. Harris reported the toboggan was being towed behind a car driven by Bill Austin, former OSC football player back at the college to complete his studies. Harris said (Continued on Page Two) Will Of Actor Bill Hart Center Of Court Battle - LOS ANGELES. Jan. 4. UP) Many western film Ktars of past and present are scheduled to ap pear at the trial to break the will of 'Two-Gun" Bill Hart, whose estate is worth $1,170,000. Selection o'f a jury began yes terday for trial of the suit, brought by the late actor's son. William S. Hart Jr., and the ac tor's divorced wife, the former actress Winifred Westover. Hart once vowed that his only son never would "want fur any thing even If I should have to beg, borrow or steal." The actor, who died June 23. 1946, at the age of 83, cut him off in his will Dut made him the beneficiary of a $100,000 trust fund before his birth. Young Hart and his mother charge that Hart was failing in mind and was unduh- Influenced before his death. The contested will left most of the estate to Los Angeles county. The county was bequeathed Hart's famed Horse shoe ranch and at least $150,000 for its upkeep as a memorial park. The son's attorneys said that discovery of oil nearby may greatly add to the property's value. The will, dated Sept. 9. 1944. stated that Miss Westover, who divorced Hart in 1927, was pro vided for in a settlement and has no claim. Miss Westover asks that the settlement be set aside and that she be awarded a share of the estate. Egyptian King Suffers Rebuke In Election By The Associated Press The WAFD party, mildly re formist, won an overwhelming victory over other conservative parties In yesterday's Egyptian elections. The lopsided vote running as high as 10 to one for the WAFD ists was considered a .rebuke to the SAADist party and indirectly to King Farouk for the poor show ing made by tgypt in the Pales tine war. Tm SAADists were the major party in the last parliament which was controlled by a coali tion government. King Farouk has been opposed to the WAFD ists. He dismissed them from of fice in 1944 and has often ruled with . a strong hand through SAADist and coalition govern ments. Soccer Parlay Winner Will Adopt Children BIRMINGHAM, Eng., Jan. 4 (IP) Albert Ernest Moxon, 50-year-old coal deliveryman, won 30,351 pounds ($84,782) Tuesday on a soccer parlay. ' - What will he do with the mon ey? "We're going to adopt some children and give them the ben efits we never had," he said. Moxon and his wife, Clara, 49, have two children of their own, a daughter, 28, and a son, 15. TO QUIT STATE POST SALEM, Jan. 4 (JP Mrs. W. F. Loaiza, superintendent of the state Hillcrest school for girls for five years, will quit on June 15. She told the State Board of Con trol she Is resigning because she is going to be married to State Police Lt Erick Tucker, Port, land, next May, ROSEBURG, OREGON WEDNESDAY, JAN. 4, 1950 Athletes Street Lighting, Sewer Line For West Roseburg Planned At Session Of City Council Sewer Survey, Cost Estimates To Be Followed By Public Hearing; Action On East Roseburg Election Deferred Preliminary surveys for the installation of a sewar system ware authorized for West Roseburg, and a proposal for street lighting, as mapped by the West Roseburg Improvement associ ation, was given tentative approval by the city council last night. , The council instructed City Manager M. W. Slankard to work with City Engineer Arthur Boyar in making the surveys and approved $1,000 for the work. Slankard was also instructed to confer with California-Oregon Power company officials rel ative to establishing street lights for Wast Roseburg. Admiral Bogan, Demoted, Applies For Retirement SAN DIEGO. Calif.. Jan. 4. UP) The commander of the U. S. first task fleet, who authored a letter Involved in the armed ser vices unification row, has applied for retirement rather than accept demotion to a rear admiral's post at Jacksonville, Fla. V ce Admiral Gerald r . Bogan said he had learned through the press that orders were being is sued transferring him to the fleet air command at Jacksonville. The veteran aviator announcea in a one-sentence letter released by the 11th naval district yester day that he was asking to be plac ed on the retired list, as soon as he is relieved from his present command. Bogan asserted In a letter re leased to newsmen In Washington last October by Capt. Charles G. Crommeliry that policies, follow ed by the defense department un der the unification act had failed to achieve top-level unification, had wrecked navy morale and threatened national security. The letter indirectly started the airing of the unification dispute before a congressional committee. Bogan told newsmen aner re lease of his retirement request that he planned to "look for a job" and that he expected to use carry on tne ngm as long as there s a ligni to carry. Bogan, who is 55, commanded the aircraft carrier Saratoga in 1942 and 1943 and later a carrier division In Pacific campaigns. . Former State Senator O. B. Robertson Passes PORTLAND, Jan. 4 UP) Former State Senator O. B. Rob ertson, 70, retired banker and wool merchant widely known in North Central Oregon, died here yesterday after a long illness. He had been living in recent years at Agate beach. A native of Turner, he first en tered business at Fossil after at tending the University of Ore gon. Later he moved to Portland and then was in banking at Con don and Mitchell. In 1920 he op erated a large Gilliam county sheep ranch and managed the Columbia Basin wool warehouse in that country. He was a stale senator from Gilliam, Sherman and Wheeler counties during the 1921-23 regu lar and special sessions. His widow, Helen, of Agate beach, and a daughter, Mrs. Ber nadine R. Richards, Yamhill, andi a son, Jack L San Fran cisco, survive. Man Slain By Wife He Branded As "Too Dumb" PITTSBURGH, Jan. 4 UP) A plump former WAC told police she shot and killed her husband of six months after he told her "Women are too dumb to use a gun." Police said they found John Howrylchak, 35 -year -old steel worker, dying on the kitchen floor of his father-in-law's bun galow yesterday after Mrs. Dor othy Zlegler Howrylchak, 29, tel ephoned them "I just shot my husband." Howrylchak died as he was be ing carried from the house. In a statement made to detec tives. Mrs. Howrylchak said the shooting climaxed six months of domestic strife resulting from her husband's Jealousy. Union Official Shot As He Sits In His Home PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 4 UP) A laundry union official was wounded last night by an assail ant who shot through a living room window and then disap peared. The victim, Charlps Naddeo, 46-year-old vice president of the AFL-Laundry Workers union of Philadelphia, was struck on the left wrist as he sat watching a televised movie with three sons. Naddeo said he could give no reason for the attack. v Killed Slankard explained that the sewer survey would be more cost ly tnan usual, since street eleva tions must first be established before the sewer lines can be determined. ' If at all feasible the sewage flow will be directed toward the city's present central oumnlna station and disposal plant. The survey win determine whether or not this will be possible. For Two Localities The city manager said that the plant is large enough to handle the estimated 100,000 gallons of sewage daily from the West Roseburg area. However, he was recommended that improvements be made to the plant which would assure the use of the facilities for both West Roseburg's future development and the added need if East Roseburg votes to come into tne city. The additions oroDosed would Include a sludge digestion tank, larger sludge drying beds and added rock to the filter. This work, he said, should be done anyway to care for the city's ex- "(Continued on Page 'Two) Red Fleet Gathers To Strike Formosa TAIPEH, Formosa; Jan. 4 UP) Chinese navy reports today said parts of the Russian Asiatic fleet, Including more than 20 sub-, marines, had moved Into ioe free Dairen, red held North China port. Nationalist leaders here sus pect that any attempt by Chi nese Communists to invade For mosa would come from Dairen and Tslnglao, another Communist rvortn i;nina port, instead of from the mainland 100 miles to the west of Formosa. Intelligence reports of the Na tionalists say the Chinese reds have bought 20 British tank land ing ships and numerous motor boat engines in Hong Kong. Reports say the Chinese Com munists in the north have been concentrating ships for the even tual assault on Formosa expect ed soon. Russian assistance in the formation of the Communist amphibious operation is suspect ed by the Nationalists. Russian General Stages 2nd Walk From Council By The Associated Press ' Russia's Lt. Gen. Derevyanko has again walked out of the Al lied council for Japan to avoid hearing charges that 376,000 Jap anese war prisoners are still in Russian hands or dead. The charge was made by the council's American chairman William J. Sebald. Derevyanko walked out fouV days before Christmas when a similar charge was laid. Russia claims only 10. 000 Japanese, classified as "war criminals," are still In Russian hands. Murder Indictment Faced By Doctor For "Mercy Killing11 MANCHESTER, N. H., Jan. 4. UP) A popular young country doctor was under Indictment today on a first degree murder charge In the mercy killing of an Incurable cancer patient. The county grand Jury returned the indictment yesterday against Dr. Hermann N. Sander, 40, father of three children, in the death ot Mrs. Abble Borroto, 59, wife of a Manchester oil salesman. Among five witnesses appear ing before the jury were a nurse who, authorities said, unwittingly assisted the physician in inject ing air Into his patient's system. The state charges the air, in jected into the veins, hastened the end of the cancer-ridden pa t'ent as she lay near deith Dec. 4 at county hospital In Goffstown. Reginald Borroto, husband of the dead woman, said he and his daughter were "terribly sad dened" upon hearing of the in dictment. Earlier, he had de scribed Dr. Sander as "a great physician." Reached by 'phone at his Man chester home, Borroto said: "I think Dr. Sander Is the big gest man I ever knew. That ex- ( Continued on Page Two) - 2-50 In Crash Most Of State Clad In Light Snow Blanket Some Areas Get Heavy Snowfall; Local Traffic Slowed By Wintry Cover Most Oregon residents awoke this morning to find their homes clad with a blanket of snow, but the .29 inch of precipitation meas ured in Koseourg by weather bu reau personnel placed the city far down the list for snow depth, i Although iraff lo, construction and other outslda aotlvlty was slowed down this morning, rising temperatures and a possi bility of olearlng skies Is ex pected later in the day. The low reading during early hours Wednesday was 32 degrees, a rise of 14 degrees over the sea son's low of 18 recorded Monday night. Last night's snowfall was the heaviest since 6.6 inches fell Feb. 6 and 7 of last year. Pendleton Gets 13 inches ' 1 Elsewhere in the state, Pendle ton reported 13 Inches of soft, dry snow fell during the night to ap- firoach the, city record of 15 nches set in 1935. Snow blocked all roads at Helix, 20 miles north east of Pendleton, with citizens reporting the only transportation is by foot, reports the Associated Press. . , Except for soma coastal points, the rest of the stata re ported snowfalls ranging from one to seven inohas. Most Willamette valley cities border ing highway 99 were not affect- (Continued on Page Two) Larceny Charges Jail Man Here Leo Eugene Craft, 22, of Arvin, Calif., was arraigned in justice court here Tuesday on charges of larceny from a store and lar ceny of an automobile, reported justice oi . peace A. j. ueddes. Craft is being held in the county jail under $1,500 bail on both counts. Craft Ir charged In a complaint signed by Chief of Police Calvin Baird with larceny from Caskey's Union garage here. The second complaint, charging larceny of an automobile, was signed bv Lockwood Motors. He was returned to Roseburg by Deputy W. A. Worrall, from Sacramento, Calif., where he was arrested. Upon arraignment he waived preliminary hearing. Worrall also returned Lloyd James Veach, 22, of Roseburg from Los Angeles. Veach. charged with non-support, Is being held under vzw nan, following his ar raignment in Justice court, re ported Geddes. He also waived preliminary hearing. Diamond Lake Region Registers 16 Below So you think it was eold Roieburgl Merlin Plots, carataktr In at the Diamond lake resort, radio' ed forest service personnel Tuesday that her thermometer had registered 16 degrees be low zero. M. M. "Red" Nelson, Umpqua National forest super visor, said this la the lowest temperature In Douglas ooun. ty for those areas to report. From latest reports, tht Dia mond laka area Is blanketed with 34 Inches of snow well preserved by the frigid ther mometer readings. Diamond lake Is about 90 miles east of Roseburg and sit uated on the Cascade summit 5,180 feet up. DR. HERMANN SANDER ( 7 ! i m , r Ending Of Excise Levies, Offset Sought In Message To Congress That Repeats Former Demands By ERNEST B. VACCARO ....WASHINGTON, Jan. 4. (API President Truman advocated a "moderate amount" of new taxes today in a glowingly op timistic state of the union message voicing hope of an eventual trillion-dollar economy. If America keeps growing as it has in the last 50 years, he told Congress, the total national production 50 years hence will be nearly four times what it is now, or at the rate of more than one thousand billions of dollars a year. In a mixture of humility and pride, Mr. Truman said: "Today, by the grace of God, we stand a free and pros parous nation with greater possibilities for the future than any people have ever had before." OREGON TO OHIO Ellsworth Takes Yule Tree East In Half Sections Grandchildren of U.S. Repre sentative Harris Ellsworth foui.d their Christmas gifts piled under a real Douglas county Christmas tree this year even though their home in Cleveland, unio, is lar removed from the land of the Douglas fir. ingenuity wnicn many ioiks think is quite foreign to the na ture of most congressmen was responsible for this county's con tribution to the family's recent holiday enjoyment. Desirous of carrying his Christmas tree along with him but forced to con serve space, the Roseburg con gressman came up with w.hat may have been the first section al, or divided, yuletide tree. Cutting the tree in half, Ells worth placed each part inside a heavy cardboard lube, taken from a roll of linoleum. Upon his arrival In Cleveland, he put the tree back together again, using common tin cans as a sleeve. Presto! Occupying the place of honor in one Cleveland residence was the Douglas fir 2,657 miles from home. U. S.Debt Boosted Past $257 Billion WASHINGTON. Jan. 4 The government's debt bounded above $257,000,000,000 on the final dur of 1949, as the current deCicjt mbunted to $3,299,798,921.52 at the mid-way point of the fiscal year ending June 3u. The treasury, reporting this to day, showed a $615,712,000 buret of spending for 1949's final oper ating day, December 30. Big Items that day included $335,000,000 spent by the Veter ans Administration, $90,750,000 by the Air Force, $74,162,000 by the Agriculture department, $43,948, 000 by the Navy and a $109,536, 000 payment of interests on the debt. In overspending Its Income by nearly $3,300,000,000 in the first half of fiscal 1950, the govern ment moved well on the way to ward the $5,500,000,000 deficit President Truman has estimated for the 12-month period. A further deficit of more than $4,000,000,000 Is expected to shape up in the President's budget mes sage next Monday lor fiscal 1951, figuring revenue prospects at current tax rates. Family Has Close Call In Automobile Upset Carl Mendezona and his daugh ter, Ramona, 11 years, narrowly escaped serious injury, when their car skidded on Icy pave ment at the Junction of the Brozlo and Garden Valley roads, nine miles from Roseburg, about 10 a.m. Monday. According to a report from Mrs. Mendezona, the car, in at tempting to swerve onto the Gar den Valley road, skidded over the embankment, turned over and came to a stop Just before plunging Into the swollen Ump qua river. Part of the car was in the water. Mr. Mendezona managed to get the car door open on the top side and climbed out of the car with the girl, who was knocked uncon scious. Her condition, however, was reported as not serious. She also sustained leg bruises. Mr. Mendezona sustained mi nor chest injuries. Bandit And Victim Each Eight Years Of Age KLAMATH FALLS, Jan. 4. UP) What must be the youngest ronbery In age ol the Dandlt and victim on record in Klamath Falls was revealed by city police who said an 8-year-old boy was picked up yesterday afternoon for taking $2 from another 8-year-old. One youngster reportedly ob served the other get two one dollar bills in change at a local drug store after buying some medicine, then followed him to a side street where he demanded a sdIU In the money. The first boy refused. Where upon the second drew a pocket knife and took the $2. He was picked up a few mln utes later In another drug store with $1.35 left and was taken to the Juvenile home. JAILERS' FRIENDS CALCUTTA, India. Jan. 4 UP) Nearly 500 Communist prison' ers are on a hunger strike In various prisons here, officials an nounced today. Their demands: that the pris oners have a say In the appoint ment of their Jailers, and that tne jailers get a pay raise. The president's message was one in which he (1) looked far into the luture when, he said. the average family may make the equivalent of mora than $12,000 a year and (2) dwelled on what he called the present day nneds for such things as continued rent controls and repeal of the Taft Hartby labor law. The president gave no inkling of how . much new revenue he wants now or where he would turn to get it. Nor did he disclose what existing taxes he would drop or lower to, as he put It, "reduce present inequities" and "stimulate business activity." He simply said there should be "some changes" in the tax sys tem to produce these results. His tax proposals will come later, In a special message. He is expected to yield to demands for an end to the bulk of the war time excise levies on such things as transportation fares and tele phone bills, provided the loss is more than offset by taxes from (Continued on Page Two) Coal Burning Rail Lines Ordered To Reduce Service WASHINGTON. Jan. 4. UPS The interstate commerce com mission today ordered a general . one-third cut in railroad passen ger service on lines using coal as iuei. ine reduction is enective at 11:59 p. m. local time Sunday, January 8. ine order applies to all rail lines having 25 or less days sup ply of fuel coal for their passen ger services ana noi , naving available a dependable source of supply." - . . "" ." " The ICC said the actiort was made necessary by the dwindling supplies of coal due to the recent disturbances and curtailments in tne coal mining Industry. ; It was the second time in re. cent months that the ICC has taken such action as a result of the virually deadlocked coal dis pute between John L .Lewis' United Mine workers and mine The commlssoin said all rail The commissions aid all rail roads having less than the stipu lated amount of fuel reserve must reduce coal-burning passen ger service to 33s per cent less than the same services provided as of Dec. 1, 1949. The order was drawn tn remain In effect for two months. It will automatlfally expire at midnight March 8 unless the ICC itself lakes further action. Michoel Mclntyre First New Year's Baby Hero A little boy, Michael Lee Mc lntyre, edged out Gale Kay Bllow by six hours for the title of the first New Year's baby in Rose burg. Michael greeted the world at 7:08 a.m. and Gayle cried a nappy new lear at Mercy nos pital at 2:50 p.m. Dr. A. B. Munroe, who deliver ed both babies, had a busy first day for 1950. Michael, who weighed nine pounds two ounces. Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Vern Mclntyre, 1530 1-2 Cedar street. Gayle topped the scales at seven pounds eight ounces. Her parents are Mr. and Mrs. Darrell James Bilow of Roseburg. Micnaei win nave a playmate, too, because George Ralph Bol ton, who lives at 1719 Cedar street was born, January 2 to Mr. and Mrs. Edward George Bolton. He weighed five pounds 13 ounces. Alaska's Ex-Treasurer Sentenced To Prison JUNEAU. Alaska. Jan. 4 VP) Former Territorial Treasurer uscar Olson drew a prison sen tence and a $46,475 fine in feder. al court Tuesday for embezzle ment of territorial funds. Judge George Folta sentenced the white-haired former treasur er to 10 years on each of two counts, to run concurrently. Olson, who took office in 1935, resigned last Mav after an in- vestigatlon of his records. He was charged with embezzlinsf $23,000. A legislative Interim commit tee released an auditor's report in August citing $31,000 ot un authorized disbursements in the period 1944-49. Levity fact J ant By L. F. Reizensteta If "Misery lave company," at the saying gee, Chiang Kai shek must be entertaining deep affection for those ether hard losers, tht coaches of defeated football teams In the bowl ckmles.