I U. of 0, Library COMP Eugene, Ore. W cm WHO DOES WHAT i B". -- ' - ALBERT KOSEL is manager of Craig's, having just recently been transferred to this position from a similar one he held with the company in Klamath Falls. He and Mrs. Kosel managed the store here for several months last spring during a change of managership period, hence already are somewhat familiar with Roseburg. Mrs. Kosel also is Craig-trained, having been with the Klamath Falls store for six years. The two, with their ion Artie, nine, are earnestly seeking a home, with indifferent success. Homes at least the kind one happens to be looking for at the moment still are difficult to find. Uncle Sam Loses On Deal To Dispose Of Surplus Potatoes American Food Brokers Find It Cheaper To Buy Canadian Spuds NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 8. (API . While the government offers surplus potatoes to farmers at one cent a hundred pounds, American food brokers are buying Canadian spuds because they find the American price-supported tubers too costly. Th situation came to liqht here yesterday when a million pounds of potatoes from Canada ' 1 Mormons Missing In Czech Province PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia, Feb. 8 UP) The U.S. Embassy an nounced today itjiad received re ports that two American Mormon missionaries "disappeared" in the province of Moravia Jan. 28 and have not been heard from since. The embassy said it had asked the Czechoslovakian foreign minis try to supply information "con cerning the welfare and where abouts" of missionaries Stanley E. Abbott and C. Aldon Johnson. While the embassy announce ment made no mention of arrests, reliable western diplomatic sources said the two men had been arrest ed by Czech police near Olomouc on unspecified charges. These sources said the mission aries had been incommunicado and that all efforts of American au thorities to see them have failed. Wallace Toronto, head of the Mormon church in Czechoslovakia, ,,Md Abbot, 23, came from Lehigh, Jtah, and that Johnson, 22, was a resident of Idaho Falls, Idaho. Both were unmarried and had been in Czechoslovakia a little over two years. The Mormon church has been meeting with difficulties from the Czech government since last May Since then 13 of its missionaries have been ordered expelled from the country on charges of "en dangering the safety, and security of the state." Western Lumber Industry's Protection Asked In Congress Ruination Faced From Canadian Competition, Legislator Asserts WASHINGTON, Feb. 8. (API Rep. Mack (-Wash) asked tha House ways and means committee today to develop some policy to protect the western lumber industry and its employees against runination from Canadian competition." Mack made public a letter to Chairman Doughton (D-NC) sug gesting this might be accomplish ed by restoring a tariff rate that "would compensate for the differ ence of wages in British Colum bia and in the United States or by imposing a quota limit on the amount of lumber Canada is per mitted to ship into the United States." Mack told Doughton that dur in 1948 Canada shipped a total of 96,071,920 feet of lumber to the Atlantic coast states but that this jumped to 303.525,459 feet in 1949 He said the shipments are steadily increasing. "If this flooding of the Ameri can Atlantic coast market by Can WJ r - were unloaded from a boat, T Gaaapj TJauf Drleanx fnnH broker and consignee of the Cana dian potatoes, told newsmen: "I don't know why I can buy choice potatoes from Canada and have them shipped down here cheaper than I can buy them from Maine or Idaho but I know I can do it. "I'm not alone in importing the less expensive Canadian potatoes Why a boatload comes into Savan nah, Ga., Tampa, Fla., Jackson ville, Fla., and other places about every two weeks." He said the situation is some thing like this: ! The government guarantees American farmers a certain price for potatoes. When they can't get that much on the open market, they sell them to the government. Then the government, stuck with the surplus, offers them back to (Continued on page Two) Girl Held In Mystery Slaying Of Oil Man WASHINGTON, Feb. 8. UP) An 18-year-old attractive blonde was held here by park police today in connection with the mystery slay irig of W. A. (Tex) Thornton, 58, in an Amarillo, Texas, tourist court last June 22. Detective William Gunter told a reporter the woman was booked by federal park police at the re quest of Amarillo authorities in the death of Thornton, a well-to-do oil man. Gunter said she gave the name of Diana Heney Johnson. He said she had lived in a number of cities over the country but had been mostly in Detroit. adian lumber continues to in crease," Mack said, "and there is every indication that it will in crease, serious damage will be done to both the prosperity and to the employment of those who work in the woods and mills." He said the lumber shipped from British Columbia to the Atlantic coast states last year was valued at approximately $4,000,000. Of this, he continued, about $7, 000,000 was a direct labor charge, representing a loss of that amount to American workers. He also assserted that the ship ments were made in foreign tramp (Continued on page Two) The Weather v . Cloudy today, tonight and tomorrow with shower. Little ttmporaturo change. . Sunset today 5:35 p. m. Sunrise tomorrow 7:1 a. m. Established 1873 Milk Dispute Negotiations Mark Time Temporary Price Boost Offer From Dairies To Producers Under Study Negotiations in Roseburg's milk dispute reached the waiting stage today, as producers mulled over an offer for a temporary price in crease which would not affect the public. Ormond Feldkamp, co-owner of Umpqua dairy and one of the spokesmen for distributors, said today his group had offered to pay farmers $5.96 per hundredweight for four percent milk. The offer, if accepted, would be retroactive to Feb. 1 and would run for 60 days to care for what is termed the "high cost period" for producing milk. Although the producers' group does not consider this offer an actual increase, it is $.23 per Cwt more than farmers are now receiv ing. The farmers, however, are still seeking $6 per CwL, a partial return to the $6.12 they received before a state milk marketing or der 'established the minimum at $5.50. Feldkamp said today no definite agreement had been reached with (Continued on page Two) Capital Credits Plan Adopted By Electric Co-Op Bylaws of the Douglas Electric Cooperative, Inc., were amended at the tenth annual meeting Mon day to permit adoption of the capi tal credits plan, according to Har old Backen Jr., manager. the new plan, similar to those adopted by other cooperatives, pro vides a patronage dividend to the co-op's consumers, with all money in excess of actual operating ex penses prorated back to the con sumers Approximately 200 persons at tended the meeting at the Knights of Pythias hall and discussed and approved the financial and operat ing reports of the co-op. Principal speakers at the meet ing were Fred Hartt of the man agement division of Rea, who spoke on the capital credits sys tem; Gus Norwood, secretary ot the Northwest Public Power asso ciation, who spoke on the extent of the recent storm damage in the Northwest; and William E. Trom- mershausen, district manager at Eugene for the Bonneville Power administration, who explained the Bonneville program. Concluding the meeting was the movie, "The Columbia," which de picted the development of the Co lumbia river from the time the Coulee and Bonneville dams were begun. H-Bomb Leading U. S. On Nazis' Path, Soviet Says LONDON, Feb. 8. UP) Moscow radio, commenting on President Truman's decision to maks the hydrogen super bomb, said today the United States is following "the path pursued by the vanquished Nazis." At the same time, however, the broadcast in English heard here spoke of the possibility of peace ful competition" between the So viet and capitalist systems and held out an implied invitation to the United States to step up trade with Russia. The broadcast said there was "widespread . opposition in the United States" to the H-bomb project. It accused the Truman adminis tration of pushing the country into an "unbridled arms drive but said the "forces of peace now have every possibility to subdue the forces of war." Accusing the U. S. "ruling cir cles" of creating an anti-Soviet trade boycott, the broadcast said Russia can build up her economy in spite of it. Horse Remedy Mistaken For Coffee Kills Woman D ANBURY, N. H., Feb. 8-WP) A spoonful of powdered horse med icine she mistakenly brewed for coffee killed Mrs. tva Huntoon. 64. within 15 minutes last night. State police said the woman ap parently took tbe wrong can from a kitchen shelf, getting, instead of coffee, the poisonous powder. About five minutes after drink ing the fluid she went to the barn and told a son, Willard, she did not feel well. She died shortly. Deaths Follow 75th Wedding Anniversary PORTLAND, Feb. 8 (. Mr. and Mrs. John Conrad Bill man were married 75 years last Nov. 15. On Sunday Billman. 98, died. Monday night Mrs. Billman, 94, died. Six of their eight children three living in Oregon survive. They in clude Mrs. L. C. Foster and Mrs. C. M. Young of Portland and Mrs. Charles Wing of Medford. ROSEBURG, $10 GIVEN GOVT. No Tax Due But Giver Would Aid A-Bomb Project CHICAGO, Feb. t-UPtThe gov ernment received $10 it wasn't ex pecting today. John T. Jarecki, deputy collector of internal revenue, said the fol lowing letter came with the mon ey: "I have gone over the enclosed 1040 (income tax form) very care fully. No tax due this year. "Nevertheless, I think I should kick in something under the cir cumstances. In aU truthfulness, I am not a dime ahead after all the bills are paid, nor have I been ahead all year. "But we are eating better than before and no landlord can put us out of here. So here's ten bucks, and let's build a bigger and better A-bomb than the one Joe Stalin's cooking up for us." Jarecki deposited the money to the treasury's general fund credit. He declined to disclose the name of the sender. Search Launched For Attacker Of Gardiner Woman pital suffering from shock and i-uui, iviiuwiug an auacK oy an un known assailant early today, ac- pnrHtncr in a raiuirt fmm tk nrri of Sheriff O. T. "Bud" Carter. ine report received by the sher iff's office i that Vrc ?..k tered her store about 6:15 a m to day, when she saw a man crouched near the stove in the rear of the store. The man jumped up and attacked her with a knife, cutting her cloth ing and causing minor lacerations to her body. He then, according to the report, fired at her with a gun. The bullet missed, but gun powder burned Mrs. Greb's face. The assailant then fled out the front door, taking with him a seven mi luttuaur ruie ana a .zz-caUDre WnnHvmnn niotnl T, I. ... I. whether other items were taken. accuraing 10 ine information tb tained here. "" A ear Us- lia.nl1 k. 1 1. - 1 mistress across the street leaving . n 1 1 laLR. aiHie, county and local officers have thrown up road blocks and are milling a cnecK ot ine area. . u.u .uu.ni ucaiiuni UIC man as about 55 years of age, and having a rather flabby face and slightly slanted eyes. Damage Suit Against Bandon Is Dismissed RANrinW Fah fl tt-. A iAuin .., . , u tLn fiu,wni damage suit, brought against the ciiy auer a jau prisoner burned to death in 1947, is being dismissed, the countil has been advised. The suit was filed in behalf of the daughter of Harold Bennett Clark, who burned to death April 5. 1947. whita a nriennot. TUn plaint alleged negligence on the viiy a pari. At the time of the death, a cor oner's jury found Clark had set the fire. DRUNKEN DRIVER RAPPED Euepnfl riphc Smith r pnca burg, was fined $100 and sentenced to 30 days in the city jail, upon his nlea of imittv tn a ifmnV Hri. ing charge in municipal court to- uajr, reporiea juage ira a. Kiaaie. Smith's jail sentence will be sus- npnHari nnnn niumiuil nf r... His driver's license was revoked ior one year, according to the judge. iwaSjf MICKEY COHEN'S HOME BOMBED Mickey Cohen, Southern California ganf leader, is framed by the damage to his Los Angeles home, at he wistfully surveys damage to his houit and clothes after a bomb exploded, causing damage estimated at $50,000. Cohen told police he was at puziled as they are in wondering who planted tha bomb. Mickey, his wife and their maid escaped injury. INtA OREGON WEDNESDAY, FEB. High Postal Official Quits By Request H. F. Ambrose Resigns Following Collapse Of Stamp Selling Scheme . WASHINGTON, Feb. 8.-WPV-A high postoffice official has quit by request in connection with dealings in special stamp issues which reportedly cost "investors" hundreds of thousands of dollars. Postmaster General Donaldson confirmed last night that Harold F. Ambrose, his special assistant 'n charge of public relations, had been asked to resign and had done so Jan. 11. Donaldson would not discuss the case in detail, saying that it was "still under investigation by the postoffice inspectors.", He did say he had requested the resignation after getting reports that Ambrose had offered to act as agents for buyers of large blocks of commemorative stamp issues. Ambrose, married to a liece of Senator O'Mahoney (D-Wyo), was said to have entered the Postoffice department's information section in 1933, when the senator was first assistant postmaster. The special assistant's job Ambrose held until recently pays $10,000 a year. Mrs. O'Mahoney told newsmen last night that Ambrose had gone to the .senator and reported being "in a jam." O'Mahoney's advice, she said, was to tell the full storv to Donaldson, then quit. ., scneme blows Up There had been reports that a postal official had promised a 50 percent profit in 90 days to inves tors in eastern cities who went in (Continued on page Two) Bank Bandits Get $120,000 Booty PHOF.NTY iri. ITak ax Two men, at least one of them armea, . eariy toaay ronned the Bank of Douglas in downtown Phoenix of $120,000 tash.: ,. City police said the men caught the lanilnr nnlciHa tha k.nt ih.i.f 6 a.m., forced him to let them into the building and waited until Jim Wise, a bank employee, ar rived about 7:40 a.m. WISH WAS tnrPtkA tn nnan fha ..f. The robbers then locked the em ployes in a room and left. Bank officials estimated the men escaped with $120,000 in bills of various denominations. t Police had only vague descrip tions of the men. One was a white man. 32-35. vpars nlrl ahnut icn pounds and between five feet eight aim nve ieet ten incnes tall. He wore light tan trousers .and a dark brown iarkel and rnrriarl a 94 caliber automatic. The orher man was a Mexican, 25-30 years old and about the ssme size. He wore work clothes. Both men wore gloves. Police said it was not known how the men left the scene but were believed to have had a car., Ban On Tipping Asked In Mississippi Legislature JACKSON, Miss., Feb. 8 IIP) Two members of the Mississippi Legislature say tioping is a nui sance. They've introduced a bill to stop it. Rep. Lowell Grisham and B. T. Weeks asked the house to approve a $100 fine on firms allowing tip ping. They suggest $50 fines on those accepting or handing out tips. lelephotol. 8, 1950 MERCY SLAYER FREED Applause Greets Verdict For Girl Who Killed Her Cancer-Stricken Father BRIDGEPORT, Conn., Feb. . (AP) Carol Ann Paight, ac quitted in the mercy slaying of her cancer-doomed father, plan ned to return to collage at toon at the rettt up from the ordeal of her trial. The 2 1 -year-old blonde, who pleaded temporary . insanity, wat freed last night by a jury of 12 parentt. one spent ner urn mum ai nome in nearby Stamford since she shot her father, Police Sergeant Carl Paight, last Sept. 23 as he slept la Stamford hospital. "Oh God," the attractive six-foot girl sobbed as she broke down at the verdict. She was near com plete collapse. Her attarney, David Golstein, termed the verdict "just and fair," but added: "This is no precedent for a mercy killing, in my opinion." He said the case was tried solely on the issue of whether Carol was insane at the time of the shooting. State's Attorney Lorin W. Willis had no comment. The jury deliberated four houra and 51 minutea before Foreman (Continued on page Two) Narcotics Worth $2,400,000 Taken With Two Arrests NEW YORK. Feb. 8 ' UP) A cache of narcotics worth $2, 400,000 was seized last night part of it in a telephone booth in the hotel McAlapine, where it alleged-, ly had been left for a customer by peddlers. The seizure and two arrests were reevaled today by police and feder al agents. The prisoners were linked with a dope ring that has been trailed since last November, police said. They were booked as Isidore Halitzer, 31, and Philip Shear, 31, both Of Brooklyn. ' ' Tha two men were arrested after parking their automobile off Her laid square 33rd street and Broad waynear the hotel. After the arrests, police said, 33 1-3 ounces of pure heroin were found in the car, 13 ounces in a i U - ,Aal ntinna luwtth fjainagc in uic iivvci ,,uic uvv.., one ounce on Smear's person, and 66 2-3 ounces in a Brooklyn apart ment. Police said Halitzer telephoned a customer and told him a pack age would be left for him in the telephone booth. It was Maimer's practice, police added, to wait nearby until he aaw a customer pick up a package. Police, who found l.vuu pairs oi nylon stockings in the rear seat of the car, said the two prisoners used hosiery in cartons as a cover up for delivers of narcotics. Narcotics agents estimated the 114 ounces of pure heroin could have been diluted and made into nearly 1,000,000 capsules to sell at price. Halitzer and Shear were report ed by police, to be assoicates of Alfred San Antonio and Paul Graci, who were arrested at La Guardia Field Jan. 31 as they al legedly prepared to fly to Nash ville, Tenn., with narcotics valued at $300,000. Henry Balitzer, a brother of the nrisoner. is serving ten years in Sing Sing prison on a narcotics conviction, police said. Another Cargo Of Toys Leaves For Europe PHILADELPHIA, Feb.D UP) Another "tide of toys" from Amer ica's children moves to the chil dren of Europe today aboard the S. S. Robert Maersk. Today's cargo the second in as many days is bound for England, France, Italy, Greece and Norway. The first shipment of approxi mately 1,000,000 toys headed for the contient yesterday aboard the U. S. lines flagship American De fender. More than 500 Philadelphia school children were among those present to bid bon voyage to the gifts for Europe's children. George N. Craig, national com mander of the American legion which is sponsoring the 'tide of toys' campaign, said the gifts are being sent with "the assurance of a child's toy and a child's word that the spirit of peace and fellow ship, introduced by another Child 2,000 years ago still lives." The toys will be distributed to needy children in the Netherlands, Austria, Berlin and the three Wes tern zones of Germany. Dog Burned Alive In "Terrible Mistake" GRIFFIN, Ga., Feb. t -UP) Joe Williams, head of the sani tary department, promised today no more dogs will be burned alive at the city dump. Williams said it was true that one was burned alive as charged in a letter to the Grilfin News. He called it a "terrible mistake." The dog, he explained, had been shot as a stray and wat believed dead. While it was being incinerat ed, however, it began to whimper and moan. Herealter, he announded, dogs will be buried instead ot burned after being shot. 32-50 CAROL ANN PAIGHT Freed; Back Te College Mother Ends Her Life Under Train THORP. Wi Poh a im The rieranitnlAH twlv nf M TA.. nuiiier, La, momer ot two infant children, was found on the rail road tracks near her trailer home vesterdav. Police said a note found in the hlnnd-KnnttAroH trailot BM. iit.. : 1 ....... BU lit . 4 to alwaya been afraid to be alone and iv seen airaia ot every thing. I haven't taken good care of the children and that's partly why I'm getting out, so someone else can." Police Chief Ed Harycka said Mrs. Rottier, apparently distraught over crowded living conditiona in the trailer, had cut her wrists and then WflllfnH tn th faHmaJ some 300 feet from her trailer nome. ner nead was severed by a passing freight train. . Her husband. Rnhprr depot agent, was in Milwaukee at uie iime, visiting a doctor. He is aone-legged Veteran of World War Deputy Coroner John Bergman of Clark County termed Mrs. Rot tier's death a suicide. Rottier. anffnrintf fmm hn.lr was under the care of a physician! ine cnuoren are Deing cared for by neighbors. Famine Adds To Misery Of War-Ravaged China By The' Associated Press ' Chinese nationalists on Formosa today atepped up their bombing attacks on the big cities of China. The rnmrnnnitt rnnital DAin;M and nine other cities were warned of impending mass raids. bnangnal was struck from tho air fnr IhA aocnnrl flaw In a m... The Communist radio said Mon days raid on Shanghai killed 1, 000 persons and disrupted power and water supplies. The Communist news agency said famine is sweeping East China north of the Yangtze river. Sixtlfn miltinn ruiAnla nra taalinn the pinch and some 2,790,000 are lai'iug starvation, urougnt, noons and disruptions in the aftermath of Civil war are blamed by the Communists for the famine. House Bill Allows Jap Wife Of Ex-GI U. S. Entry WASHINGTON, Feb; ft-tyR-The House Tuesday passed a bill which would let a former Portland, Ore. G.I. bring his Japanese wife to the United States. Under the bill Mrs. Janis Shl mada Page, wife of Gordon Leslie Page, could enter this country for three months. During that time she and Page would have to mar ry under American laws. They were married in a Japa nese ceremony in Japan in 1948 and have one child, born in 1949 Page was discharged from the Army In 1946. The bill now goes to tha Senate. AGED SHOPLIFTER PINED Mrs. Elizabeth Lawrence, 81, of 643 S. Mill St., Roseburg, was fined $25 in justice court Tuesday, upon a plea of guilty to a shoplifting charge, reported Judge A. J. Ged des. She was arrested by city po lice upon the filing of a private comlaint by a local store, accord ing to Police Chief Calvin Baird. MONEY CHARGE FACED Fred Cooper, 62, Myrtle Creek, charged with obtaining money by false pretenses, was lodged in the county jail upon failure to post $500 bail in the Canyonville justice court of Nina Pietzold, Sheriff O T. "Bud" Carter reported. Lewis, Mine Owners Agree To New Parley Step Taken At Request Of Truman; Lewis Hurls Lit At Inquiry Session WASHINGTON. Feb. 8. UP) President Truman's coal fact-finding board today won agreement from John L. Lewis and the coal operatora to try again for agree ment on a coal contract through negotiations. The new bargaining sessions were set for 2 p. m. with the board nieinoers suung in as ooservers. The board members were opti mistic that the whole coal dispute might be settled before nightfall David Cole, chairman of tha board, had remarked that he be lieved an agreement might ba retched "in two or three hours." Lewis said it was "possible. ' The operators indicated the were less optimistic. Lewis Hurls Lie . The board's proposal came after a somewhat stormy hour and a half of hearings during which Lewis once called coal man George H. Love "a liar by tha clock." Cole asked whether Lewis ever had presented any specific con tract demands to the mine opar atora. - Love said he was Informerl h Cyrus S. Ching (federal mediation chief) that "it was the union bar gaining technique to say that "You men own the mines, I have tha men in Uie palm of mv hands what do you bid?" Lewis jumped up and leveled off at Love across the table: "That's an infamous and de liberate lie. I said we represented the men. I say to ynu, 'George; Love, you're a liar by the clock'." i.oie tried to interrupt. Love pro tested: "I don't want to go into personalities, Mr. Cole." "Why not?" Lewis shouted. "Why not?" Cole restored calm and tha hear ings went on. The chairman announced just before the Lewis outburst that tha board would not take formal testi mony, but would instead question the principals in public hearings to determine the facts. In this way, Cole said, tbe board (Continued on page Two) 2nd Search Plane In Alaska Missing WHITEHORSE, Y.T., Feb. 6-UP) Two planes droned through the darkness early today over the Arc tic wastes northwest of here look ing for DOSSihle fires nr flere from a missing U.S.A.F. C-47. The plane, carrying 12 Canadian and U. S. Airmen, -vanished yes terday while searching for a C-54 transnnrt Whifh riisnnneararl Tar. 26 with 44 persons aboard. Mearcn officials said S.O.S. sig nals from the C-47 were picked lin 1fl-t ni0ht htif effort- tn .M.i. a "fix" on them were fruitless. u round radio posts in the area were ordered into a 24-hour alert. The -iffnala ronnrtnrtlu ufam rlif- ferent from those heard earlier in tne day by planes and coast guard stations along the Pacific coast. The earlier signals, reported from the United States to Alaska, were similar to those picked up from time to time since the search for the missing C-54 began. It uat the Kefntin1 isdmiI, mIama to become missing since the far- nung searcn Degan nearly two weeks ago. Another C-47 crashed on a mniintflin nealr 91 miles tenth of here last week. All six persons auoara were rescued. Slays Wife, Sets Homo Afire, Kills Himself ASTORIA, Feb. 8 UP) Glenn Doolittle, 43, sent his 14-year-old son Dale, to a neighbor's for the night, then killed his wife, 34, set their house afire and put a bullet through his brain. That was the way sheriff Paul Kearney and Coroner Raymond O. Luce reconstructed a tragedy in a Knappa farmhouse. Doolittle left a note that told tha story. It was left in a car outside the house, addressed to his borther in Linton, N. D. it said "by the time you get this we . will ba gone." The charred bodies of Doolittla and his wife were found early Tues day. Survivors besides Dale, includa twin daughters, Mrs. Peter Hanna, John Day, and Marcella Doolittle, 19, and Betty, 17. They were not living at home. Kearney said Doolittle, a painter, had been out of work since 1 hanks giving. FALL KILLS LINEMAN PORTLAND, Feb. S-1&U-Lineman Joseph L. Nelson, 46, Beaver ton, fell to his death from a 30 foot perch on a power pole yester day. He was employed by the Port land General Electric company. Levity fact J ant By L. F. Relzensteln Canadian lumbar Is under sailing tha Oregon and Wash ington product, and Canadian potatoes ore underselling right in tha Unitad States tha do mestic spuds. That's something for Undo Sam to chaw en be tldat canned corned beat im ported from Sooth America.