j U, of 0, Library ' CONP Eugene Ore WW WW 1 Guardhouse At Tho rVeehof Cloudy with showers faatoy mJ Friday. StMMt today 4:12 a. m. Sttaris tomorrow i:4 a. at. A-Bomb Base mm WKO DOES WHAT h rLl-i. Cir1 '"V i i MRS. J. F. STRADER brightens the day (which wii dreary and stormy outside tha house where iha sits) by reading a book on gardening and flowers, while visiting at the home of her daugh ter, Mrs. Dale Hatfield, at Dixonville. . Before her marriage to the late Mr. Strader, Mrs. Strader was Lillie Ann Ward. Her grandparents were Mr. and Mrs. Hoy Fluornoy, residents of the valley west of Roseburg which bears their name. After her marriage' she and Mr. Strader made their home on the bid Strader donation land claim northeast of Dixon ville, where she still lives. All of Mrs. Strader's 80 years have been lived in Douglas county. Her eight children and eight grand children all live in Oregon. ' In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS THIS-changing-world-note: -. .'.,- -' Out in the Wilshire district in Lot Angelei the other day, a coyote trolled leisurely down the street. It wis doing nobody any harm. So far as could be determined, it was merely seeing the sights even as you and I when we go to L A. But all of a sudden everybody In sight began to yell and whoop at the poor little beast. Eventually it was hazed into a garage and the door was slammed and now it is is solitary confinement at the city pound. The story Is that it will be given to the zoo. T HIS is the point: The coyote wa stealing no chickens. It was biting nobody in the leg. Its sole offense seems to be that it wasn't acting in orthodox, accepted coyote ways. Do you reckon the time may come when we HUMANS from the back districts will be trapped in garages and sent out to the zoo as an exhibit for the children to gaze at if we go to Los Angeles and fail to act as humans from out (Continued on Page Four) FINED FOR CONTEMPT William Doyle Mayberry. 54. Roseburg, charged with contempt of court, following his failure to comply with a court order enjoin ing him from interfering with his wife, pending a suit for divorce, was fined $100 when he appeared before Judge Carl E. Wimberly. The fine was suspended and he was ordered released from the cnuntv jail on provision that he complies with the court order. INDUSTRIAL CHANCES EYED C.Of C. Group Asked For Information Anent Milk Quotas. Customs Canning Custom canning, packaging of agricultural products or market and milk quotas were subjects considered by the Rose burg Chamber of Commerce agriculture committee at a break fast meeting today at tha Rose hotel. in the committee s files are four requests for information aa to the need for and possibilities of a custom cannery in Roseburg. Two inquiries have been received from Salem, one from Portland and one from Olympia, Wash. The committee agreed to fur nish information in each instance. A conference will be held with one inquirer Saturday at 10 a. m. in the Chamber ot Commerce office. The committee learned that milk cannot be produced by dairy farms which do not have assigned quota under the state law. Some study will be made of the allocation to determine whether quotas are as signed on an equitable geographi cal basis. It is because of present quota allocations that a great " Ok 1 NINE LIVES SAVED Cat Survives 36-Hour Trap ..... In Fiery Kiln, MINERVA, O., March 9. MP) An ordinary calico cat which emerged singed, thirsty but alive after 36 hours in a fiery kiln was an object of scientific interest today. Dr. William Orr, the veterinarian in this village, exclaimed, "It's a strange case that wouldn't happen again in 100 years. The animal's (foot) pads were burned off, the top of us skull was scorched, the end of iU nose was charred and its body was burned as dry as a cracker when it was brought ' me." Dr. Orr pumped food into the baked puss's veins after putting tie cat under sedatives. Today it was jumping into his lap to be fed. The cat was sealed accidentally' in a kiln at the Metropolitan Brick Co. plant here Friday night. Tem perature in the oven reached up to 900 degrees fahrenheit. When the kiln was opened Sunday, the dur able feline tottered out before the astonished eyes of workers. The veterinarian said he investi gated the cue carefully yesterday with Plant Superintendent Joe Bucola and both agreed that any other explanation was out of the question the animal had stood the heat for a day and a half ,nd had survived. - - Bucola said no part of the kiln could have had a temperature of less than 400 degrees. Workmen doubted if the cat could have found a place cooler than 600 degrees. INVENTOR DIES . PORTLAND, March 8. lP Charles A. Peters, 70, inventor of the Peters choker hook widely used in northwest logging opera tions, died here yesterday. He once operated a machine shop and automobile agency in Kelso, Wash. amount of milk is now being ship ped into Douglas county, the com mittee has been informed. Special consideration will be given the feasibility of securing technical advice on the proper packaging of Douglas county farm produce for the market. Projects now being considered by this committee will call for frequent meetings and considerable activity on the part of individual committee members. On the committee are L. A. Rhoden, chairman; Paul Helweg, vice-chairman: Homer Grow, H. V. Sullivan, R. F. Franks. Andy J. Townsend. Bob Bashford and J. Roland Parker. tsro.blisr.od 1173 Judith Copon Draws 15 Years; Russian Pal Ordered To Quit US Spy Plotters Denounced By Trial Judge Gubitchev Declares He's Innocent; Girl's Lawyer To File Appeal Notice NEW YORK. March .( Judith Coplon was sentenced to 15 years in jail today for plotting to spy tor soviet Russia. Valentin A. Gubitchev, her partner, received a 15-year suspended sentence and was ordered deported to Russia within two weeks. Miss Coplon was sentenced to five years on a conspiracy charge and IS years on the count of at tempted espionage, the sentences to run concurrently. Gubitchev received a suspended sentence and was ordered denort- ed by Federal Judge Sylvester i. Kyan at tne recommendation of the government. Before the judge snoke. Gubitchev declared in a courtroom state ment that the case had been "arti ficially manufactured" against mm. The dour-faced ex-pal of Miss Coplon read his statement in fed eral court before he and she were sentenced. As he had at tha begin ning of the trial, Gubitchev de clared: "The mere fact of bringing me to trial constitutes an unprecedent ed violation of rules of international law and of the national law of the U.S.A. itself . . . n "I am a Soviet diplomat of the rank of third secretary of the (Continued on pg Two) Snow First In March In 12 Years The "unusual' snow In March! Local folks who witched the huso anew flakes as larae ae dollars fleatlna to earth around II a.m.. were keainnina to won der whether merchants talking of spring openings are lumping the gun on the weather man. The weather man in Roseburg M. L. Caldwell, to be exact assures that the anew will not last, as charts indicated a tern- perature rise from the J4 degrees at that hour. While March snow la. unusual in Roseburg.. Caldwell said rec ords show five inches fell in the city March 21 and It, ltM. There were measurable traces m 142 and 143. Prior re that anew la recorded on an average of about ence every four years In traceable amounts. Portiander Routs Two Gunmen At His Home PORTLAND. March S-WPV-Two gunmen attempted a holdup of Douglas R. Gerow. finance com pany, president, at his home last night but drove off after he grap led with them. Gerow said the men rang hit doorbell and when he opened the door, showed a gun and aaid, "This is a holdup." "The hell it is," Gerow aaid, and grabbed at the gun. The gun went off twice, both bul lets hitting the wall. A cut was opened in Gerow'a left temple, ap parently from a blow from a gun butt. The men fled. Gerow ia president of the United Finance company and of the Eaet Side Commercial club. Burglary Reported At Pacific Co-Op Assn. Police Chief Calvin Baird report ed today a break and entry into the Pacific Co-operative Producera association building on Short street, which occurred sometime late Wednesday or early Thurs day morning. Discovery of the burglary came this morning when a small cash drawer waa found to have been forced open. Baird said only a small amount of cash waa miss ing. THIIR NOSIS.KNOW LOS ANGELES, March 9 (Jt Harold Martin smells too doggone good. That's why he and Carl Lan caster, a friend, were acquitted yesterday of stealing a Great Dane and a collie dog, each valued at tl 0.000. Martin told a Jury that the dogs forced themselves into the defend ants' car last Dec. 1 and wouldn't leave. The reason: Martin ia a salesman and hit clothes smell of the prod uct he sella dog food. ROSEBURG. C. W. Manning Of Oakland Out For County Judge ;'V. Flctum by Clark'l Otudio C. W. (Turk) Manning, above, of Oakland announced today he will be a candidate for the office of county judge on the Republican ticket. Manning, born in California, has lived most of his life in Douglas county. Ha has had many years' experience in construction and maintenance of roads,, bridges and other similar work. - He spent more than 10 yeara aa supervisor of maintenance and con struction for the Oregon State High way department. During the war he resigned from the state to re engage in farming. Also during the war he spent considerable time in logging operations and served as secretary of the union. He has since sold his farm and has again taken on contracting and construction work. The last two years he has spent with J. C. El don, rebuilding part of the Suth-erlin-Elkton highway, which was finished last fall. Manning haa held office in the Oakland city council and school board, but this is his first venture into county politics. He said he filed his nomination at the requeat of many of hia friends. Pickets Fire Six Mines To Protest Royalty Hike POTTSVILLE, Pa., March 9 (.ft Pennsylvania State police were alerted today to prevent any further disorders at free-lance hard coal mines six of which have been aet afire in the last three days. Mate police road patrols were put in operation in the trouble area 20 miles west of Pottaville yester day after Sheriff Bruce Fellows of Schuylkill county appealed for neip . Hoisting rigs at two independent mines were set ablaze by maraud ing pickets Tuesday night. Four other fires were reported the day Detore. The pickets all free-lance min ers are protesting demands by land owners for an increase in royalty payments on coal mined from their properties. H. Wilsoo Lark, Shamokin, haa demanded that the miners psy a royalty of 60 cents a ton for coal mined on his land. The royalty previously was 37 v cents a ton. - National Guardsman's Jailing Poses Question LONG BEACH, Calif.. March 9 jPV Can a auperior officer Jail a national guardsman for missing drills? Superior Judge Fred Miller today will review the nine-day sentence of Pvt. Glenn M. Roberts. 10, who has been in Jill since Monday. The sentence was imposed by Lt. Col. Willis T. Lyman, executive officer of the National Guard 234th Air craft group, who aat aa trial judge advocate at Roberts' court mar tial. Roberta was freed yesterday without bail on a writ of habeas corpus. His attorney contended the commitment was not legal. FREED BY RANSOM MANILA, March I (& Vi cente Araneta, JS, wealthy Ma nila business mart, waa released by outlsws today after the pay ment of 150,000 ransom. Araneta, sckrn of one of the Pi lippines' wealthiest families, waa kidnaped Sunday in Cavite pro vince by a band of SO outlaws. He was injured slightly by flying glass when the leader fired a shot through Arsnetas automobile windshield. a OREGON THURSDAY, MAR. 9, 1950 Federal Oleo Tax Repeal Up To President ContjressApproved Bill Represents Compromise To Satisfy Dairy States WASHINGTON Mirrh tat- Only President Truman's approval ia needed now to repeal all federal taxea on oleomaraarine. effective July 1. Lawmakera generally predicted that Mr. Truman will lion the re. I peal bill which Congresa aent to j the White House late yesterday. I The Senate approved the meas ure then by a 59 to 20 vote. It passed the House Tuesday, 262 to 106. Provisions put into the bill bv Dairy State lawmakers who want to prevent oleomargarine from be ing passed off as butter call for: 1. The serving of oleomargarine in triangular pattiea in public eat ing places or, aigns identifying Uie product aa margarine. 2. In the case of retail aales, distinct labeling of the outer carton and inner wrapper as containing oleomargarine. Senator Wiley (R-Wis) waged a (Continued on page Two) Implement, Car Dealers To Have Festival Display Roseburg'a downtown business section next week will look like an outdoor display of convening auto and imnlemnt manufactur er, if plans of the Retail Trades asaociauon are realized. Slated aa a big feature of this year'a Spring Opening festival ia a street display of new model cars, farm imnlpm.nl, anA a, ulnn.-l building supplies and logging equipl Ram'nnlnff ! n m u-hU if all streets from Lane 'to Douglas and Main tn Rm. will k. V.I L. j off, with the exception of Cass nurri wnr.-n win do ciosea from Stephens to Main. On Cass street, frnm Jnrlrcnn fA Whmi l..t- Stephens, the latest in farm im plements win De displayed. Build ing supply houses will occupy the rest of Cmmm urll Mi KIM1- from Lane to Cass on Jackson. iew irucxs win be displayed on Oak street from Rose tn Main Mobile displays of logging equip ment Will h chAUM An -U . . . ........ via " -llllliuil street from Rose to Main. Such itemi mm rhin ..J .u - - - I IU VllICI portable equipment will demon strate now a aaw ana planing mill is operated. 1 QVl mtviol llAmnhil.. -.Ill j " -............... - WII1 !M- displayed on Jackson street from waa iu iuuKias. the evening's festivities will be gin at 7 p.m. THOSE SAUCERS ASAINI VAN NUYS, Calif.. March 9 '-"Pi Here comes those flying sau- cers again. Police here early today reported that they had received numerous calls from citizens who said they saw a flying saucer skip through the foggy San Fernando Valley sky. COMRADES. LEND Voice Of America Gives Advice On How To Yote For One Party In Soviet NEW YORK, March 9. (API The Voice of America has stuck its tongue in its cheek and started to have a little fun with the Communist party. The Sate department hopes it has a few Russians laughing even if they're not laughing vary loud. It's election time in tha Soviet and next Sunday the followers of Joseph Stalin will vote. So here's what the "voice" has I been pumping into Russia this week along with the regular radio news in almost every language snd dialect of the sprswling Soviet empire ... Announcer: Gentlemen, we give you tne elections to tne supreme Soviet! Music: Flourish of trumpets. Commissar: Comrades! Today ia March S! There are only aeven days left in which to make up your minds as to which randidate you wish to vote for. Thia year, as tn other years, we nave simpli fied the task for you. There will he only one slate, one party, and in all probability only to help you TALKS ABOUT SPIES Victor Kravchanko, Russian author who broke with the Soviet regime in 1944, tails Houia Un-American Activities committee in Washington that spying is on of the principal duties of all Soviet diplomats. "Every Sopiet repre sentative ... is a potential spy," he told the congressmen. Kravchanko, author of "I Chose Freedom," used to be a rep resentative of Soviet purchasing commission. (AP Wirephotol RODEO PROGRAM OUTLINED Prize Money Of $3,000 Up For Six Major Contests; Features. Parade Listed The Douglas County Sheriff's poise's fifth annual rodeo will be held at Roseburg tha evening of Saturday, June 24, and afternoon of Sunday. June 25, announced. While tha tame general progrjsm will ba followed as that In previous years, a few minor .changes have been announced. Hospital Boosts Building Permits Permit for construction of the Douglas Community hospital in the amount of $329,000, caused Feb ruary building permits to soar. The monthly report of City In spector C. H. Boniols strnws the permiU totalled $446,718. This in cludes one other large permit for $30,000 for construction of the Car penters and Joiners hsll at Cobb and Roberta streets. Included also are three new dwellings for a total of $14,845; 15 dwelling repairs, $8,373, and one commercial repair, $500. The new dwellings are being built by Roy Brown on Eddy St., Don Keed at ZU7 w. nrsi m., ana Merle Dunlap. Second Ave. No. The commercial repair is for re modeling the front of the building at 120 No. Jackson street, housing the Joe Richard Men's Store, Lu verne's Dress shop and Dr. R. L. Clinton'a office. Twenty-four electrical primus were listed for a total value of $2,825, and nine plumbing permits aggregating $2,935. Sir Thomas Beecham Collapses At Concert LONDON March 9 (IP) ' Sir Thomas Beecham, 70, who collapsed last night while conduct ing the Royal Philharmonic orch estra, is feeling "a little better" today, a spokesman said. Beecham was found to be run ning a temperature from influen za when he collapsed at tne con cert in Ctieam, Surrey. EAR!; t COUrse onlr one candidate. Grasp your pencils firmly! Enter the election booths with heads held high! Mark your ballot without fMri With one slate and that all p,rty members it will be difficult : fot vou 0 g0 wrong! Man (very timid): But, com rade, wouldn't it be simpler to just declare the official slste elected and aave ua the trouble? Commissar: Ahhhh, comrade, I am glad that there' is one so bold as to ask that question. (Aside: Pssssst! Officer! Get thst man's name!) Comrades, if you think (Continued on par Two) ) 57-30 Bruea Carter, possa secretary, Rodeo stork has been secured by bid, and Christiansen Bros., Eugene, which has furnished stork for the former rodeos, was the successful bidder. Instead of securing nationally known trick riders, the posse haa arranged for a local rider, Jackie Carstens, to team with Barbara Huntington, Eugene, a feature rider er of last year's Pendleton round up, for specialty acta. Cy Taillon, whose growing re pertiore will include Pendleton and Cheyenne roundups this year, haa again been ecured as announcer. A different method, to be an nounced later by Chairman Del McKay, will be used in the selec tion of a rodeo queen. Purse money of $3,000 will re main the ' same for. six major events, which will include saddle bronc riding, bareback riding, bull dogging, bull riding, calf roping and Daly team tying. . The show (Continued on page Two) Drive-Inn Opening For Summer Season Dated The "Drive-Inn." one mile south of Roseburg on highway 99, will re open for the summer season Fri day, March 10, Max C. Swall, owner and proprietor, announced today. Barbecue sandwiches will still be featured along with complete fountain service. The Drive-Inn restaurant, closed for the past three months ,has been redecorated and rearranged inside. Regular hours will be from 11:80 a.m. to midnight with five em ployes to serve. The Drive-In will be closed Thursdays. "We are anx ious to see all our old friends and to meet new ones," Swall aaid. Airliner With 54 Aboard Lands Safely On Belly NEWARK, N. J March 9-M A twin-engine C-46 transport plane with 54 persons aboard slid 300 feet in a safe belly landing last night in rsin and darkness at Newark airport. Airport authorities said the land ing gear of the ship, bound from Miami, Fla., to Newark, collapsed as the plane touched the runway. Most of the 50 passengers thought it was merely a rough landing. Streams of gasoline from punc tured tanks apewed onto the rain swept runway as the passengers tee that was true, and that the safety. No one waa injured,: but a pregnant woman was taken to a hospital for a routine checkup. Churches Oppose New U. S. Envoy To Vatican NEW YORK. March 9 - (Ml - The bulletin of the Federal Coun cil of the Churches of Christ in America has urged President Tru man not to send an envoy to the Vatican to replace Myron C. Tay lor, who recently resigned the post. The President's maintenance of "diplomatic relations" with tha Vatican has caused "needless ten sion" among rhurchea, tha bulle tin said in ill March km faster day. t Horror Scene Homes Of Oil Heater Deal Quick Death Eight Overcome In Fire Fight ALBUQUERQUE, N. M., March (AV Oil-fed flames, leaping lightning faat through a Sandia base guardhouse, snuffed out tha liva of 14 military prisoners last nignt. Trapped with them in the tinder dry wood structure, the prison'! other two inmates were injured critically. It was the first major disaster in the history of the war built installation now a aeml-ae-eret assembly point for the atomkt bomb. Two guards, alerted by prison ers' criea, vainly tried to rescue them from behind bare and mesh ed wire windows. They were over come along with nx others fight ing the blaze. Twenty additional officers and men also were treated for smoke effects. Investigators said there wai aa doubt the fire started from one of two big oil stoves used to heat the prison. They still sought to deter mine how and why today. It was all over 25 minutes after the first alarm waa sounded at 7:35 p.m. Thirteen of tha priaonera apparently died in tha first few seconds; tha other succumbed twa hours later at a hospital. Most of the victims ware be lieved to have inhaled tha intense, almost instantaneous heat and euf focated, Sandia authorities said. (Continued on page Two) Open House Set . For Saturday Cy Mortensen, Inc. Formal opening of Lee Morten sen, Inc., at 200 So. Pine St at Lane ia announced for Saturday. Open house will ba held from 19 a.m. to ( p.m. Mortensen has just taken over the Ferguson tractors and equip ment agency, formerly handled ia this location, and will offer in ad dition Diamond T. trucks, Kelly Springfield tires, Pierce trailere and a tractor and truck repair department. The building waa erected by Mortensen ana first occupied in ! April ot last year. It ia a 50-80 foot oumice block structure with radiant heating. Ttia front ' half houses the display room and offi ces and the rear ia given over tat repair work. Mortensen, who came to Rosa brug from Klamath Falls in 194J, said he plans to continue hia log ging and contracting business, in which he haa engaged for many years. He haa maintained an office ' In his new building here since ita completion. Tha laat six montha he has been away on a clearing contract job at Meridian dam on the Willamette river. Thia job, un der a $130,000 contract, included the clearing of 22S acres for tha main dam site and required up wards of SO men. Recent contract work which ha haa handled included togging road construction for Mist Logging Co. " and Harbor Plywood. Ha haa alas done considerable excavating work in a no around Koseourg. H. K. Hopkins will continue work ing with Mortensen aa secretary. About aeven persona will be em ployed in the sales and repair de partment of the new business. - U. S. Lawyer, In Kremlin, Urges Atomic Control By The Associated Press An American attorney spoke fa the Kremlin last night on atomie control. Former Assistant Attorney General O. John Rogge, a top poli cy maker in Henry Wallace's pro gressive party called for a multi nation body with powers of "un limited inspection not control but inspection of all atomie energy in stallations everywhere in tha world." Rogge spoke in St. George's hall of Prime Minister Stalin's citadel. He is in Moscow as a member of the World Congress of Partisans of Peace. Hia audience was compos ed of members of the supreme So viet (parliament) and the Soviet committee for the defense of peace. The World Congress presented a petition urging that atomic weap ons be outlawed and all armementa reduced. Oakland Man Questioned In Fatal Holdup Effort PORTLAND, March S-MV-Two men are under arreat in the gro cery store hold-up thst brought sudden gun deaths to two robbers Sundsy night. Sheriff's Capt. Howard Kelly aaid Donald Yarbrough, 23, Portland, admitted being the driver of a get away car that sped off after tha shooting. John R. Anderson, 23, Oaklsnd, Ore., wss held for ques tioning. Capt. Kelly said Anderson denied participating in hold-upa with Yarbrough, but knew they were planned. Lvtty fact Rant By U F. Reiaetvtteha That coyote cauqht tfrolDaa la Let Angola ltreat wary hove been looking for kit twa- legged gongload pals wfc beve haVa figuring romiaaatty af laae hi wfanlaiajl SSjceaeagos,