The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, April 05, 1950, Page 4, Image 4

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    4 The News-Review, Rosoburg, Of Wed., April 5, 1950
Published Otlly Exoept Sunday : f the
Newi-levie Company, Inc.
tmfnt anil inn uiui I. "
ftMb'. Or.f.a. mailt Ml ! SUrch S. la.S
CHARLES V. STANTON . EOWIN ( KNAPP
Editor Sirf Manager
Mimbir of tho Associated Preie, Oregon Niwipipir Publishers
AMooiition, tho Audit Buroou of Circulation
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m.Rlh. it H Uira a.albt 12 1
Out Of The Woodwork
ARE YOU REGISTERED?
By CHARLES V. STANTON
Are you registered to vote?
April 18 is the deadline for voter registration for the
May 19 primary election.
Among those who should register are new voters per
sons who have reached the ai?e of 21 years and have not yet
placed their names upon the roll of voters; persons who
have moved into the county: persons who have moved
from one voting precinct to another; persons who have
failed to vote at an election within the past two years.
The county clerk's office reports it is NOT requiring
re-registrations in areas recently annexed to the City of
Roseburg, nor in newly-created voting precincts. Unless
persons in those areas have changed address, their reg
istration cards will be continued in effect and, in the' new
precincts, will be transferred to the poll books for those
precincts.
The forthcoming primary election is to be an interesting
and hotly contested affair. Every eligible voter SHOULD
participate. But to be eligible a voter must be registered.
And only a few days remain before registration books
are closed.
We are to have many local elections during the next
few weeks. Voter 'registration lists will be widely used.
Nearly all municipalities will be holding budget elections.
Kudget ' elections also will be held in virtually all school
districts. Roscburg is to have a special airport bond issue
election. All these are in addition to the forthcoming
primary.
Voters will want to participate in these elections and
consequently should be sure of their registration.
If any person has reason to question whether his reg
istration is In proper form, he should contact the county
clerk's office or the nearest local registrar.
And don't forget the deadline date is April 18; only
a few days left
i
In the Day's News
(Continued from Page One)
Diminishing "Tribe" To Attend Banquet,
A group of men engaged in a profession, diminishing
in the face of modern science, will meet for a banquet
in Portland April 27. These men are the Morse telegraphers
of Oregon. They will be meeting to celebrate the 1 59th
anniversary of the birth of Samuel F. B. Worse, inventor
of the telegraph.
The key-and-sounder telegraph pioneered the field of
fast communication. It made possible the exchange of world
news and information. Telegraphers, trained to read the
coHa UK If. pimp from flip flnunrlnr. and fn nnliliH nut thpir
-.ii nL t, , ber of the House of Representatives
messages wiin ey or uug, v. ere many, r.acn man """congressman Dingle, Democrat.!
Known oy nis nsi. uperaiors maintained nign competi- of Michigan, proclaims: Horse
tion for sending messages with speed and accuracy, yet j thieves have been HANGED for
to tho extent of a loan of $.10, I'll
see fiat the whole transaction re
mains a secret.
AN P,
J. btl
resident Truman's desk is
bill, passed by both houses,
that if it becomes a law will pro
hibit the federal power commis
sion from fixing the price of natural
gas delivered to pipelines by inde
pendent producers. An independent
producer is defined as one who
doesn't own a pipeline and isn't
affiliated with a pipeline.
A terrific ruckus is being raised
by the opponents of the bill (which,
by the way, was passed with the
votes of more good Democrats than
wicked Republicans). Those who
are against it shout that it will
"take an extra 1U0 million dollars
a year from consumers, principally
in the North and Kast, and hand it
over to special interests."
One particularly oratorical mem-
By ViaAnttt S. Martini
It is amazing to us of this day, the placing field."
who take beautiful reading texts j There are many "McGuffey so
for children for granted, to learn cieties." McGuffey alumni chose
how much the McGuffey Readers the selections for the reprints. Hen
meant to the childhood of the ' ry Ford sponsored the centennial
1800s. The curator of the McGuf- j edition of the readers in 19M, a
fey museum at Oxford, Ohio, Dr. ! hundred years after the first is-
Harvev C. Minnich edited Old lues: he was a McGuffey "alum.iston from Sunny Vale, Calif. Rev
t?.nrlta. .k ir..tt Carver received his ministerial
Favorites from the McGuffey nus. , . , . . .
- , ... . . . training in the Angeles temple in
Readers (American Book Co. 1936) Dr. Minnich states: "The cry i,, Angeles. Mrs. Carver is an
available from State library. 'Educate or we Perish' was raised artist and has displayed her talent
by teachers and parents who saw i before many large audiences dur
Another New
Church Formed
Near Winston
By MRS. GEORGE BACHER
Another new church It being or
ganized in Winston located In the
Suksdorfs orchard addition, at
the end of the east road which in
tersects highway W at the Myrtle
wood Gift shop. Dr. Harold Jeffe
ries, supervisor for the northwest
ern district of the Four-Square
Gospel churches, was in this local
ity recently to assist with the pur
chase of the site and remodeling
of the two-story structure located
on the property is now underway.
It is hoped that the building will
be completed by the latter part of
April at which time Dr. Jeffries
will again be on hand to be in
charge of the dedication service,
Evangelist Eleanore Carver, as
sistant pastor, said.
New Paneling Used
The inside walls of the building
are being treated with new paneling
and wamscoating. The crusader
room and chapel have been com
pleted and utility and supply cup
boards have been installed. Plans
include some seven or eight class
rooms and adequate rest rooms.
A rustic motif will be used on the
outside finish, by means of blue
gray shake siding on the outer
walls and heavy doors of golden
cypress. Extensive landscaping is
also in the offing, Mrs. Carver said.
By Easter it is expected that
the upper auditorium will be com
pletd and it is urged by both the
pastor, the Rev. Mr. J. H. Carver,
and his assistant and wife, Evan
gelist Eleanore Carver, that "all
interested residents of the commu
nity make an effort to attend the
Easter services" as that day has
been set as the date to organize
a Sunday School. The pastors
stressed the fact that "although
the church is being established by
the Four-Square faith it is to be
inter-denominaitonal in spirit" and
that the "doors are wide open to
anyone wishing to attend." The
Sunday schedule includes: Sunday
school at 9:45, morning worship
at 11:00. junior crusaders at 6:30
p m. and evangelistic service at
7:30.
Picture To Be Painted
A highlight of the Sunday eve
ning service will be thepainting of
a picture under colored lights by
Mrs. Carver. This picture will later
be presented to the person bring
ing the most relatives or friends
to the service, she said.
Rev. and Mrs. Carver, together
with their daughter, Janet, have
been touring the country doing
evangelistic work for a number of
years. They recently came to Win
FOR . . .
SERVICE ...
EXPERIENCE . . .
CO-OPERATION . . .
Investigate the services offered by your "Home
owned, Home-operated" bank Money I eft on
deposit with us remains in DOUGLAS COUN
TY. All facilities available for your individual
needs.
Douglas County State Bank
Member, Federol Deposit Insurorwe Corp.
"HERE IP I SET RIO OF THESE,
MAiVBE MV HUSBAND WILL ORDER
THE VMM.U SOCKETS VME NEED.
Don't overload your electric circuits. When yes)
build or modernise provide ADIQUATI WIRINS.
So Your Electrical Contractor
In the introduction Dr. Minnich
.1 in0 their iantjli.He tnnr.
aays. ..iiuuur? cuvisagvu uir uic uiiaauniiru Hunger lur training: , . -rtn-r, v.Bli.t nA
She
need of moral instruction in an era
of bookless millions; he supplied
I this need in his readers, whose in-
fluence has never been equalled by
any school text." .
j Hugh Fullerton wrote the preface
for the anthology: "He taught
assisted by her daughter who is an
accomplished pianist and also plays
an accordion.
Western Berlin
Emergency Staff
Ready For Action
retaining; identifying; individual styles.
Radio, teletype, facsimile reproduction ami many other
modern inventions in the field of communications have great
ly reduced the number of Morse telegraphers. Hut those
still in the profession are as enthusiastic and as competitive
as ever.
At their banquet in Portland they will experience unique
entertainment. A Morse telegraph circuit will connect the
banquet tables with many of the nation's larjre cities, and
greetings will be exchanged over far distances.
lesser crimes" (than passing this
bill).
THE point, of course, is that if
the price of natural gas isn't
FIXED by government commis
sions it will soar out of sight and
consumers will be stabbed in the
back.
in some of their children and the
lapse toward ignorance and savag
ery in others. Into this field came
McGuffey to assume, without pre
tense, but from a deep sense of
duty, a leadership which made him
one of the great among the cul-
generations of American boys and tural powers of the world."
girls the joy of labor whether William Holmes McGuffey un-
manual or mental. And the man derstood children and suDDlied the
who taught us how to study and need for texts and pictures at the BERLIN, April S (.Pi The
, , , , i ..... ... . . i western powers in Berlin have or-
work, also taught us how to play. , child s own level and understand-1 ganized an allied general staff to
store than forty selections of his ing. They were happy pictures!
readers taught fair play and Character-forming stories and pic
sportsmanship. In a time when ' turea of pets and realistic child
sports and games were rude, life. "The McGuffey Readers came
rough, sometimes almost savage, i to deliver the childhood of America
he preached the doctrine of fair ' from the stygian night of fear and
play and honor. He was, in fact, horror created by stories" in such
the father of sportsmanship in the ! readers as were available at the
classroom, the workshop, and onetime.
into
action in any emer-
i;
A S'etrg.Rciiew reader, interested in comments recently
madein this column concerning promiscuous garbage dump
ing, offers the suggestion that when offenders are appre
hended, the courts should impose jail sentences at hard
labor. Culprits then would be taken out under guard by a t9M
road crew and compelled to clean up some of the roadside
dumps. Such an experience certainly would be a real
deterrent to further offenses. Might nut he such a bad idea.
WONDER.
had an interesting little experi
ence the other day. I shipped a !
foot locker filled with not-very-valuable
household belongings from
southern Oregon to Chicago. I j
shipped it by railroad freight. The
weight was 70 pounds. j
The prepaid freight cost was :
Government Cost
Survey Advised
Senator Taf t
WASHINGTON. April S -.P
If it is lost, I can collect $7.00 on :
it In the way of insurance. It struck !
me as funny at the time that the
railroad could throw it in the lake, I
pay the insurance without deliver-j
ing the service and come out $2 64
ahead on the transaction. I
(The railroad company, of course. !
wouldn't do such a thing. It is a
nd honest business institu-.
Immunity Of Congressmen
From Arrest Copied From
Centuries-Old British Law
By JAMES MARLOW
WASHINGTON. Several hundred years ago the British
parliament was having a tough time with the king.
He could have a member arrested on his way home for saying some
thing in parliament which the king didn't like.
Parliament felt that, for the public good, its members should be
free to speak in parliament without fear of punishment.
So in 1689 parliament set up a !
recalling that the original farm
programs envisaged no subsidy
horn the treasury "the farmer
himself took the loss involved in
lw rfVIIUIWI IUII . " ' "i "'! iraerai anil soun.i
now e.it up M percent of the na-,""n- " ,n transportation
A demand from Senalur Taft lor an 1 tial inrome. or about $60 000 ooo.-, '"vice it has contracted to give.
impartial survey of present and "J 1n indirect taxes on food, Still, it s an odd fact that the trans
future costs of government has clothing and other necessities shine i pnrtatinn w ill cost f 64 more than
thrown another spollicht on federal "mount to 31 percent of the price ) h jn,urw, ..,,, .,h. ' ,
.pending as an issue in the Novem-' P'd for them, the senator esti- insured xalue of the goods.)
ber congressional elections. mated. To this extent, he said.
of other constitutional
hill nf rights U'hirh iri in n.rt
". . .the freedom of speech and ! m'f nin
debates or proceedings in parlia-1 . -ment
ought not to be impeached! Only one Tase testing congres
or questioned in anv court or place j ional immunity has ever reached
out of parliament." ! the I'.S. Supreme court. That was
This meant immunity for mem-!'n lltHu ,h" the court said:
bers of parliament. They couldn't I - "It would be a narrow view of
ne jauea or lined tor anything they 1 the constitutional privilege to limit
The Ohio Republican, a candidate ;'" " aire.ny necome a se,TMr. point is that the railroads
foi re-election, wants a "non-parti- r!"u' J'm,''i'.,,'on on ,he llt"'rly of r regulated clear up to their
san commission of leading citl-1 , . . ,.,,. ears. They can't raise a rate or
;,inc-er 'j-Ssr? i K5 ;' a.r w,,hi" Am,s"on "
spending programs and on "the 'r, ; J'" ",- .lf ""h '""xment.
burden of taxation which a hrvm, ,"r W .rwfcer.1 r have a com-1 et, with all this regulation, it
cents to ship BY
tivities and our spending for us.
said in parliament
It was an important point and it
was remembered by the Ameri
cans who put together the I". S
Constitution about 100 years later.
In explaining the place and pow
ers of Congress in the new Ameri
can government, they put this in
article one, section six of the constitution:
economy can stand and still exist."
He said that today's spending pol
icies can lead to socialism and a
"national calamity." Taft's re
marks were in an address he de- Parking Rule Off For
ast night to the Iauonal ,
I Good Friday Worshipers
livered la
Ketail federation.
The broadcast sneech told tax
payers that the Republican (Kith rilll.ADEI.PlllA. April 5. i.pi
t'oiiKress left the country S6.AO0,-; Good Friday worshipers may at-
000.000 in the black flcr its two-j tfnd fhuri.h , ,hl,a(tr,phia Ulln.
year term. The present Congress,
Taft said, will leave a $6,000.- 0,t ,r"r of Peking violation pen-
OOO.OPO deficit this year and another ,!!!?' c .....
nnn non nun worth of red ink in ! olice Superintendent Howard P
the fiscal year ending June 30, ;Ml,,.on to'a.v ,ISMIrd instruction
91
yieir auciHiisi smie in wnicn lne.cos(s $9 64
. .,ih.t nil .,1 I'll! ' i f L-IIIK - ...
rr.iuiii a iwi iwKer weigning
70 pounds from here to Chicago.
I'm personally convinced by ex
perience that government price
regulation doesn't keep the cost of
transportation from getting high.
; it to words spoken in debate. The
1 reason of the rule is as forcible
. in its application to written re-
ports presented in that body by
I its committees, to resolutions of
j fered w hich, though in writing,
i must be reproduced in speech, and
to the act of voting ... in short,
i to things generally done in a sea-
sion of the House by one of its
members in relation to the busi
ness before it."
. One Justice Dissents
So up to this time in American
history a member of Congress has
been free to say anything he
pleases about you even ruin
; your name and you have been
unable to sue him, provided .
That what he said was said in
spring
gency.
This was disclosed in an inter
view by Mai. Gen. Maxwell D.
Taylor, U. S. commandant in the I
divided city.
In some respects the new American-British-French
staff resem-'
bles wartime ahaef supreme
headquarters of the Allied expe-1
ditionary force. There is no over
all commander but the post is re
served for such appointment in i
the event of genuine aggression.
Taylor said there had always
been a need for such a general
staff and that the attitude of the
east German Communists had
stepped up its organization.
He said the staff's primary task
is to plan the suppression of any
"putsch" tactics that might be
forthcoming from the east. The
staff came into being after the
Communists threatened to use a
youth march of a half million east
Germans to storm the city Mav
27-30, and spread disorder and
fear. Since then the Communists
have taken a milder tone in their
plans for the end of next month.
The Berlin allied staff has four
divisions: G-l. a committee ' of
American, French and British po
litical experts who exchange ideas
on this branch of the cold war:
G-2, the western intelligence of
ficers: G-3, the security unit made
up of the military police and com
bat troops; G-4, psychological war
fare. West Berlin authorities, includ-
I ir.g Police Chief Johannes Stumm
take part in deliberations of these
four divisions.
Stumm s police are counted upon
to crush any German Communist
violence, but a force of 7.500
' Americans. British and French
troops stand behind them ready to
, be called if things get out of con
i trol.
YOU CAN LEARN HOW
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE HEALS
Attend a Fiye Lecture Entitled
"Christian Science Thi Discovery
Which Solves Today's Problems"
by
Will B. Davis, C. S. B. of Chicago, Illinois.
Mtmbtr of Th Board of Ltcturtthip of th Mother CHureh, Th First
Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, MosMchuwttt.
Thursday, April 6, at 8:00 P. M.
at First Church of Christ, Scientist
312 E. Douglas Street,
Roseburg, Oregon
All Art Cordially Invited
I FROM THE NEWS Or
Senators and representatives
". . . shall in all cases, except
treason, felony and breach of the
peace, be privileged from arrest
during their attendance at the ses
sion of their respective houses, and
in going to and returning from the
same: and for any speech or de
bale in either House, they shall
not be questioned in any other
place."
So there was spelled out con- tongress, on the floor of either
TOUCH STEVEOORI
BALTIMORE. April J. i.n
Maryland stevedores are tough I
One r?ar dual and one front
wheel of a 3. 300-pound truck hack. I
to "foi i'un enffirceniiit nt n...-. wt m r Willi.,,, Vlnn Ul.v....
I inff reiilllatinn.' in r.,., .,l.l . M ..nl.AH .
"It seems to me that the time , (rol , , 3 ,0 m r lt , Blrt Baltimore General hos-
leg
gressional immunity: a member of
v ongress could not he jailed or
sued for damages for anything he
said about anyone, so long as it
was said on the floor or either
House or Senate in debate.
Court Broadens Meaning
mat seemed pretty narrow im
House or before a congressional
1 committee If the same congress
man slandered you outside Con
gress, say on the radio, you could
sue hint.
So far, therefore, congressmen
,have had in elfect an absolute im
munity for anything said about
om "commentaries on the Consti
tution." He said:
No man ought to have the right
to defame others under color of
performance of the duties of his
office. Every citizen has as full
a right to be protected by the laws
from malignant scandal and false
charges as a member of Congress
has a right to utter them in his
seat.
57 YEARS AGO
L
l . 3
J
'V -o, ", "s r '0.
CQo ":'e "t ""
aeburr Review
July 27, 1893.
Mighty interesting! "Way bock in 1893 residents suffered
$1992 loss from fires with only $820 being recovered
by insurance. Net loss $1,172 Thnt in ;,.! .k.!j
convince you of the necessity of fire insurance. Take stock
or everything you own ond then ask yourself if it is in-
surea accoraing to present day values. Then see us.
It Pays to Insure in Sure Insurance!
Phone 1467
has come to make a completely
impartial, non partisan study of
this whole problem of government
spending," the Republican senate
leader said. ,
He suggested a "complete re
study" of the agriculture program,
tnat ritiiens who desire mayipital. doctors found only a
attcna cnurcn services without the 1 bruise. .
fear of penalty while they are in I "It hurt a little as it started
a plac of worship.'' lover, but I feel fine now." corn-
Many Philadelphia churches have mented Nelson as he left for home t
scheduled three hour services, from The truck driver's suffenni
12 noon to J p. m. Kriday. from shattered nerves. i
munity: in debate. Consrcss anyone in Congress. Sometime
docs a great deal of its business someone mav trv in court to test
outside of debate For instance, this immunity again
in committee hearings or investi-; Cut not all authorities on law
Kallonv ! agree that congressmen should
The meaning of the Constitution have absolute immunity. For in
on the point of congressional im- stance, take Joseph Story, who
munity was broadened by sulise- was a I'. S. supreme court justice
quent court interpretations, just in the first half of the last century
as courts have broadened the and wrote the learned and fam-.
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