12 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. Wed., June 21, 1950
Two Reorganizing
Plans Vary From
Hoover Report
WASHINGTON June 21 - (JP
A House committee was told Tues
day that two of President Truman's
new plans for reorganization of the
government conflict with recom
mendations of the Hoover com
mission. The protest came from Robert
L. McCormick, research director
of the citizens committee for the
Hoover report. This organization
was set up ' to purfi for- jwem
ment reorganization along the lines
proposed by a commission headed
by former President Herbert Hoo
ver. The two plans at Issue call for
the transfer of the reconstruction
finance corporation to the com
merce department and for the
creation of a new government de
partment of health, education and
secutiry.
Mcdormick appeared before the
House Expenditures committee
which Is considering resolutions to
reject the proposals. Either the
Senate or House may veto a re
organization plan within 90 days
after it is submitted by the Pre
sident, i
Shortly after McCormick testi
fied, the committee heard Federal
Security Administrator Oscar R.
Ewing defend the plan for a new
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department. Ewing reportedly
would be picked to head the de-
Cartment if Congress allows it to
e set up.
McCormick said the plan to shift
the RFC to the Commerce depart
ment is "in direct conflict" with
the Hoover commission proposals.
He said the commission had sug
gested transfer of the RFC to the
treasury department.
The pian to create the new de
partment, he said, also is "at var
iance" with commission recom
mendations. While the President's proposal
and the commission recommenda
tion conform "to the extent that
they grant departmental status to
the social -and -educational func
'tions of the present federal secur
ity agency," he said, they differ
otherwise.
He said the President'i plan
would put two autonomous agen
cies, the public health service and
the office of education, in the new
department.
Curtin
By MRS. GRACE THOMPSON
Mrs. Jerdon arrived last Mon
day night via bus from California
for a visit at the Ames home.
Monday overnight guests at the
Roy Stephens home were his folks
from North Bend, Mr. and Mrs.
L. W. Stephens, who were enroute
to Eugene to board the train for
California, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Ste
phens and three children of North
Bend and Ted Stephens of McMinn
ville. The primary pupils of Curtin
school received cards from their
teacher, Mrs. Myrtle Gleason, who
is vacationing in Florida and other
eastern points. She said she would
arrive home the first of the month.
Lorctta Oleson, Jean Ames and
Mickey Littlepage are at Corvallis
attending the 4-H summer school.
Mrs. Norma Remington was tak
en to a Eugene doctor Wednesday
where she was given emergency
treatment after a bottle of bleach
ing fluid exploded in her face and
eyes.
While Mrs. Mabel Sowles was
Ironing Tuesday, the iron cord blew
out. Mrs. Sowles was not burned
1 but her glasses were chipped in
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By J. R. Williams
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several places, making necessary
a lens change.
Bill Henderer has made several
trips to Eugene for observation
and treatment after suffering a
heart attack last week.
Mrs. Ada Redifer and Marvene
and Mrs. Dave Dixon and two chil
dren left early Thursday on a ten
day visit at Lakeview with rela
tives. Russell and Terry Marquart of
Cottage Grove are staying at the
Stephens home.
A log truck went over the grade
Friday morning just after it turned
off the state highway on the Bear
Creek road. Luckily no one was
injured, although traffic was block
ed for some time. The truck
couldn't make the turn and had
to back up. In so doing, it broke
the axle and the trailer buckled.
The logs were pulled and dumped
into the pond by one of the lumber
carriers.
Mrs. Rhea Cosby entertained the
Women's Hobby club Wednesday
at the Holt home with the following
persons present: Mrs. Ruby Ilea
cham, Mrs. Dorothy Oleson and
Deanna, Mrs. Grace Thompson,
Mrs. Flora Holt, Mrs. Dorothy
Booher, Michael, Diane and Loren,
Mrs. Emma Stephens, Mary Lou
and Donna Faye, and the hostess,
Mrs. Rhea Cosby.
The common brown hare raises
her young in solitary manner.
After they are a few days old, she
finds a separate form for each
and visits them each night for
suckling.
The words to the patriotic hymn,
"America," were written in 1832
by a theological student, Samuel
Francis Smith, to the tune, "God
Save The King," which he found
in a German songbook.
Petitions Ask
NLRB For New
Vote At K.Falls
KLAMATH FALLS, June 21-UP)
Approximately half the required
number of signatures have been
placed on petitions asking the
National Labor Relations board for
an election aimed at decertifying
IWA-CIO local 6-12 as union re
presentative for Weyerhaeuser
Timber company employes here.
Petitions are being circulated
asking for the election as part of
a back-to-work movement started
by some Weyerhaeuser workers,
union and non-union.
The request to NLRB for an
election came after officers of the
IWA-CIO here declined to call a
union meeting to vote whether to
recall the local union s bargaining
rights from the IWA northwest
regional council.
Weyerhaeuser has been struck
by IWA since May IS, and all
negotiations have been handled Dy
the Union's northwest office.
Herbert Shults, a Weyerhaeuser
employee who is spokesman for
the back-to-work movement, said
petitions were being taken to woods
camps for more signatures.
About 300 names, or 31 per
cent of the number of eligible Wey
erhaeuser workers, are necessary
to get NLRB consideration of the
election request.
Meanwhile, the back - to - work
movement cropped up in another
union at the Klamath Falls Wey
erhaeuser plant. Some 90 com
pany employes, members of the
International Association of Ma
chinists, have been called for a
meeting to take a vote on pro
posed action to get back to work.
Members of the IAM have been
idled by the IWA strike, refusing
to cross the woodworkers's picket
lines.
Hot Wind Tunnel Designed
For Studying Plane Tests
LOS ANGELES IJP) A new
"hot" wind tunnel designed for
studying the broiling temperatures
supersonic planes must withstand
is under construction at the uni
versity of California at Los An
geles.
Speed of air traveling through
the tunnel will range from 1100
to 1400 miles an hour, far above
that of sound, which travels at a
rate of about 750 miles an hour.
Atmospheric friction at these
speeds is expected to produce tem
peratures in the plane up to 670
degrees Fahrenheit.
Newly designed cooling systems
to protect pilots from this heat
will be studied under the direction
of Earl Jansen of the UCLA re
search department.
Atomic Bomb's
Outlawing Aim
Of 'Peace' Move
NEW YORK. CP) A Com-munist-sponsored
petition to out
law the atomic bomb bai ieen
launched in the United States with
a goal of 5,000,000 signatures by
mid-September.
Known as the "Stockholm peti
tion," it calls for outlawing the
bomb, creating "strict inter
national control," and branding as
war criminals the first national
leaders to use the bomb in war.
It takes its name from the Communist-led
,meeting of the World
Peace Partisans congress in Stock
holm, Sweden, which started the
appeal last March.
Since then it has been circulated
widely in the Soviet satellite
countries and western Europe It
was unanimously adopted by the
Supreme Soviet (parliament) in
Moscow. It now is being circulated
throughout the Soviet union, with
millions of signatures reported.
The Peace Information center
here said it was handling the pre
liminary phases of the campaign.
Abbott Simon, campaign director,
said the American version of the
petition was "similar" to the
Stockholm version. He said the
center "maintains contact," but is
not affiliated with, , the World
Peace Partisans.
The petitions appeared in New
York City, and the Communist
Daily Worker said 10,000 persons
distributing them were "en
thused" at the response.
The petition was denounced at
Boston by a high state depart
ment official as placing "a pre
mium upon bad faith and evasion."
Francis H. Russell, director of
the department's office of public
affairs, said agreement not to use
the bomb would place "the rest
of the world" at the mercy of
Soviet mass armies.
He added that all nations except
the Soviet union and its satellites
have been willing to accept inter
national control of the bomb back
ed by realistic inspection.
Veteran Druggists Slate
Prizes At Annual Meet
Prizes will be awarded to the
oldest pharmacist in attendance,
the pharmacist registered the long
est and the pharmacist who has
been in the same location for the
longest period of time when Ore
gon Veteran Druggists hold their
11th annual meeting at Portland
June -22 and 23.
The meeting, in connection with
the OSPA convention, will be held
in the Multnomah hotel, according
to a report from the Oregon Vet
eran Druggists' Assn.
Roseburg druggists listed by the
OVDA are E. E. Applewhite, W. F.
Chapman and Nathan Fullerton.
Others in county and listed in the
OVDA directory are W. A. Bur
dick, Ruben H. Fields and Donald
W. Yantis of Reedsport, Frank J.
Wilson of Myrtle Creek, H. L. Ston
aker of Yoncalla, E. O. Sempert
of Myrtle Point and Orville Kruse
of Sutherlin. All druggists listed
have practiced pharmacy for 35
years or more.
The U. S. Agriculture Depart
ment says frozen orange juice
marketed in the 1948-'49 season
would make a block 60 feet wide,
five feet deep and a mile long.
Recreation Law
Has Approval Of
Supreme Court
SALEM, June 21. ilP state
supreme court Tuesday upheld the
validity of a legislative act under
which Willamalane park and rec
reation district in Lane county
was created, in a decision here
Tuesday.
The opinion was written by Jus
tice Latourette and affirmed a
decision of Circuit Judge William
East of Lane county. A bond is
sue and the authority of the dis
trict's directors to perform their
duties was also held valid.
The suit was brought by the
state o'. Oregon against W. E.
James, Melville- S. Jones, Carl
Lewis and other directors of the
district challenging their right to
act.
The state, through Lane county
district attorney C. E. Lucky, con
tended the legislature was with
out authority to enact a law which
permits inclusion of all or part of
a municipality in a newly created
park or recreation district.
The ppr- and recreation district
includes a part of the city of
Springfield.
A recently laid egg in New
Hampshire weighed 10V4 ounces
and measured 9'i inches around
the longest end.
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