U. of 0. Library Eugene, tre. COMP 0o imi JL UUVI bUUYJ LTL PICTURED ABOVE ii Norean Allen, queen candidate (or th Ron burg high school senior class carnival. Th carnival will ba held at th armory Friday availing, Nov. 17, starting at 7:30 p.m. Har campaign manager is Don Pearson. Drunken Drivers Feel Law's Hand Adrian Valdrien Hausemann, 41, of Reedsport was sentenced to serve 180 days in the county jail and fined $250 for drunk driving ac cording to Reedsport Justice o f Peace Fred Wright. Hausemann was arrested by the state police. Louis Hnry Teller, 31, of Rose burg was sentenced to serve 30 days and pay a fine of $250 on a similar charge of drunk driving, reported Justice of Peace A. J. Geddes. Teller was arrested by a police reserve officer. Arrested also for drunk driving was Finas Howard Riggins, 36, of Reedsport who received a similar fine of $250 and a 30-day sentence, said Justice Wright. Rigsins was arrested by a deputy sheriff. Also arrested by the police re serve was Raymond Preston M c Farland, 22, of Roseburg who was fined $50 and sentenced to serve 30 days for being drunk on a pub lic highway, reported Geddes. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS These words are written on Armistice Day, 1850. It is very, very quiet. There was a sunrise salute, which, I'm ashamed to ad mit, I mistook for blasting at the rock quarry out north of town. There was a rattle of gunfire out in the duck swamps and the grain fields. That was all. I can't help harking back to this day and this hour in 1918. We had then just won a war to make the world safe for tlemoc racv. WE BELIEVED IT. Oh, HOW we believed it! The fervor of our belief on that 11th day of November back in 1918 is utterly beyond comprehension in these cynical days of the mid-century when nobody believes anything any more. The war was over. Our boys were coming home. There wasn't ever going to be war any more. The blood that had been spilled had not been spilled in vain. The world forever afterward was to be just and fair and llecent. There was to be self-determination of small na tions. No nation was ever going to bully any other nation. There were to be no more war lords. For the world had been made safe for democracy and THEN we believed in democ racy. We celebrated. All over t h e (Continued en page four) AGED WOMAN KILLED HILLSBORO (JPl Lenna Bartlett, 74, Beaverton, died Mon day night of injuries received when struck by a car while Va Ik ing at an intersection near her home. Police said the car was driven by Merlin C. Morrison, 54, Beaverton. The Weather Mostly cloudy with scattered Showers, cfearin occasionally to day and Wednesday with continued cold. Highest tamp, far any Nov. 74 Lowest temp, far any Nov. 14 Highest temp, yesterday 4 Lowest tamp, last 24 hours 35 Precie. last 24 hours .. .05 Vecip. from Nov. 1 13 Defic. from Nov. I l.0 f-recip. from Sept. 1 ....U.n Suntot today 4:54 p.m. Sunriaa tomorrow, 7:04 a.m ; Watershed Timber Gives City Sizable Income FOREST GROVE (JPI Sale from this city's municipally owned watershed may bring the treasury $345,000 in the next five years. The Carnation Lumber Co., For est Grove, bid $34.75 per thousand board feet to top offers of 17 bid ders in Monday's auction. There is an estimated 10,000,000 board feet of timber on the 200 acres specified for logging. The state forestry department will direct the logging operation for a 10 percent gross fee. The profits are to go for improvements and retirement of city water de partment debt. Coffee Price Cut Defies Trade Law PORTLAND (JPl Coffee was selling at 65 cents a pound for nationally advertised brands to. day, a housewife bonanza cf around 20 rents. Private brands sold as low as 59 cent" as last week's price war continued despite legal action against it. It all started a couple of weeks ago. Then District Attorney John McCotirt warned six retailers of Oregon's fair trade law which for bids sale at less than cost plus 6 percent. That brought a temporary halt. William Luther's store in south east Portland whacked the price a?ain and he was arrested. He said he had advertised his low prices and wouldn't back up. He asked for a jury trial. Monday the gong price for na tional brands was 67 cents. Today Safewajr advertised 65 e e n 1 1 throusn Wednesday and othera be gan to meet it. ". . . at their own risk," said Deputy District Attorney Charles Raymond. Phone Users Kick In Vain On "Voice Of America" PATERSON, N. J. (JPI The Voice of America says it's sorry ii local telephones play the "Star Spangled Banner' and break out in French and TV sets go dim but it can't be helped. Two voice technicians told a public meeting, called to discuss the interference complaints of res idents near the transmitter, that there wasn't much they could do. Specific complaints might be ironed out, they said, but the state department needs all 50,000 watts at ita nearby Wayne township transmitter to carry on its work. 1 1 50 Honor Doctor Who Attended Them At Birth TOWNSEND, Mass. (JPl Some 1150 persons brought into the world by Dr. Richard S. Ely a coun try physician attended a recep tion in his honor last night. In fact, the whole town turned out to honor the doctor on comple tion of 52 years as a country phy sician. At the same time, the doc tor and his wife, the former Eva M. Sherwin, observed their 50th wedding anniversary. Balanced Legislature Plan Will Be Revived o PORTLAND (JPl The Young Republican State federation chair man said Monday a legislative re apportioning proposal would g 0 before the next Oregon legislature. A. Freeman Holmer, Salem, said his group would sponsor a measure which would take into account j both population shifts and geo-i graphic representation. i The federation was the sponsor! of the so-called "balanced" plan; for reapportionment defeated ia! last Tuesday's balloting. Establish- 1873 KOSEIUKG." OREGON TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 14. 150 247.10 Lockout Union Files Complai int With HLRB 15.000 Rejected For Refusal To Cross Lines Of Pickets, Assertion NEW YORK UP) Bitterness spread today in the nation'a par tial telephone strike after the huge Bell system struck back at disrup tive hit-and-run picketing. Leaders of the striking CIO Com munications Workers of America tCWA) accused the company of a "discriminatory lockout" in com-i plaints to the National Labor Re latione boarU. They said the company had turned away 15,000 long-distance operators and maintenance men across the country who would not pledge themselves to work "regu larly" that is, be ready to cross their union's sporadic picket lines. The workers affected belong to the CWA, but not to its striking di visions. One complaint waa filed here and the other in Philadelphia. NLRB officials sail! it would take at least two weeks to' decide the matter, with at least 10 days more to get a court injunction if the union charge were upheld. Say Work Refused Bell called the lockout charge "absurd" and said it was only try- Equipment Workers Lose Battle With Cops PHILADELPHIA (Pi Strik ing telephone equipment work ers fought police for 45 minutes roaay in an arrempr to Keep Ben . operators from going to work eMLQO. WltCnCS a west Philadelphia exchange. The Bell workers finally made it with police aid. Seven strikers were arrested during the push.and-shove strug gle in front of the Trinity a x change. ing to line up a reliable woriung force to handle the emergency. In New York City today approxi mately 1,400 operatora entered Bell's long lines center, and left the builiiing within a short time. They charged they had been re fused work when they said they would not cross picket lines. A Hell spokesman said long dis tance service throughout the 14 cities where long lines offices are maintained was normal Monday and this morning. He said only three offices Buffalo, Pittsburgh and Memphis were picketed. The spokesman said that of 2.399 regular operators scheduled for duty last night, 1,583. or 66 percent, .were on the job. The remaining as signments were filled by other per sonnel, he said. Picket lines were formed in front of local telephone exchanges in Winston-Salem and Charlotte, N. C, today, the first lines set up in North Carolina since the strike began. While tension mounted on the picket lines, negotiators for both sides met in comparative harmony last night for a seven and one-half hour session the longest since the strike began last Thursday morn ing. The talks will continue today. Unfair Labor Verdict Hits Broadcasting Co. WASHINGTON (JP) Rogue Valley Broadcasting The Co. Inc., operator of station KWIN Ashland, was found guilty of un fair labor practices yesterday by an NLRB trial examiner. Examiner Frederic B. Parkes II ordered the station to quit dis couraging activity of the AFL El ectrical Workers union among its employes and to offer to re-hire Ralph S. Click, who was dis charged Sept. 2, 1949 Parkes found Click was discharged be cause of union activity. The broadcasting lirm was di rected to make up any loss of pay suffered by Click, to atop ques tioning employes about union sen timents or otherwise interfere with any labor organizations. Kissless Bridegroom Legally Rid Of Spouse LOS ANGELES l.P) While he was a kissless bridegroom, his bride found tirr k have an affair with a professional dancer, com plained Samuel H. Scripps, 22-year-old grandson of the late publisher E. W. Scripps. Superior Judge Thurmond Clarke granted Scripps an annul ment of his March 1 marriage to Patricia Murphy, Q. an ice skater he met in a show ne financed. Scripps, beneficiary of a $13,322. 000 trust, said he asked hia wife for affection but that she refused. His complaint alleged she had been in timate with Robert 1 Wandt. 25, of New York, named as co-respondent. Charged Florida Grand Jury Indicts 7 Corporations, 53 Persons As Gambling Probe Sequel MIAMI, Fla. (API A racket-busting grand jury con cluded four months work Monday with a blistering review of what it called "sordid gambling conditions" in Dad IMiamil county. It Indicted seven corporations and S3 individuals, among them the Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph company. Th jury said on unidentified winter visitor "was filched out of half million dollars in en evening in a gamblng casino operated in this county." Neither th loier nor th casino was Kerosene Blast Kills 5 Persons ALTOONA, Pa. (.P Kerosene used to prime the fire in a wood stove caused an explosion which killed a 37-year-old mother and four of her children last night. Three other members of the fam ily, who lived in a one-room con crete structure built as a two-car garage, were critically burned. State police Sergeant George Hahn said apparently the blast came when the mother, Mrs. Nellie Ebbert, poured kerosene on a fire in the stove. Mrs. Ebbert and her three daugh ters Evelyn, 9; Joyce, 8; and Elaine. 2 were standing near the stove. They died instantly. Twelve- year-old Neat hbbert died in a hos pital a few hours later. Critically burned were Mrs. Eb- bert's husband, William, 40, a truck driver; a son, Tommy, 11, and the children's grandmother, Mrs. Florence bbbert. Michigan Vote Lead Switches On Oleo Figures DETROIT (JPl Democrat G. Mennen Williams, seemingly des tined six days ago to be a one-term governor, enjoyed today a lead of nearly 900 voles in Michigan's daffy election aftermath. Williams' margin was his best since the original 6000-vole edge of hia Republican rival, former two- term Gov. Harry f. Kelly, slipped away in corrections of a series of ballot counting bungles Since the start of the corrections, Williams and Kelly have alter nately held the lead. With the official canvass now complete except for only four of the state s 3 counties, this was the count: Williams 935,174 Kelly 934.287 Election officials in the four in complete counties admitted there still could be enough errors uncov ered to change the rapidly-shifting picture again. The lead already had changed ha nils six times. Canvassers felt, however, that the biggest mistakes had been rec tified. Whoever is behind at the final tabulation would have to ask for a recount, if any, under state law, and foot the $21,000 bill at $5 a pre cinct. The most unusual, if not the largest, error came to light Mon day in Macomb county. Eugene Haight, chairman of a township election board, explained! that the vote on a referendum toicidental permit the sale of colored oleo margarine inadvertently was put into the gubernatorial tally hook. With the correction, Williams gained 509 votes over all. Its effect on the oleo vote was only trifling. Oleo's sale was over whelmingly approved. UMPQUA RIVER FLOOD CONTROL Water Storage Dams, Levees Required U.S. Army Engineer Tells C. Of C. Forum A system of water storage dams and river levees offers the best solution to Umpqua river flood problems, W. M. MacGibbon of the U.S. army engineers said at the Roseburg chamber of com merce forum Monday at the Hotel Umpq ... . . ... ., , MacOIDDon openeu tne iniurmai discussion with review of the! armv engineers flood control , . XL? .F .. .h. 1 "r,m rePrt- He mei ,h" P'O first flood control I jeel as! levee work at Dillard. as a rwnlt of the flood control act passed by Congress that year. This survey. McGibbons said, was completed i.i 1939 and sub mitted to Congress. As a result of the survey- the engineer said, seven projects were ,4hori7.ed by Congress. These were on Smith River and on the Umpqua at Gardiner, Reedsport, Wnston and Wilbur. In 1939, MacGibbon said, the rivers and harbors act of that year authorized a comprehensive survey of the Umoaua basin. He said the army engineers are still By Phone Identified. The telephone comoanv was in dicted on a charge of "being an accessory to the operation of gam bling houses." Five other corporations indicted Monday operate hotels at Miami Beach. They are: Selray corpora tion, lessee of the Surfsidd hotel; Central Investment company, owner of the Clinton hotel; Palm Court hotel, Inc.; Cromwell Hotei, Inc.; and the William Penn hotel, Inc. It previously had indicted the Rolfe Armored Car service 0 n charges of handling gambling ca sino funds. They were charged with renting rooms for gambling purposes. The offenses allegedly took place last winter. Wide Corruption Charged The grand jury previously had indicted Dade county Sheriff Jimmy Sullivan (since removed) and seven of his deputies. It called the sheriff "faithless artl incompetent" and said depu ties had been "on the payroll of the racketeers, taking directly from those racketeers instructions whom to raid and whom not to raid." It pointed to "the corruption of charities, churches, political or ganizations, veterans organiza tions, municipal governments, po litical campaigns, elections and public officials by these rack eteers." The jury said that for several years the Miami district of the Tel ephone company "did not exercise that extra vigilance" needed to prevent its property from being used for unlawful purposes. J. M. Phillips, district manager of the Telephone company, issued a statement saying "we consiller gambling a dirty business and want no part of it." "We categorically deny that we have ever knowingly aided or abet ted the operation of gambling houses in Miami or anywhere else," the statement said. Bonds for the Telephone com pany and other corporations were set at SI ,000 each. Names of the individuals were not released pend ing their surrender. Motorists Found Dead In Car Near Corvallis CORVALLIS (JP) Isaac El more Parks, 54, Kennrwick, Wash., and Steve Elmer Kish, 33, Sac ramento, died of carbon monoxide poisoning sometime during the night in their parked car about six miles south of Corvallis. Coroner Dr. Paul Scott an nounced the cause of death after examining the bodies, which were discovered in mid-morning. He said the deaths appeared ac- since windows in their old-model car were not tightly closed and there was no evidence of suicide or foul play. The two men apparently were enroute from Kennewick to Cali fornia in a car operated hy Kish and registered to George D. Lind scy of San Francisco. working on It. By 1945, they real ized it would take a long time to complete the survey, he said, and offered to submit to Congress an interim report. Congresa author, ized this, he said. Since then. MacGibbon stated. Is areas on (tie Umpqua have re- quested flood control projects. He Jev?n q th, projct, nav. shown economic justification and have been authorized in the levees Rfid overflow closures at Riversdaic and Garden valley, chant.el enlargement a0) a by pass channel at Sutherlin creek and Cooper creek at Sutherlin, levee work at Elk creek at Drain, extension and improvement of ex isting levee on Dean creek, and improvement and extension of ex isting levees at Reedsport. Storage Dams NedeU. MacGibbon said thW only way the army engineers have of learn ing about flood conditions is through actual floods. He said the 1 19SO flood shows clearly that lev es alone will not offer enough Strikers Frozen Quiet Settles Over Korean Front Ice-Tipped Winds Slow United Nations Forces In Push To Manchuria SEOUL, Korea (JPl A frozen silence settled over Korean battle fields today. Temperaturea of aix above zero virtually paralyzed the northwest ern front where an estimated 60, 000 Chinese Communists face the concentrated U.S. First corps. It was even colder in th northeast. Ice tipped winds swept down from mountain peaks on the quilted Chinese and on ahivering Americans, many still in summer uniforms. Th U, S. Eighth army was rushing arctic clothing to the chilled troops. Parka clad marines pushed through frozen hills in the center of the line toward Changjin reser voir and ita great hydroelectric development. Farther east, two regiments of the U.S. Seventh division marched along ice caked roads in subzero weather toward the Manchurian border.,,30 milea away. Winds of 40 miles an hour made it difficult for fighting men of the Seventh division to breathe. Their handa and feet were numbed by the cold. Sleds and oxcarts carried heavyj weapons and equipment through the mountain roada north of Pung san. Spotty Fighting Reported Red mortars opened up on the troops three hours after they started the march toward Kapsan, 15 miles northwest. Other Seventh division patrols reached the Pujan reservoir 35 miles southwest of , Pungsan without seeing the enemy. On the snow covered hills of the east coast, the South Korean cap ital division beat off a tank-led North Korean attack with the help of the eight-inch guns of the U.S. cruiser Rochester and the rockets of marine planes. A U. S. Tenth corps spokesman said the battle left the South Ko reans secure in their positions on the Orangchon river, 90 miles south of the Soviet border. Far behind the lines a bypassed force of about two Red battalions about 2,000 men attacked South Korean troops in Ppongyang, 60 miles northeast of Seoul. The Communists were driven out in an eight hour battle. At 10:30 a.m. the fight was still raging outside the town. South Koreans said they killed or captured 141 Reds. Two B-29s hitting the oft-bombed bridges across the Yalu river from Sinuiju to Manchuria were dam aged hy six Russian-built MIG-15 jet fighters. The big bombers made forced landings at Seoul's Kimpo airport to get medical care for injured crewmen. The six enemy jets were driven off by American F-80 Jets. None of the jets American or enemy was damaged. Blood Donor Units Asked Of Oregon State Depts. SALEM (JPl Governor Doug las McKay called upon all heads of state departments today to set up blood donor organizations their departments. He said the Red Cross blood donor program is a "vital factor in the civil defense program." protection from flood waters. He said the army engineers believe that the only solution to Umpqua basin flood problems is a com bination system of storage dams and levees. There are no storage dam sites on the North Umpqua river, Mac Gibbon stated. He said this river in time of flood will just ha"-Jo be allowed to flow uncontrolled. However, he aaid, there are two good storage dam sites on Cow creek and several good sites on the Soulh Umpqua river. He said there were three major problems which would have to be settled before building storage dams. These he listed as obtaining right-of-way and property for dams, the fish problem and sportsmen's oppo.'Am. and how to Ifandle the power from storaite dams. MacGibbon closed his talk by stating the intensified flood con- trol work in the Umpqua basin will not be started until the army engineers have comp eted their and sub- comprenensive survey mitted it to Congress. Canadian Plane Pilgrims From Rome Ploughs Into Rocky Alpine Mountain GRENOBLE, Franc I API Th first rescuer reached th scan ioday where Canadian airliner crashed against th sid of an Alpin cliff and reported '''nothing left but pieces of bodies" of th 58 passengers and craw. Most ef th 51 pssngrs war Canadian Holy Year pit. grims homeward bound from Rom. Th rtcur, French army Alpin troop General Valett Dot!, reported by radio that th plan broke into pieces and that bits of bodies and parts of metal war scattered over 500 yard area. H said th plan had dug into th rocky fac of th moun tain at full power. Th bodies war covered by light blanket of snow. Hit-Run Driver Inflicts Injuries On Boy Bicyclists Two boys were injured and a third boy narrowly escaped injury in a hit-run accident on the Gar den valley road, five miles west of Roseburg, Saturday afternoon, State Police Officer S. A. Morrii reported Monday. The boys were identified by Of ficer Morris as Thomas Kimball, 12, Roy Linamin, 14, and Eugene Linthicom, 13, all of Roseburg. Officer Morris said the youths, traveling by bicycle, stopped off the road in a driveway near the H. W. Conn place whea they were struck down hy the unidentified au tomobile. Officer Morria said the light colored green or gray Ply car was thought to be a late model, mouth. Morria aaid the driver stopped his car, got out and looked bark at the boys lying on the ground. He immediately got bark into hia car, Morria said, and drove away at a high rat of apced. Kimball was knocked uncon scious as a result of the accident receiving a broken leg and lacera lions about the face. Linthicom re ceived lacerations about the legs, Linamin escaped injury. The hoys were picked up b y Mrs. G. W. Conn, who assisted them to Roseburg, where they re ceived medical attention. Morris said, according to w 1 1 nessea. there waa only one occu pant in the hit-run auto. He said ine driver appearea wi wom ing man. Officer Morris requested that any persons, especially garage men, observing a car of the above de scription with possible right front fender and side damage report it to the local state police office. Secretary At U.N. Apparent Suicide COLUMBUS, O. (JPl Author ities awaited a toxicologist'a report today in the apparent suiciUe death of 40-year-old Miss Isabel Smith, secretary of the senate or eigr relations committee. Miss Smith was found dead in bed in her aister'a home here Monday. Police reported ah left a auicide note aaying she waa taking her life because of the strain and pressure of her work. ' Miss Smith had been on assign ment from her senate job as an attache of the United Stales dele gation at the United Nations. She came here by airplane Saturday for a "short visit," according to her sister, Mrs. Agnes Clancy. Dr. Robert A. Evans, Franklin county coroner, said a small empty bottle was at the bedside. He said he believed the bottle had contained beadache tablets. The sister told detectives M i s a Smith had been "reticent and n'elancholy" during the visit. Ousted Army Officer Found Dead Of Bullet FREDERICK, Md. (JPl Lt. Col. Harold J. Isbell, 49, was re lieved last Saturday as comman dant of Camp Detrick, the army's bacteriological warfare center. Monday he was found dead In hia automobile, a bullet hole through his head and a .45 caliber revolver in his hand. Isbell was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel just 12 days ago. He had been a major. Army Issues January Draftee Call Of 40,000 WASHINGTON (JPl Th army today announced a call for moon draftees in January. The new call 'brings the total army request to 250,000 since the outbreak of the war in Korea. All m-n brought into the aer vice through the selective service system to dajf have gone to the army. The navy and air force con tinue to depend upon volunteers to build up their manpower. Man Restored To Life After Heart Beat Stops LONDON (JPi A man whose heart slopped for three minutes was brought back to life for five days, a doctor reported to a cor oner's hearing. Dr. J. W. Shackle, pathologist. : said the 110-year-old man, Charles Uyarren, was undergoing an opera- Wi for a kidney ailment when till rirart stopped. The an sioppeo. me surifeun i"" I saged Warren'a heart rmiaclee anJW roni n n n-ra , i after three minutes it began beat-, Restrain your grouch, alto Te During th fiv dayi h lived tng again. he! 'remained nnconaetoua. - Yith Holy Year Rescue organizers her began preparing to remove th bodies from their lofty resting place at th tirat ugnt tomorrow. . Guides pushed through rain and snow all last night in search for the plane, starling as soon aa newa of the crash was received. Earlier today guide had mes saged that they had spotted the wreckage near the north face of Mount L'Obiou. Photographs of Pope Piua XII, who had blessed the pilgrima shortly before they took off from Rome Monday for Paris and home, wer found acattered in a forest aeveral milea from the acenc of th crash apparently carried b y mountain galea. Scraps of a diary written by on of the pilgrims told of the audi enre with the Pope and of recit ing the Rosary imploring t h mercy of heaven before boarding the plane. The radio message from th guides said: "The airplane seems to be completely destroyed. "The wreckage of the fuselag is scattered in a mass of fallen earth at the foot of the north wall of Mount L'Obiou at a spot look ing over the Iaere river." Experienced mountain climbers estimated the guidea were a hard five hours trip from the wreckage. mey sain the face of the mountain ia a solid atone wall 1,800 feet high ana one ot tne most aangeroui spots in the area. The crash occurred about U milea from the spot where an In dian Constellation plunged into th face of Mount Blanc less than tw weeks ago, killing 43 East Indian seamen and a .crew of fiv. AK . . hoirsh" French mountain guide reached the arene of that crash in one of the most hazardoua Alpin feats in history, none of the bodies have been removed because of th snow and the danger of winter ava lanches. One French guide waa killed by an avalanche during th climb. TO BATTLE POLIO March Of Dimes Ups 1951 Goal To $50 Million NEW YORK (JPl The March of Dimes haa raised ita signts for next year and will try to collect S50,000,000 to fight polio $20,000,- 000 more than was collected this year. Announcement of the new and higher goal was made Monday by Basil O Connor, president of th National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, sponsor of the annual campaign. He said the foundation muat not only erase a $5,000,000 deficit it ex pects by the end of th year, but must be prepared for new and higher costs following three yeara of excessive polio outbreaka. He aaid this year is now rated the aecond worst on record, and follows the two successive record breaking years of 1948 and 1949. At present, he said the founda tion is helping 100.000 patients or three and a third times as many as 12 yeara ago. Father Wins Court Suit To Keep Young Son SALEM (JPi A Portland fa ther, Harold Abelsen. won the right in state aupreme court to keep his seven-yea r-olll son. The boy's maternal grandpar ents, Jacob and Marjorie Votk, pe titioned Multnomah county circuit court' for adoption of the child, Dennis Harold Abelsen. The boy'a mother and father were divorced, and then t h mother died almost two years ago. The father was remarried a n d now haa three children in hia new family. The opinion, by Justica Earl C. I.atourette, upheld Circuit J u d g Ralph M. Volman of Oregon city. U ACTIVIANS TO MltT Roseburg Active club will meet tonight ft 7 o'clock at Carl's Haven. Plans are being made for an in-tra-city meeting, tentatively set for Friday, Nov. 17. Also plans ar iaping up for the club's next am ,9i,r ihntv. the date to be an- tiibunced. Levity Fact Rant By L. f Relznstein ay your tax, then ust relax, - ' ' ,. ,. j m . 'ouch. TH yea att your bid In 'II. i