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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 16, 1950)
o U. cf 0, Library Eugene, re. COMP q 0 O D)IEIiICIH HEAVY CAMPAIGN TO GO ON Community Chest Needs More Funds To Preclude Likely Separate Drives Community Chest directors end representative, of agencies participating at beneficiaries mtt in the chamber of commerce offico Wednesdey evening to review results of tho currtnt cem peign. A tabulation of reports from division chairman ravaalad total of $18,442.63 received in cash. In many instancas, dua to inclamant weather and flood conditions, tha workers in sev aral divisions hava baan unabla to complete their asiignmants. It was determine, that several hundred firms and individuals have not been contacted and plans were prepared to carry on the campaign until all desired contacts are made. Within .the next two days there will be a regrouping of workers and a e-assignment of prospects to division chairmen and others who mar be influenced to devote their time and energies to the com pletion of the campaign. Tom Pargeter, campaign chair man, advised those attending the meeting that unless sufficient money was raised to care for the needs of the local participating agencies, they would be faced with the necessity of conducting sepa ate drives in order to carry on their services to the community. He also reminded his directors . L . ....... 1 .4 nlnl tha niirnnc . -.hi-l, ih. l-nmmiinitv fhest was organised and increase, rather than decrease, the number of lo cal fund raising campaigns. Pargeter further urged all who are interested in supporting the worthwhile projects of the various local agencies to make voluntary donations to the Chest fund by leaving their contributions at the chamber of commerce office, chest headquarters, or mailing them to P. 0. box 191. Prominent Folk Missing At Sea CHARLESTON, S. C. (IP) Coast guard planes sighted aa empty rowboat tossing on the waves off Seabrook beach today as sea and shore searches were pressed for the wife of an insur ance company executive and an escort. No sign was found ot Mrs. Fred erick H. Ecker, 48-year-old wife of the Metropolitan Insurance cumpany's board chairman, or James Herd of Shelbyville, Tenn., and New York. They were thrown into the ocean whan their fishing boat capsized Wednesday morning. Two companions were saved, Two others in the fishing party identified only as 1. Kogera anil Mr. Moore were rescued by shrimp trawler. Rogers said Mrs, Ecker and Herd were clinging to an oar from the boat when He last ssw them. Mrs. Eckers was wearing a life preserver and Herd had a kapok pillow, Rogers said. Soviet Claims M' Arthur, Japan Write Secret Pact MOSCOW (1 Pravda de clared today that Gen. Douglas MacArthur is drawing up a secret pact with the Japanese govern ment providing for a 30-year American occupation and large scale rearmament of Japan. The Communist party newspa per said the United States will grant a $1 .000 ,000 .000 loan for re militarization under terms of the secret pact and in addition all the weapons required to equip Japanese forces. Pravda said in a dispatch from Shanghai by Tass, the official Sov iet news agency, that word of the negotiations became known through reports from Tokyo. In the Day's News By PRANK JENKINS A ar n-inlai flnmtta rlnurn in frioiH North Korea, we:re running into something new. This something new is GUERRILLA WARFARE Here are some of the ways it works i ..., ;m ,...,, iu. i will let themselves be seen. When I Stephenson sj.d he would base they are challenged by our men, j "V5 extradition fight on the fact they drop their guns and put up i " "hen he was paroled, he was their hands. When our patrols move bmhed ,rom ln.dian"- . forward to take them prisoner, Tne ,orme,r Klan lead.p,r ' " CONCEALED guerrillas open fire ! ervln, '' term Michigan with automatic weapons and mow City. '"d for murder when he was down our men. paroled last March 23. The Ind. 1 lana attorney general issued a pa- As our motor columns (carrying role violation warrant after Steph troops and supplies) reach narrow, I ,nn disppcarl from his home brush-bordered defiles in the moun-: t Carbondale, I I. in August tain roads, concealed guerrillas de-L. Stephenson, after a bitter court stroy the lead and the rear trucks, i convicted of murder m thus stopping the whole column. : for the slaying of 28-year-old Then the bushwhackers cut loose Wad8e Oberholtzer. with machine guns and automatic weapons. When a fair-sired American armed force appears, tjiey run. j These tricks and dozens of others i sre for ground fighting. Rut they've even learned to ambush our : PLANES. Here s how that works: They make decoys of their de- stroyed tanks, painting them bright- ly tn attract tne attention ot our liominuta on pig rourj lne Weotner ; Mostly cloudy and winel with showtrs today and Friday. Highast temp, for any Nov. 74 Lewatt temp, for any Nov 14 Highest temp, yesterday 50 Lowest temp, last 24 hcurs 40 Precip. last 24 hours 2.4 Preeip. from Nov. 1 3.0 Excess from Nov. 1 73 Prteip. from Seot. t 14. 2 Sunset today. 4:41 p. nr. Sunrise Tomorrow, 7:09 a.m. Gales, Rain Lash Areas Of Oregon Br Tha AMOCtaUKl hiM Gales raged through a broad band of eastern Oregon and Wash ington last night and today while torrential rainfall set an all-time record at Eugene. Tree were uprooted and tele phone and power l.nes tangled from Walla Walla to La Grande as gusts up to 81 miles an hour well above hurricane force lashed the area. Western Oregon and southwest - rn Washington rivers Desan to rise, kugene'a Amazon creek boiled out of its banks in places "lu eviruaiea Dy luwooai. aoutneast rorttand s Johnson creek spread out five inches deep over S E. Foster road from 108th to lMlh avenues. At 5 a. m , sheriff's deputies routed cut families from the threatened homes in the oft-flooded suburban district. Lessening ratn with intermittent clearing was forecast, holding hope the Willamette valley would have only minor flooding. There was mixed rain and snow, too, on the north Oregon coast at Seaside, the telephone company reported. Klamath Falls hsd wet snow that melted as the mercury pushed above freezing. Portland's Mayfair theater was damaged when a clogged down spout sent water cascading down the front of the building. It went through the wall, ruined plaster and made much of the north aide seating capacity unusable. U.S. Casualties In Korea Upped WASHINGTON ( An- nounret Am.rir.n .nl.H. in the Korean war rose today to 28.-1 Ml. an increase of 646 over a Week ago. The figure Is for casualties whose nMt of kjn were notifipd through Nov. 10. Actual casualties have been larger since reports to next ot kin often lag several weeks behind the casualties Of the total announced by the ! Defense department today, 4.798 : were deaths. Non-fatally wounded numbered 19,740. Persons reported at one time or another to have been missing in action totaled 4.347. Of these, 517 have since returned to United Na tions military control, four have 1 tiled and 107 are in enemy hands. This left the number still missing on Nov. 10 at 3,719. The army has suffered by far the largest number of. casualties, 24,989, compared to 3.375 for the marines, 311 for the navy and 206 for the air force. The dead were: army 4,049; ma rine corps 627, navy 49, and air force 73. Former Grand Dragon fights txtradition Minneapolis i.pt David 1 C. Stephenson, former grand dra gon of the Indiana Ku Klux Klan, said today he would fight extra dition there on charges of parole violation. I have a little money left and if !"? ,h. kP'rom 0,n oacK. stepnenson saia He was arrested while working at a sub- urban Minneapolis printing plant when fellow employes recognized a newspaper picture of him. , . : Elecfrtc Iron Starts fire. Then Puts It Out WASHINGTON '." An elect- ric iron which someone forgot to turn off started and out out a fire m an apartment house here. Firemen who answered an alarm jd thev found that the iron burned thamigh the ironing hoard, then through the floor where it melted a Jead water pipe. n h. t.. t,-m. .k. , nri ni i.r irr.tr, ih. pipe'had extinguished the ,nolder-' pipe nao extinguisnea tne . ,n fir-p ma siiht DouglUs, Retiring U.S. Envoy, May Lose Eye SOUTHAMPTON. England i.ri, l.ewis Douglas, the retiring U.S. ambassador to tendon, d closed today he may have to have fc T.V UZI operates 1 on the eve since he snagged it with a trout flv while finning near ; k- A ...1 nan I Established 1873 Allied Troops Advance Through Sleet Storm Manchurian Border Only 20 Miles Off Chines Rtds Repulsed After Slashing Holes In South Korean Lines By Th AHOcia(d PrM Driving through a sleet storm, United Nations forces pushed for ward on a 30-mile front in north 1 west Korea today. Other allied i trnnm nooMl In within 90 mi H t th. u.n.k..in k..r m I tral advances along the frozen northeast front. nurmrasi ironi. In the western advance, lines north and west of the Chongchon river moved up as much as three miles. These lines are manned by South Korean. British and units, of the U. S. First corps. On their right flank, South Ko reans who have been subject to !ne heaviest blows of the commun - i.-v nicniy, nt auic iu biiuinu ineir lines, iney were ariven dsck four m,U. vctrH.v To the northeast on the Pung- san front. U. S Seventh division units thrust against light rests- tance and gained five miles. U. S. marines ran into a sizable force of Red troops on the Chang - i. ;, m.i. ... .. :, Jin reservoir. This was the first time in six days the marines have felt any real enemy strength, ratrois or me seventn marine regiment encountered the R e d I west of the reservoir and the town of Hagaru which they captured without opposition. The marines pounded the foe with 10S MM. ar tillery. South Keraans Rally Earlier the marines had heard reports of a big Chinese Commun ist buildup in the snowcapped mountain wct nf thm rui vnir There were indications the whole Chinese 42nd army was in the!""' romance ot Jacksonville s mountains. i safety commissioner R. D. Suttoti The Reds made an amphibious nd ,he of a prominent truck landing behind the lines of the I lnS firm head. South Korean capital division now The husband, J. P. McRae 34 within 90 miles of the Soviet Siber- had learned of the rrvat and was ;"" """ " T'"" -"---v But a furioua counterattack by the Sogth Koreans drove the Com munists back two miles on the Myongchong front. American naval guns and planes had come to the rescue of the bat tered South Koreans. Eight-inch i euns of the U. S. cruiser Roches-1 ter anu rockets of msrine and naval planes hit at the enemy. The U. S. Tenth corps said the counterattack wiped out half of a Red battalion which made the amphibious landing. The allies stepped up their roundup of Red guerrillas oper ating behind the lines to the south. The U. S. Third division captured 200 Reds near Wonsan. 'Russian Roulette' Wins In Gamble With Death INDIANA. Pa. (JPI The In diana county coroner said a young hospital orderly was wounded fa tally the third time he pulled the trigger of a revolver while play ing "Russian roulette" last night. Dr. Edward L. Fleming gave lne following account of the death 01 rrra '-napia. 20. ot nearby jMnciiiiic, an trmpiuyre .1 Lite Torrance State hospital: Chapia went to the home of Austin Osman of Josephine ami borrowed a .32 calibre pistol to I lake bear hunting. After being given the gun, Chapia asked Os man and hi& wife: "Do you know how to play Rus sian roulette?" Neither Osman nor his wife an swered. Chapia inserted one bul let in the weapon's chamher and placed the muzzle aga.nst his head. He pulled the trigger and there i w as a click once more and I another click. I The third time, the bullet tore I into his brain. Red Registration Belies Chinese Savant's Denial LOS ANGELES iP) Two former members of te police Red squad hlentified at an immigra tion department hearing here a Communist party registration form they said was rrude out to Dr. Hsue-Shen Tsien, a top jet propulsion expert. The Chinese-born scientist, iorm "h .' t-ahfornii Institute of Technology, has denied being a lominunist. i nt nearing is on whether he should be'-'deported as rn alien belonging to a group ad vocating the overthrow of the U. government. William F. Hynes, former head nf the Red sauad. and William! Ward Kimple. the squad's eOmder- ground ajjent, identified the Com-j "Kew'Vred'p.. 7 1 after he attempted to ship l.ono pmindi of icientifie document! to Vi Y' - H ; " . I' A I r . : t Mi J., ' . ' , ali Wi ism .-. JOYCE HARPHAM. I daughter of Mr. and Mrs , Harpham of Deer creek road, Wei elected for October's . i I 0,r' of the Month" by the i. i I i . i I . , --n narpnam, 13 years old is a junior at Roteburg high. She was selected from a group of :,hr4, -lr, nominated by the ; - - i i -i i l , &irls league council. Joyce has I " " . '. n outstanding record of service .to the organization as well as an area ant record nt unu p4lt Jnd pr.nt lor the school . . i 7 ,B. . . d i as a whole. j Jenkins.) iritigrf Dy raul Man Slays Wife, Her Lover In Bed PAI.ATKA. Fla. (JPi Two fho,"n bl",, "ded h elandea- waning near auuon s weii-iurn shed but lonely lakeside cabin ?5 miles from here. He caught the two in bed in a nude embrace Wednesday morn- uig. ured twice at close range. staggered from the cabin and col- lapsed of a heart attack. Mrs. McRae's head was blown off. Sutton s was almost so. She was 33; Sutton 39. All these details were told to a coroner's jury by a brother A. G. McRae and two friends whom the husband telephoned Wednesday morning to ask if they would meet him there to take photographs of the lovera so he could use them as evidence. But the photographs were not taken. The shooting came first. McRae was jailed, then taken to a hospital here under guard. His condition was reported as fair. No charge was placed against him. Sutton was married and had a son. Mrs. Sutton was reported vis iting somewhere in the west. iq i IP above! . V. V. felD err..-, ... 0M (j ' ' " -.-- " PHONE STRIKE SCUFFLE Philadelphia city police and pickets of fion Worlten of America scuffle outtidt a Pennsylvania Bell Telephone Company tichanqe r P 11 'P-'. -"by. . ' union", fn, ,.P.;n, tor wrk- Police reserves were summoned to open e lane through the picket lines eMJ the Bell opera- or Mrd building. At ttaht three euictrt restrain picket, and policeman 0 left xL I L . iL A I Aft V- C.A. 1 J ROSEBURG. ORECON THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 14, 19S0 Price, Wage Controls Held Necessary Stabilization Director ' Voices Warning; Senator Demands Action Now WASHINGTON tjpi Senator Martin H l'il today called for im mediate price and wage controls "clear across the board," but Sen ator Bricker (R-Ohio) voiced a hope they may be avoided. I "Regimentation should be held at a minimum unless we get in an lt.ftiit yrir " Df-ir-lrAo ..... nA 11 contended such steps as higher JUDGE WALTER L TOOZE, taxes and elimination of "all un-i above, elected Nov. 7 to po necessary" government spending 1 sition No. 3 on the Oregon su would curb inflation. j pr,me court, was sworn into Martin said he. too, is "hellishly ! . Mi e.. j. opposed to government interfrr-' ,h' ?,f'" .Sll,m d .'ue ence in business, but the way the ' eeeding Justice J. O. Bailey, dollar situation is going means; who retired ahead of the ex that something must be done piration of his tm January I, W'My " , .. . i next. Succeeding Tooie on the Alan valentine, ine nations eco- mimic stauiiizaiiu . oirrcior. nin ea nomic stabilizatio. director, hinted strongly last nignt tnat wage-price , controls may be imposed soon un - less inoustry ana laoor ' exercise restraint." In a speech before the Economic club of New York, Valentine called ; tor noiaing tne line on prices or ! reducing them if possible at the ; expense of profits. "We must not and will not hesi tate to use mandatory Hirect con trols to deal with any recalcitrant groups, and in such areas as vol untary measures have failed," he: said. ! Noting that some prices and wages have risen considerably since the start of the Korean war in June, Valentine said the govern ment will not hesitate to impose orire and wane mntmli if nnlirv .a i.,...,. if Earlier Ihis year and' onlv after! a bitter fight. Congress approved' an economic controls law which gives President Truman full discre- lion as to when or whether wage non "nking He I workers from re and price controls should be im-! PorllnK for work- ,.' nfV "Im posed. The Isw requires that one'1.""' vorted non-strikers to their cannot be imposed without the I other. "Price and wage controls should i D imposed immediately - riRht now-and clear across the board," UiMiii H.i.r "It u.n,,H nnt k r f fee t i v t o try and "on1 ur eueime ;u ir ana no it on a piecemeal basis." c u-.-l 1 1 "T'" ""W" Owner, W. J. Weaver, Dies Word has been received of the death Monday in Ontario, Calif., of William J. Weaver, former owner ot Roseburg. im .iuici umua Weaver owned the local hotel for 14 years before selling the business to J. A. Harding, July 1, 1926. Weaver, an ex-Pendleton, Ore , resident, also operated the Yreka Inn, Yreka, Calif. Services were held Wednesday in Ontario. He retired there some years ago fori reasons of health. Mr. Weaver ia survived by the I widow, Lillian, and a brother in i Iowa. J i.i. l a. -a l l " " v c'rcu'1 ! . . . . , i .""'. ppoini.i 1 Wednesday by governor Doua- . las McKay. Injunctions Hit Phone Strikers PHILADELPHIA (Pl The nationwide telephone strike marked by flaring tempers on the rirket line and a lesl tug of-war uver injunctions entered the sec ond week today with no immed iate prospect of peace. I he Bell Iclcphone company went to court seeking an Injunction that would prevent picketing of the company s exchanges in Philadel- ! phia. scene of two nitket line bat- " '"'' l,s'J lVJd."v. ,l" 1 j1 ' hilielJ'h!"J """'up inM-,a km m. "n consecutive diy lo prevent i . Another clash occurred at Wash ington where a line foreman re ceived a black eye in a battle be- een P'"' na ,""'''' ' wi-cn- unu ruiumac i cie- 1 one nipany. Two pickets were 11.B,ij h 1: ,j i.. questioned by police and later re leased. And in New York, an AT&T, stockholders meeting was c o n ducted against a backdrop of boos and catcalls. The meeting was at tended by a number of employee stockholders. The Bell injunction request here snowed similar acfon in seven I other states. Injunctions against picketing were granted in Louis iana, Virginia, Kentucky and Wis consin hut were refused in Neb raska and Georgia. Action is pend ing in New Jersey. JAILED FOR SPRE . Stanley Saxon Palmer, 59. was committed to the city jail for 10 days in lieu of a $20 fine on a drunk charge. Municipal Judge Ira B. Riddle reported Thursday. king CIO Comfhunlc- ha. the stri 2M-50 Sales Of Beer To Students Of U.O. Probed Eugene Hearing Follows Five Suspensions For Drinking In Dormitory EUGENE .V) Charges of beer sales to minors at two popu lar college student meeting places were aired here Wednesday, but it was the long-range policy that SeemeH tn allrj-t mtat inla-..t The policy question: "Should beer salea be permitted near the university of Oregon campus?" Parents and university officials will have a chance to tell the State Liquor Control commission what they think about it. The hearing Wednesday, con ducted by commission examiner Carl Glos, was on a charge that the College Side inn and Taylor's Coffee shop had sold beer to min ors. Hersrhel Tayloi- said he had mane made no salea to minors but con- ceded that minors had consumed beer on his premises. Glos deferred decision on the charges. After the hearing, Commissioner Richard Reed said the policy ques tion would be placed before the commission later this month. Dean of Men Ray Hawk and Dean of Women Gokla Wickham were on deck for the university but were not called during the hearing. However, after the hearing, Hawk told Reed, "you know there is plenty of evidence" and added if the commission didn't take a firm atand the "publicity is going to be very bad." Mra. Wickham tleclared "any number of the 17-year old" girls had told her they could get Oeer anytime they wanted. Both deans declined, however. to aupplyaaffidavits to this effect lrom the students. Hawk said "I don't like In cru cify the kids when the evidence is there anyway." Oldar Student Involved Taylor's admission that he was Kuilty of permitting a minor to drink on the premises followed testimony by student Charles Co vey, 19, Portland, that an older student took Covey's money to the bar, bought beer and carried it to Covey. Reed saitl It had long been un ersity policy to prefer having the atudents who are going to drink beer do so at places where tney can be watched, lie added this apparently has changed. Dean Hawk agreed that university Pres ident Harry Newburn now wants beer removed from near the cam pus. Mrs. Geln Porter, Eugene, prominent in the Oregon Mothers' cub, said "there are plenty nf Oregon molhera willing to ask that beer be removed." She aanl that in the past there never seemed to be atarting point for the campaign. She in dicated this may be the time. In his own delense, Taylor said he had always, in 31 years of op erating the coffee shop, endeav ored to determine the ages of the students. He said there should be a schoql penalty for older students who buy beer ami distribute it to the under-age students. His wile, who also testified, said "that is what happened at home coming, and added I wouldn t go through that again." r ive university students were suspended Wednesday for drinking beer in a dormitory room. Four were war veterans. The names were not disclosed hy student affairs director D. M. Du Shane. Probation Violation, Bad Driving Draw Penalty Claren Barlety Hooper, 18. o f Winston was sentenced to serve 60 days in the Douglas county jail and lined sio on charges of reck less driving and violation nf proba tion, reported Justice of the Peace A. J. Geddes. The fine resulte.l from the charge of reckless driving while the 60-day aentence was tnvolked for violation of 'probation. An ad ditional 30-day sentence on the for mer rherge wss dismissed. Hooper was on probation from the justice court for 80 days on a charge of illegal possession of alcohol beverage by a minor, said Ceddes. For that reason, the sen tence became effective upon the diiilty plea for reckless driving. Hner was arrested by a deputy shenlf. 5. P. WORKER KILLED KLAMATH FALLS A Southern I'tkifir roundhouse , worker wa rut in two at the waist Wednesday when run over Q the -" bi ! j,mf, j Dit iwncn engine ana two nesses said the worker. Huffman, had walked into . theeath of the cara heina ou.hed b)ie locomotive. Creek Levels Higher Than In Oct. Flood Roads Closed, Bridge Washed Away; Triangle In Roseburg Damaged A total of 3.46 inches of rain in a 24-hour period, ending 6 a.m. today, fell in the Roseburg area but another big flood was thought to be unlikely. Small creeks in the county were reported at higher levels than during the flood of Oct. ?9 30 but snows in the mourc taina were preventing the riven from reaching flood stages. State police reported the rains last night caused slides and wash outs, closing several state high ways. The Pacific highway south of Canyonville was closed last night by a slide and washout. It was open for traffic this morning. Further south, the police re acted, the Siskiyou mountains are practically impassable because of heavy snow falls. Highway 38, between Drain and Reedsport, was closed last night ly a slide below Scottsburg. The police did not know when the road would be re-opened. Damage Reported The Douglas county roadnus ter's office reported the small creeks n the area were higher lasl mni u"n during the flood of uci. aw. ine waters damaged tins on tne new Melrose road bridge. The roadmaster'i office said the Drxonvtlle area suffered the loss of a bridge and a large C-lype culvert was washed out on the Dixonville-Carnes road. A fill on the Burkhorn road near the Mar place was washed out. Water has closed Happy Valley road to iookinglass. Conditions In Roseburg loseburg waa not seriously dam. aged by the heavy rain. City Man ager M. W. Slankard said all the rain water was carried by tha sanitary sewers, which kept them filled. The disposal plant had to by-pass much of the sewa?e and dump it directly in the river, Slankard said Some streets were covered with j several inches ot water but the worst damage waa reported at the north side triangle. Employes I oi Henmnger's market spent most i of the night shifting merchandise I so it wculd not be damaged by j water. The store floor was cov 1 ered with several inchea of water, I Alleged Kill-For-Pay j ei nkfar Ol Un.t I 'Oyer OoCt Of Hunt CHICAGO (.P) Police said I today a nation wide search is being n.ade for a Trenton, N. J., man who reportedly told a pal he had been paid $9,000 for killing William J. Drury, a former police lieutenant. The man being hunted for ques tioning :n connection with Druy'i slaying was identified by police aa Anthony Rotondo, 35. Charles Di Urn nor to. 32. also of Trenton, an ex-convict and for gery suspect, was reported by police to have told them that Rotondo had admitted to him that he killed Drury. Di Umberto, brought here on subpoena issued by the Kefauver senate crime committee investigatorr. Drury, 48, was assassinated by gunmen last Sept. 25 shortly be fore he was to testify before the committee on Chicago gang ac tivities. Liquid Asphalt Blast Deals Injury, Damage CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. UP) One person was injured and a house damaged when 35.000 gal- , Ions of liquid asphalt exploded. The asphalt was being transfer red from a rail tank car to truck when the blast occurred. The blast set fire :o a dwelling about 50 feet away, but the family escaped injury. Tht cause of the explosion was not immediately de termined. OPENS BUSINESS HERE Thomas Hubbard has openetl a sewing machine repair shop at 908 Military street in Roseburg. Hubbard, a veteran, was recently released from the Veterans hos pital at Walla Walla, Wash. He was in the same business in Walla Walla before coming here. BRICK PLANT BURNS EATONV1L1.E. Wash. (.P) Fire destroyed the Clay City brick plant four miles north nf here last mint. The plsnt was the largest producer of face brick in the Pac ific northwest. The loss may run to several nundred lhous,n(i dolIir, . NO FIRE DAMAGE The Roseburg fire department was called to 1021 S. Mam street Wednesday afternoon, to control an overheated furnace. There was r.o damage except a small amount fiom situate. FESTIVAL THEME SET PORTLAND I.P) The Rose Festivsl sssociation announced the 19M floral parade theme would be "Do You Remember." The event will be limited to 50 floats. Lity Fact R ant By L F Reizenstein If Oregon's legislature, at presently constituted geograph ically, isn't "unbalanced," it probably will be mentally by ' fl?ilh.V S'.OPP1'" with me state . tmanctai pre-dicoment. i iittic in rtiii, itd vnina. noTntr piCKV Dy Tntj coit, inr tt irtpnoroj