The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, March 24, 1951, Page 4, Image 4

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    ( 4 The New-Rev.w, Roteburg, Of ot March 24, 1951 j
PublilKad Dally tac.pt Sunday by the
Newi-Review Company, Inc.
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'Round and 'Round
THE EASTER MESSAGE
Sf. Mott. 28: 1-7
In the end of the Sabbath, as it benan to dawn toward
the first day of the week, came Mary Magdalene and the
other Mary to see the sepulchre.
And, behold, there was a great earthquake: for the
nngel of the Lord descended from heaven, and came and
rolled back the stone from the door, and sat upon it-
His countenance was like lightning, and his raiment
white as snow:
And for fear of him the keepers did shake, and became
as dead men.
And the angel answered and said unto the women,
"Fear not ye: for I know that ye seek Jesus which was
crucified.
"He is not here: for he is risen, as he said. Come,
see the place where the Lord lay.
"And go quickly, and tell his disciples that he is risen
from the dead ; and, behold he gocth before you into
Galilee; there Rhall ye see him: Lo, I have told you."
St. Mark 16: 1-8
And when the Sabbath was past, Mary Magdalene, and
Mary, the mother of James, and Salome, had bought sweet
spices, that they might come and annoint him.
And very early in the morning tho first day of the
week, they came unto the sepulchre at the rising of the
sun.
And they said among themselves, "Who shall roll us
away the stone from the door of the sepulchre?"
And when they looked, they saw that the stone wag
rolled away: for it was very great.
And entering into the sepulchre, they saw a young man
sitting on the right side, clothed in a long white garment;
and they were affrighted.
And they said unto them, "Be not affrighted: Ye seek
Jesus of Nazareth, which was crucified; he is risen; he is
not here; behold the place where they laid him.
: "But go your way, tell his disciples and Peter that he
goeth before you into Galilee: There shall ye see him as
he said unto you."
St. Luke 24: 1-9
Now upon the first day of the week, very early in the
morning, they came unto the sepulchre, bringing the spices
which they had prepared, and certain others with them.
And they found the stone rolled away from the sepul
chre. And they entered in, and found not the body of the Iord
Jesus.
And it came to pass, as they were much perplexed
there about, behold, two men stood by them in shining gar
ments. '
And as they were afraid, and bowed down their faces
to the earth, they said unto them. "Why seek ye the living
p.mong the dead?
"He is not here, but is risen: remember how he spake
unto you when he was yet in Galilee,
"Saying, 'The Son of Man must be delivered into the
hands of sinful men, and be crucified, and the third day
rise again'."
And they remembered his words.
And returned from the sepulchre, and told all these
things unto the eleven, and to all the rest.
St. John 20: 11-18
But Mar' stood without at the sepulchre weeping: and
as she wept, she stooped down and looked into the sepul
chre. And seeth two angels in white sitting, the one at the
head, and the other at the feet, where the body of Jesus
had lain.
And they say unto her, "Woman, why weepest thou?"
She saith unto them, "Because they have taken away my
Lord, and I know not where they have laid him."
And when nhe had thus said, she turned herself back,
and saw Jesus standing, and knew not that it was Jesus.
Jesus saith unto her. "Woman, why weepest thou?"
Whom seekest thou?" She, supposing him to be the gar
dener, saith unto him, "Sir, if thou have born him hence,
tell me where thou hast laid him, and 1 will take him away."
Jesus saith unto her, "Mary." She turned herself, and
saith unto him, "Kabboni;" which is to say, Master.
Jesus saith unto her, "Touch me not; for I am not
yet ascended to my Father: but go to my brethren, and
say unto them, I ascend unto my Father and your Father;
and to my God, and your God."
Mary Magdalene camo and told the disciples that she
had seen the Lord, and that he had spoken these things
unto her.
Threat Of Decreasing Foocf
Supply Faces, United States
n The Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
(Continued from page One)
of perjury floating around loose in
this country.
Sober question:
How can you have JUSTICE
when perjury is as prevalent as it
seems to have been lulely? Justice
rests upon establishment of
FACTS, low can you establish
facts when witnesses lie under
oalh?
Getting hack to O'Dwyer:
He was suddenly booted upstairs
from mayor of New York City
to United States ambassador to
Mexico.
Why?
Well, I'd Ruess It was done to
hush up the nasty mess that al
ready was conking in New York.
Wouldn't you?
Do you remember Hercules, the
strong man of Creek and Homan
mythology?
liy way of proving him nut, he
was given twelve labors to per
form. One of these labors was to
clean the Augean stables, where
3.000 oxen had been kept for many
years without anybody ever grab
bing a pitchfork or shovel to
clean out after them.
He got away with the job in one
day by divertin! a couple of rivers
through the stables and letting the
waters wash them pure again.
Wouldn't It be wonderful if we
could divert the Potomac through
the city of Washington and in one
day have our capital city washed
clean and pure again? Or if we
could dam up the great Hudson
and send its waters rolling down
through the city of New York to
cleanse away the corruption we've
been reading about there?
Use Charted
Of Highway
Log Volume Estimated
On Oregon State Roads
By OVID A. MARTIN
WASHINGTON (IP) The
threat of a smaller future u p
ply of meat, dairy and poultry
products tianns over t';c i.atinn.
An Agriculture department re
port Monday showed that farmers
plan to plant considerably less land
to livestock feed crops than is
needed to maintain current butch
crshop supplies of livestock food
products.
Unless these plans are changed,
feeders will have to cut down on
production of beet cattle, dairy
men on milk production, livestock
men on hogs fattened and poultry
men on the number of eggs and
chickens produced.
The department said fears of
farm labor shortages at harvest
time and a reluctance to plow
up land which has been returned
to grass was evidently keeping
farmers from expanding crop pro
duction as much as Secretary of
Agriculture Brannan says 'is
needed under the defense program.
Campaign Planntd
faced with this prospect, depart
ment officials prepared to put on a
vigorous campaign urging larger
plantings than are now indicated.
Otficials said porhaps the depart
ment had not adequately publicized
crop needs.
The department had set up spe
cific planting goals for 10 crops.
In the case of five corn, barley,
.soybeans, sweet potatoes and flax
seed the prospective plantings
tire below goals.
Only in the case of dry beans,
potatoes, spring wheat and rice are
the indicated acreages above
foals. No forecast was made for
cotton, for which a 60 percent in
crease is sought.
The unfavorable outlook was
most noticeable for corn, the major
raw material for meat, milk and
eggs. The department had
urged at least 90,000,000 acres for
this crop compared with 84,370,00(1
grown last year.
Food Grains Brighter
Yesterday's report forecast only
85,694,000 acres. At average yields,
the crop would be about 3,050,000,
000 bushels. The department esti
mates the nation will need at least
3,500,000,000 bushels to meet cur
rent livestock feed and industrial
needs and to maintain i modest
reserve against crop failure.
The total production of all feed
prams was indicated at about 117,
500,000 tons. Added to reserves of
about 23,000,000 tons from past
crops, that production would give
a supply of about 140,500,000 tons
Uut the department says needs will
total at least 142,000,000 tons.
The production picture for food
grains is much brighter. A wheat
crop of at least 1.200,000,000 bush
els is indicated. With reserves, a
crop of this size would provide a
total wheat supply of about 1,635,
000,000 bushels compared with
prospective needs of 1,147,000,000.
IF YOUR PAPER HAI HOT
ARRIVED BV l:1S P. M.
PHONI 11431
u
Nowi-Rovlow
tf Hai not boon 1
I d.tivorod by I
1 1 5 p.m., pKona I
2-2631 b.lw...
fclSam.7p.ta.
Two Former Tax
Charges Of Fraud
Collectors Face
OREGON STATE COLLEGE
the volume of logs that will move
over Oregon highways in the next
10 years is estimated in an Oregon SAN FRANCISCO (IP) The
State college school of forestry sur- federal grand jury here has in-
vey that is expected to be useful ' dieted two former executives
The trouble is that the tasks are
I different.
The stables of Augeas were cor
rupted merely by physical filth.
The waters of a river can wash
away physical filth. There is strong
and growing evidence that our
country, at this moment of graver
national peril than we have ever
faced before, is being corrupted
by MORAL FILTH.
It takes more than the waters of
a river to wash away moral filth.
S f-
llll Viahnttt S. Martini
Easter! How manv thoughts Perhaps we need to be more in
come to us all a,t sue! a time. 1 lent upon the simple exercises
have been thinking many limes given us by the Teacher. Maybe
this week about a letter from an we need lo practice more the
out-of-state friend in which she little things, the loving of our neigh-
Editorial Commenf
From The Oregon Press
now managing director of the
Wild.ite Institute of Washington,
D. C. -.
Oregon has thus exported two
men who could he mighty helnful
right now in solving the problems
X ROSEBURG EDITOR GETS
MEDAL FOR WILDLIFE JOB
(Oregon Journal)
Carl D. Shoemaker, conserva
tion director of the National Wild
life federation, has received the
Leopold memorial medal for his
j.ffnt-1. in iL'ilrllifa i.,tii.A,.i;..
The medal was given him at the ; "cauty and fish and game
North American Wildlife confer
ence at Milwaukee.
Oregon will feel considerable
pnoe in tne award since it was in
this state that Shoemaker began j
his outstanding career, lie was
named by Governor Withycombe to 1
the state game commission be !
cause as editor of the Rosehurg
Evening Ncwa Shoemaker crit
icized the governor when he dis
covered the members of the com
mission were poorly distributed
goefraphically. Never since has
hhocmaker been out of the wildlife
conservation field, He has worked
in the national capital, employed
by both private and congressional
groups.
Oregon has furnished another
rationally known figure in wildlife
coi.servation. He is Dr. Ira N. Ga
brielson .former director of the
U. S, fish and wildlife service and
uses much ink be rating the disci
ples for their 'callousness' in sleep
ing, in emotionalism about the
crucifixion itself. She seems so
sure that she wouldn't have slept
bor regardless of the neighbor's ap
parent attitude ("if ye love them
that love you. . ."), the exercises
in self-discipline instead of efforts
at reforming the world, the real-
she forgets, too, that Peter's effort ization of the importance of our
at retaliation was rebuked
From another friend comes
thoughts of Easier. She sees the
crucifixion as a means to an end.
How else imild Jesus have proved
what he taught? Her thought is
tri imphantly grateful for the mes
sage of Easter. For tl.e hope that
is given to each receptive heart.
Sometimes, I think, we are a
little like the beginner in music. We
look at the difficult pages of the
'pieces' we long to play and be
come discouraged. We rebel at
simple exercises. We don't want
lo think about long years of prac
tice. We keep thinking about the
ease with which Die skilled musi
cian plays the music, not only the
difficult but the seemingly simple.
He can take that dull exercise we
find so dreary and make an ex
uisite thing of it.
part, however simple, in the divine
orchestral arrangement? We shall
have more patience, more happi
ness, more sense of accomplish
ment. The mother struggling with the
everlasting washing, ironing,
mending, cooking. . . .who sees it
as service in His name, finds it
easier going. The man laboring
over tiresome routine of business,
or driving the same monotonous
route is also able to serve
in His name.
Such ideas as these have been
going through my mind as I have
thought more than usual about
Easter. If we find ourselves in a
'tomb' of despair grief, frustra
tion, helpless inactivity let u s
think beyond the cross, and reach
out confidently for the blessing.
It's there!
to both logging operators and high
way engineers in road planning
and present and future highway
maintenance problems.
The survey, made at the request
of the Oregon natural resources
road committee of the Pacific Log
ging congress, estimates the
amount of timoer to be cut in all
areas of the state and the routes
it will take to market. Harry I.
Nettlelon, associate professor of
forest management at OSC, spent
a month in compiling data from
all sections of the state.
Eugono-Springfiold Heaviest
Associated with 'Nettleton in the
project were Dean Paul M. Dunn,
Wiliiam A. Davics, professor of
logging engineering, and Robert
Payette, senior in forestry at OSC.
The Eugene-Springfield section
of U. S. highway 99 will have the
heaviest use by logging trucks,
the survey shows. It will carry 347
million feet, or 70.000 truck-loads,
of logs a year. The Springfield
Thurston route on the Mckenzie
highway, the Tillamook-Bay City
and the Bay City-Garibaldi sec
tions on the coast highway are
scheduled for from. 200 to 300 mil
lion feet a year.
Other areas expected to carry
over 100 million feet a year include
Lillamook-lilcnuood, aeaMUe-A s
toria, Langlnis-Coquille. Coquille I
Coos Bay, Thurston-Nimrod, and 1
Cascadia-Albany. A total of 1715 i
miles of highways, it is estimated, 1
will carry from one to 10 million j
feet a year, or a maximum of 10'
loads a day for a 200-day working
year, and another 1606 miles will
carry from 11 to 100 million feet.
Logging Dependent on Trucks
Robert F. Dwyer, Portland,
chairman of the logging congress
committee, pointed out that the
logging industry is nearly 100 per
cent dependent on trucks for trans
porting logs. Trucks now make
possible logging of isolated tracts
that 30 years ago were considered
as impossible to reach, he said.
Marginal timber previously left
as waste is now being harvested,
he said, adding that as much as
25 percent greater utilization of
timbeiiands is possible where
trucks can operate economically
over good roads.
Officer Suspended For Not Shooting Fugitive
SPOKANE (.li A deputy
U.S. marshal, who said he "could
have killed" an escaping youn?
that have arisen over proper use i because the offense was so minor,
of the state s natural resources I has been suspended for 30 davs.
lears ago a clever newspaper
paragraphrr said of a certain pot
ilioian in the public eye "He mis
takes conversation for conserva
tion." Oregon is full of his kind.
Gas Pipeline From Texas
To Northwest Projected
WASHINGTON (,VI The
power com
propose
a few blocks from the" courthouse.
He surrendered as, a marshal's
search party combed the area.
WATER PURIFIER WORKS
LOS ANGELES i.V) An an-
Deputy Charles Carlile will be swer to one of the sreat hazards
off the payroll until April 22 unless i of a major disaster contamina-
Ihe attorney general decides other
wise. Marshal Wayne Hezona said
regulations call for the suspension
when an officer loses his prisoner.
The prisoner, Marvin Glass, 24,
ran away from Carlile as he was
being led from the Newport jail
lo I ho courthouse, a distance of
pipeline
and Washington
Pacific Northwest Gas Pipeline
itMOoiaiion, ot '
Herring Houston
dent, applied on
a permit to build the line
Total cost, ineluitine ii
-a m , .... . .
oi -iiien aim smaller lateral lines
tion of a city's water supply may
be a portable purifying unit
invented by a California Institute
of Technology professor.
Dr. Alexander Goetz' 12-pound
"sanitizer" has been tested by
county health officials and proven
PMivihla nf hirnina n.i,ku ..,
125 feet He gave himself up a few ; (,.,,, ,ne ,., As,., nver lm0
hours later. He had been lailed . ri.r h..;l.ki. i.....i
The unit sucks up water like a
mall pump and filters it through
Grandchild's Poisoner
Dies In Electric Chair
JACKSON, Miss. (.Tl A for
mer dairy herdsman, convicted of
poisoning his granddaughter for
her insurance, died in tlie state's
portable electric chair Thursday.
Houston Roberts protested h i s
innocence. He was convicted o f
the federal income tax collector's
office.
They were Patrick Mooney, re
tired chief deputy of the Nevada
district of the collector of internal
revenue, and Ernest M. Schino,
fired last week as field officer in
the collector's bureau here. Martin
M. Hartmann, a salesman-, also
was indicted.
The indictment charges that the
three conspired to defraud the
government by attempting to ob
struct the revenue bureau's prose
cution of Mrs. Gertrude Jenkins
of 6an Francisco for income tax
evasion.
Hartmann was a salesman for
the Mountain City Consolidated
Copper Co. This is a Nevada con
cern, which the California crime
commission reported was organ
ized by some officers of the de
partment of internal revenue.
Mooney is secretary of the com
pany, a non-producing outfit.
The grand jury probe was
launched after Mrs. Jenkins, on
parole on an abortion conviction,
swore in an affidavit that she
bought $.),000 worth of the copper
company stock in expectation of
avoiding tax difficulties.
Federal Judge George B. Har
ris fixed bail at $1,500 each and
issued warrants for arrest.
Mrs. Jenkins was indicted last
Dec 20 on a charge she tried to
evade paving $25,130 in 1944-45
taxes. Her trial has been set for
May 14.
School Board Member,
Janitor, 2 Cooks Quit
PORTLAND (IP) The Rock
wood school board, center of trou
ble for weeks, met again Thurs
day night with these results:
Board member Lester Tracey re
signed and walked out;
Janitor Earl Wilson heaved his
kyes 40 feet across thu room and
said he quiU
Two caietreia cooks said they
were through.
The two remaining board mem
bers ratified their earlier action
in firing Principal Edwin Simons
and instructor Keith Larson, which
had started all the trouble at th
small school northwest of
Gresham.
Salary Increase Refused
By Idaho Legislator
COTTONWOOD, Idaho f.-tV -State
Rep. Joseph Kaschmitter (D
Idaho) didn't believe state legisla
tors should vote themselves a pay
increase, so he sent his $300 "ex
tra" paycheck back to the state.
mixing poison with medicine be- i "I thought it was morally and
ing given five-year-old Mary Lou
ise Hill. The slate contended Rob
erts wanted to collect the child's
insurance to finance a love affair.
The 44-year-old slayer remained
in a strait-jacket until a few min
utes before the execution. He had
tried to end his life Saturday by
slashing his wrists.
nmission has under study i on " charge of illegal possession I
'd 2,175-mile natural gas I , " sawed off shotgun and was1
from Texas lo Oregon I bc""' Ulkca ,0 ,he courthouse tor
a hearing.
powdered earth that renders dan-
"I fired two shots in the air hut . . ' . """" "r:
which Robert R. j he kept running," Carlile said. "He h, ,)rodllc(:d for ,.. " to 1 ,
,. Tex . is p.-1 Mumbled ,,, ,, .,, , couW nvc f1'; 4 q 0
June 29, 1950, for! killed him. Hr 'wasn't more than , wor , ho,,,, ,' cost
,nJ r . r.i ,i l ,"' few cents per gallon.
thought it would be worse to tl. ;.. !... .
SnJf.'.'llS".? VTr0"' W'" ki" hhVn 1K h'm 8" j "r ? cJnVtnmT.r Congress
" T"liiWi V!li!S IIKI O
out in an alley shed 1 was Benjamin Franklin.
Partly Blind Man To Give
Cornea To Blind Friend
NEW YORK (.! A partly
blind ex-prizefighter will give the
cornea oi his sightless eye in the
hope that it may restore the vision
of a totally blind veteran.
The two met at Marine hospital
on Stale island where they occupy
adjoining beds. After comparing
notes, Eric Josephs, British boxer,
suggested the transfer of the still
inuct cornea of his right eye to
the left eye of his new friend,
Philip Tron, 24, of Jersey City,
Kgr1'
ethically wrong for legislators to
vote for a pay increase for serv
ing in the same session of the leg
islature they were attending,"
Kaschmitter said.
The Cottonwood lawmaker voted
against the bill to pay legislators
$5 a day extra for serving on com
mutes, but the bill passed the
House and Senate and was signed
by the governor.
Death Penalty Given
Slayer Of Policeman
DALLAS. Tex. (.Pi Robert
Johnson, described as a tough, trig
ger i-happy leader of a hill-billy
band, was given the death penalty
here in the death of a rookie po
liceman. Johnson, 33, was one of four La
mont, Calif., hill-billy musicians
charged in the murder of John
nie Sides here Jan. 22 and in the
wounding of patrolman (Hi. L.
Dawson.
SEE OUR SELECTION
OF
AFRICAN VIOLETS
SPRING BULBS
CREBENT LAWN SEED
FERTILIZERS .
PEAT MOSS
CUT FLOWERS
PRIMROSES
SHRUBS
VARIETY OF HEATHERS
GARDEN SUPPLIES
.ROSEBURG GARDEN SHOP
510 W. OAK ST.
m
(Cadler Serviced
9andllA.M.
"THE RESURRECTION
OF MODERN MAN"
7:30 P.M.
Cantata By The Choir
"THE FIRST EASTER"
Mrs. W. W. Woodward, Choir Director
Mrs. Homer Grow, Organist
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Corner Lane & Jackson Rev. Morris H. Roach, Th.D.
FOR . . .
SERVICE ...
EXPERIENCE . . .
CO-OPERATION . . .
Investigate the services offered by your "Home
owned. Home -ope rated" bank Money left on
deposit with us remains in DOUGLAS COUNTY.
All facilities available for your individual needs
Douglas County State Bank
Mmbr Fedtral Deposit tnsuranct Corp.
, Do Your Food Shopping
t EARLY AT NIELSEN'S
this week...
We will be closed Sunday,
""V j March 25, in observance of
(sT Easr"'
Nielsen's Market
Highway 99 S. at City Limits
A Tribute To
Our Churches!
We bring this message to. all the
churches of our city. It is a message of '
deep appreciation for your services
and for your faithful consecration to
the life of Him who died on the cross.
The church is the spiritual gathering
place for those who would worship in
reverent communion and prayer. It is
the cathedral o f contemplation,
whether it be an impressive edifice or
a humble meeting house. Here we
have churches of many denominations
. . . and God lovingly invites you to at
tend the one of your choice. Let's ALL
go to church EVERY Sunday. Let's
pray for the redemption of the world.
Manufactured and Distributed by
0 Douglas County Creamery
o Established 1899
Dial 3-3237 Roieburg, Oregon
o We Salute Douglas County!
0 tugtnt nf tv Springer 0 .
n