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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (May 17, 1951)
14 Tho Newt-Review, Roieburg, Ore. (fhuriM Moy 17. 151 Oftgon Younej GOP Still Aims At Reapportionment Wheat To India PORTLAND tPi An officer of the Young Repiblicans of Ore-1 goi saya that hia organization will i sponsor an initiative petition for reapportionment of the state legis lature. ! Clay Myers, secretary, said the 1 initiative measure would be pre sented to the executive committee at Eugene Sunday. I If the committee fails to approve: the program, the Multnomah county chapter, which already is! on record for the measure, will sponsor it. I If sufficient signatures are o b tained, the measure will be placed on the 1952 ballot. It provides for a I constitutional amendment which requires that the legislature reap portion itself on the basis of popu- iation. Should the legislature fail to do so, the secretary of state would do the apportioning. i The plan would give Multnomah' county 16 representatives and seven senators in place of the pres ent 13V and 6 1-1. U.S. Suffers Propaganda Setback With Russ Offer Big'Vhitey" Found How To Bear Hot Days In This Clime Peggy Loo Gets Divorce From Day Barbour SANTA MONICA, Calif. - (JP Shapely Peggy Lee sang "He Didn't Love Me Any More" to a superiour court judge and thus shed the husband who arranged most of her song successes. The 30-year-old blonde said guitar-playing Dave Barbour told her he wanted his freedom. That caused her to lose weight and be come emotionally jpset. She was divorced on grounds of cruelty, given custody of their seven-y e a r-old daughter, and awarded $100 a month for the child's support. Miss Lee asked no alimony. The musical couple, who have composed many hit songs together, married March t, 1943. NEW DELHI, India IJP The United Sates has suffered a major ma laiki Lr in In A i the further toward the Russian camp alter this Is last development, U. $. Aid Obscured The Russians move completely obscured the fact that the U. S in the past months has been expe diting grain shipments to India at the rate of more than 100.000 tons a month. TJ. S. information and other prop aganda means have failed to get across to the average Indian the fact that what the Soviets are doing on a small scale the United States has been doing for a long time on a larger scale. Shipping records show that in the period between Jan 1 and May 1, the U. S. delivered to India 411.000 tons of grain. The only contribu tion from Communist ' countries during that period was 42,000 tons (mm Red China. Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru himself contributed to this swing of sentiment by the dra matic manner in which he told Parliament that not only had ne gotiations for Russian wheat started but that Russian ships laden with wheat thready were on their way. Nehru Dramatize He made this announcement first and then told parliament an hour later that India was in accord with whichever proposal the U. S. adopted for sending 2,000.000 tons of wheat But the Russian an nouncement blunted the effect of the other. Capitalizing on the propaganda value of the situation, the Soviet embassy allowed word to circulate that tne Russian iiudiuw mu cast aside formal negotiations and m tnian Affirials- "Let us for ipnr result of Russia's skillfully timed j move to send 50,000 tons of wheat get the terms and get wheat started in order to teed your nungry peo ple." GUN MISHAP FATAL OREGON CITY Oscar Widmer, 50, died Tuesday, the vic tim of an accidentally self-inflicted to feed this country's famine-threatened millions. Indian officials, men on the street and the Indian press greeted the Soviet move with widespread approval. They have been receiv ing with growing impatience the weeks-long reports on the ups and downs of U. S. proposals to grant or loan 2,000,000 tons of food grains to India. It is apparent that an important segment of Indian public opinion, which has been wavering between the East and the West, swung gunshot wound. Bernara acnun reiauve, kbiq Widmer, moving here from Bea ver Creek, grabbed a shotgun by the barrel to move it from a truck. It fired, the charge striking him in the chest. The Manchu dynasty China from 1644 to 1912. ruled if If - A nice bearskin coat look fine in January in Duluth, but it hardly imidi comfortable along about August in St. Louis. However,"Big Whitey" of the big Clyde Beatty circus, net along fine In hia bearskin muffler by just keeping reasonably quiet and unconcerned during the hot weather while the circus is on tour. - He'll be here along with numer ous other raritiei in the huge traveling zoo, that is a part of tne main show, when the tenia are pread for afternoon and night performances on Sat. June 2, at the North Umpqua Rd. grounds. Circuses learned a few years ago that polar bean really suffer less from the heat than do the lions and tigers and other tropical beasts, and that a clean, dry, well ventilated cage is far more com- Rancher On Trial For Killing His Life-Long Friend NOG ALES, Aril. UP) The old west of blazing tempera and guns sprang to life anew Wednes day. The story of i point-blank rifle duel unfolded before a jury trying wealthy rancher Jim Hathaway on a aecond degree murder charge. ' Hathaway, who was born of 'a pioneer family in the cattle coun try along the Aricona-Mexico bor der 55 years ago, is accused of hooting his life long friend, Jusn Trlles, 60, to death after an ar gument, ' The two ranchers blasted at each other at short range on the after noon of Feb. It at the edge of the ftnolta stockyards, 34 miles east Of here. ' Tellcs died of wounds in the side and shoulder. Hathaway was un scathed. According to testimony at the preliminary hearing a few days alter the killing. Hathavav and Telles had quarreled over remarks Tclles was sllcged to have made regarding a woman friend of Hath away and Mrs. Hathaway. Witnesses at the preliminary hearing said Hathaway slapped or struck Telles. Then, a witness testified, Telles told Hathaway: "I can't take care of you that way. But I'll go home and get mv gun and I'll take care of you tint way." Hathaway, according to a wit-, ness. retorted: 'You 'it home and get your 1 gun, and I'll be right hero when you come bacic." Telles returned in about half an hour and the shooting started, ; Charles Grout I Dies In Coquille j Charles Grout of Portland, former Rnseburg resident, d I d May 12 at the home of his sister, Mrs. D. H. Morgan, in Coquille. Funeral services were held Tues day in Portland. Mr. Grout and his wife had gone to Coquille to visit Mrs. Morgan and the former was assisting Mrs. Morgan with the opening of her new store, when ho was auddenly ktrickrn with a heart attack. Besides the widow, he is survived by a son and daughter, Paul and Klir.abeth Grout, of Portland, and two sisters, Mrs. Morgan of Co quille and Mrs. Leah Saling of Portland. Mrs. D. II. Morgan was taken to Portlnnd Sundav bv her son nd daughter - in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Morgan of Roseburg. Mrs. Morgan lelt Kuseburg Wednesday for her home in Coquille. She made her home here for many years, prior to moving to the roast. At present rate of use. helium reserves controlled by the U. S. will last more than 50 years. mm j-A JtRAPT Cottaqe Cheese o -Jl I. is Kino i ivM' MADE TO GO WITH WESTERN FRUITS AND VEGETABLES o NEVER TOO MUD NEVER TOO SAITY o NATURAL tUfWN ON THsARM FIAVORQ AND MADE FRESH FOR t-TOU EVERY DAjfj Q fort able to the denizens of the north than a tank of ire water. Polar beara have hair on thr bottom fo their feet, a non-skid device which nature endowed them in the land of the midnight sun Three herds of elephants, scorer of fine circus horses, hundreds oi people including the foremost star, of the circus domain will be here with the Clyde Beatty Circus, with a brand new outfit from stem to stern and top to bottom. Genera' admission ticketa and grandstand seats will be on sale downtown on exhibition day for the convenience of the public and at the same prices prevailing on the ahow grounds. Despite rising labor, food and equipment costs and meteoric soaring of performer salaries, the Clyde Beatty Circus has main tained its popular-price scale, one of its spokesmen said here. j 32c I enninger Thrift Markets Oakland Sutherlin o HENNINGER'S MARTS ROSEBURG. 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