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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (May 17, 1951)
& SECTION TWO Establish! 1173 ROSHURG, ORECON THURSDAY, MAY 17. 1951 117-51 SPEAK WITH AUTHORITY Tlw self-propelled -Loot Toms" blue oi Seoul. The 155-mm. gum played large part in temporarily sutlinr v . f ' i . r .-m - r .is- ON THE MOVE AGAIN". 8. Infantrymen follow a alg-aag Korean road a they more Into new posi tion! along Korean front. United Natlona forces drore nine mike north of the 38th parallel on the east coast. In the west the Alliea drore up from 8eoul to within 1J milee of the old boundary. (NEA-Acme photo by Staff Photographer Ed Hodman.) Suicide Effort To Cheat Prison Sentence Fails ALBUQUERQUE UP) Dr. Nancy Campbell sought death rather than go to prison for kidnap ing. But she failed and was admit ted Saturday to start serving 10 to l.S years in the state penitentiary at Sant Fe. "I prefer cremation. This Is the best way out. Nancy," read a note she penned in her jail cell before slashing her wrist with a smuggled razor blade. Another woman prisoner found the Santa f'e woman doctor bleeding in a shower room. The jailor called a doctor who stopped J2l a w.vvvw ana are again bluing away at new Red ouiiaup. (U. a. the bleeding before Dr. Campbell's condition became serious. It was another of the fateful events that have dogged Dr. Camp bell ever since she kidnapped a Santa Fe school girl. The brilliant physicm gave up her fight against the sentence dropping plans tor an appeal to the state supreme eourt. She had been free on $40,000 appeal bond Dr. Campbell, 44, was convicted April 21 of the ransom kidnaping of Linda Stamm, nine, strn-dtugh-ter of Allan Stamm, wealthy Santa r e contractor. Her plea of Insanity was rejected by a district court jury. The Stamm child was lured from her home last Nov. 10 and was re turned unharmed the following nitht after FBI and other officers seized Dr. Campbell as she reached for a dummy ransom package. UOMT, TINDf, IKN lVOt ...SCtUtaPTrOVt SATIN cinch containa every quality ingredient necessary for perfect cakes. Millions say... "It's the best cake mix you can buy."Try ctnch today." "mujoms of caats wis mo mnimm- a;o c 'AW l' out to ttnoe RM artlllfry north the Communiat spring ofrenaiTe Army pnowj Kf.A repM PREXY7 Dr. Paul A. Wagner (ebove) says he is stilt presi dent of Rollins College at Win ter Park, Fie. When Informed th college trustees had voted him out, he said the meeting was an illegal one. Wagner aroused controversy when he said nearly one-third of the faculty would be dismissed in an economy move. (AP Wirephoto) , , .... , , , 1'' s--- Black Markets On Cattle Ready To Start Operating; Only Remedy: Stop Buying ; By DOROTHY ROE Associated Press Women's Editor Here we go again, girls. The black markets of World War II are all set to go again, and by fall, economists predict, we'll be lucky to have beef on the table at any price. Oat of all the directives and announcements that. have been pouring out of Washington on the subject of the price of meat, the thinir seems to boil down to this: So far the price of cattle is cut tn?,UU0nthTuT,h,Vwive,'1'.,ri ,h '"" of "bonuses." One lead .0"3.ut. ?u5!"'v". ing manufacturer even announced store" The price cuts that will be visible to the housewife are prom- ised for later in the summer and fall But the cattle raisers naturally , are milled at this new price ce,l-1 ing for beef on the hoof. Many are for. the price cut goes into effect "7 ? wLSSr: f"..? "J .o ..r.u. n. ""-"'""! prices for beef. Farmer Not Concerned , That is the way the black mar-. kets started during the last war, an that looks like the way tney i are ready to start once more. Not every farmer will take the trouble to una out wnai me premium ouyrr is going to do with his beet. If be is willing to pay fancy prices and plans to do a little illegal slaughtering, the farmer may feel that is not his concern. Net result ot all this is likely to be. a shortage of legal meat at ceiling prices, and a new, flour ishing black market. The most effective way to kill a black market, of course, is for housewives to stop buving meat. This is hard to do, with the U.S. appetitie what it is. but if Amer ican women got mad enough they can wipe out any illegal price squeeze overnight. There probably would be a lot of complaining husbands, but its possible to provide nourishing, ap petizing meals without beef or lamb, the two meats apparently most in demand and therefore on the critical list. Poultry Plentiful Chickens, ducks and turkeys still are plentiful, and provide the mak ings for some pretty fancy meals. All kinds of fish also help stretch the food tifhply, and include such lucurious items as lobster, crab and shrimp. Pork chops, ham and eggs, spareribs snd roast pork are dlsnes that rate high with the American appetite, and still can be obtained without mortgaging the old family homestead. So if we're serieus abiut nipping the black market in t.ie bud, we can just cut out beefsteaks and lamb chops from the menus for a few weeks. The national health is no' going to suffer. Wehn ham burger costs a dollar a pound right out in the open legal market, it seems time to call a halt anyway. What w really need to put over the idea, of course, is a great new diet fad, which would proclaim , that fowl and fish are what it takes ! to make you vounger, slimmer and more beautiful. . Plenty ef Girdles, Tee I In other fields, the news 1 1 brighter. So far. the expected short ages in so-called "hard goods" washing machines, refrigerators and such have not developed. You can still buy the appliance of vnur!" milk shipped mto the city choice with little or no waiting which did not meet Portland'! in 1 and no dealing under the table in 1 spection code. Sfew irl'vJ titter f" P""' 0hn..,,iPpu,1",n,Vw: in'utom,,lc he,,lnt unlt for . , ine predicted ruDoer snortage ';tm"xj "PP'" LY1 time high. To the women of Amer ica, this means no relaxation of XiX, for everybody It mean .LothTtXe'ttrub'ne"" y means also that that nice foam rubber is still available for upholstery and mattresses and that the lamily car can go on rolling on all four tires. Altogether, it looks as if U. S. production methods tvill keep on rolling f,t en0Ugh to supply most of the rest of tne wordi lnd tne folks ,t home t00 Portland Plans Fight To Protect Milk Standards PORTLAND P) The city health officer here said Portland will go to court to protect its high standards from the importa tion of inferior grade milk. ,. Such Importation is permitted un der emergency conditions by a leg islative measure signed into law hv Governor McKay, Dr. Thomas Meador, city health officer aaid. "Our standards, higher than atate department of Agriculture regulations, are based on those of the U. S. public health service, and we will continue to maintain them through our inspectors," he said. That might precipitate a court case if the state insisted that lower grade milk be permitted to come into the city, he added. Under the new law, in the event o( a milk shortage in Portland, the state milk marketing administra tion could declare an emergency situation and ship in inferior milk, Dr. Meador said. The health officer, commenting on Governor McKay's statement that the law would not cause lower milk standards in Portland, said: 'I hope he's right." In the event of a test case, Alex ander Brown, city attorney, said the city would base its case on the contention that under a home rule amendment to the federal consti tution a city can enforce more stringent regulations and standards than provided by a state. He said a recent Pennsylvania supreme court decision upheld this position. Brown said Pittsburgh has restaurant regulations which come up to U. S. public health standards' and are Higher than j those provided by the state. 1 The Pennsylvania court upheld the city s right to enforce these reg ulations, he said. Commissioner Fred L. Peterson said earlier the city would "dump" New Republican Stratgey Offered To Oust Acheson WASHINGTON - (. Rep. Phillips R-Calif has come up with a new strategy for house Re publicans aeeking to force Dean Acheson out of office as secretary of State. Such a campaign has been un der discussion in house cloak rooms for several weeks, and ad ministration leaders have conceded privately they are not at all sure they can stop it. Phillips, member of the ap drafted an amendment which . propriations committee, has i would strike Acheson from the State department payroll without mentioning him by name. Attempts to eliminate individuals by name nave been blocked in tne past by court rulings. Phillips' amendment would pro hibit use of any State department A l I mm Never before a shaving instrument like this! aji offer like tb.ii!(Tbe Remington Con tour De Luxe is magnificient in design superior in performance perfect over all to meet the demand of the most dit criminating man. Dring ui any standard electric shaver you own we'll give yon up to S7.50 trade-inallowance .j.j." we'll make it TAAataiKIa f fxaa VAtfi fii tltt a ! 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Service for 8 lUiupqiuiValku v-fejr. r Q Housewares Department funds to pay anyone In the de partment who in the previous five years "was connected directly or indirectly with a business or pro fessional office, any part of whose income was derived from business relations with or professional serv ices for any government other than the government of the United States." "That would get Acheson," Phil lips told newsmen, "because his law firm represented some for eign governments within the past five years and while he still was associated with it." Phillips said he questioned the validity of a proposal advanced earlier by some house members to deny, in an appropriationa bill, any funds for payment of Ache son's salary. "To name the individual could be construed as a bill of attainder and therefore illegal," he said. (A bill of attainder is a legisla tive act which takes away a per son's civil rights or capacities without a judicial Inal. The con stitution forbids bills of attainder.) GUI, Never before So Come in Today; Shave Tomorrow. Ut Your Credit Open An Account j- - SQUARE ROUND CHINA GOLDEN 24.95 SKSnJE: 25.95 0 202 N. JocktM "By not naming Acheson, but by approving a limitation auch aa I have proposed we would ac complish the tame result," Phil lips said. Phillips and others seeking Ache son's removal doubt the wisdom of another proposal to tie up all State department money until Acheson gets out. Just when they will get I chance to offer their amendment is any body's guess. The appropriation! committee hai been holding up the state department budget bill in th hope that sentiment will change. FISH STORY ' FLORIDA CITY. Fla. VP) W. A. Shipp went fishing in Lake Tsala Apopka and dropped his eye glasses overboard. He mentioned hia loss to a storekeeper, Dick Tracy. The next day Mrs. John Hog lund went fishing in the lake and reeled in a pair of eyeglasses. Her husband mentioned her find to the same storekeeper. Now Shipp has hi! glassei again. X aLV.,bf:. 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