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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1951)
3 Thi Newi-IUvlew, Roseburg, RT . r ' , V.fi 1 1--4 I - - J ', B - - , .! . ifwf.L', J iff . ' if 4 ; -it' (-.. ' v, , TO THE BLUE YONDER Prof. Marcel Schfln fijitem coimle rri to ft line to be carried Into upper atmoiphere by balloona ... Reliable Service Trust your loved one to our ears, and be assured thai all arrangements will be carried out in the best of taste, in an atmosphere of quiet dignity, Ganz Mortuary 2MI. S. of Myrtle Creek an Hwy. 9? Ambulance Service 24 Hours a Day Phono Myrtle Creek 502 ; In nr opinion: Th&f'e. are more ; in a Reconditioned RicJcaftl iian in any Comparably priced car " USED PACKARDS PRICED TO SELL '50 Packard 8 Sedan $2195 '49 Packard 8 Sedan $1885 '49 Packard 8 Club Sed. $1795 '41 Packard 110 Sedan $ 530 '40 Packard 110 Sedan $295 '47 " Super Clipper Sed. $1295 '46 " 6 Clipper Sedan $995 Most of these ore one-owner trade-ins on New O Packards. Nearly all are equipped with over drive, electro-matic clutch, radio and heater. We Invite you to drive these beautiful Packards Today. ASK THE MAN WHO OWNS0ONE BARCUS Hlway 99 ot Garden Valley DO YOU f WANT TO THEN o Or. . o unused miles o Rd. Jet. Phone 3-3564 0 SUCCEED? e YOU ARE A REAL GO-GETTER yolPcan SELL YOU ARE NOT AFRAID TO 'WORK YOU ARE MARRIED YOU ARE AMBITIOUS YOU HAVE A HIGH SCHOOL EDUCATION YOU ARE 30 TO 45. YEARS OF AGE THERE'S A REAL OPPORTUNITY FOR YOU SELLING "APPLIANCES EARNINGS AR.i UNLIMTED! APPLY AT S2) equipment lor registering from Staff Tield, Chicafo. j Melrose By MRS. NETTII WOODRUFF Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Kenyon and family and Jerry Fueston went to Martinez, Calif., for the 50th wedding anniversary of Mrs. Ken yon's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clem ent Allard. Mrs. Nellie Meyers, with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Helmbolt, went to southern California last week for a short vacation, Mrs. Shirley DeCamp underwent a minor operation luesday mor ning. Carl Nickens Is reported ill at his home in West Roseburg. Roger Reec has been confined to his h'dyie with flu for several days. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Finn and children spent last weekend vaca tioning on the McKcnzie river. Bl;$e Conn spent last week vis iting his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Knudsen at Eu gene. Mrs. Russel Cox, who has been visiting her molher in Seattle, is now visiting at the Clyde Kenyon home. Mr. jnd Mrs. K. I,. Matthews spent Tuesday at WQchester Bay fishing. Enos Handy and Norvcl Conn also fishecPat (he bay last week. They made good catches. The Horizon club girls, accom panied by Mr. and Mrs. Jay Conn, spent an overnight camping trip at Conn's cabin near Scottsburg. They left early Tuesday morning. Girls participating were: Jeanine Conn, Donna Barker, Donna Dil lon, Anita llerrman, Darene Buscn bark, Phyllis Williamson, Charlotte Sands, Darline Kruse, GaiPConn, Claudett Manning and Louise Conn. Dalene Busenbark weQf to Camp : Tyee this week to act as coun selor' Also attending the gtmp this ; week were: Carolyn Targeter, Donna Graves, Virginia and Lourae Schrader. Mrs. James Conn attended the camn Monday and talked to the girS about Camp j Tyee traditions. I Mr. and Mrs. D. N. Busenbark took their grandson, Bobby Busiy- bark, back to his bune at Prossjr, Wash., this week. Tlify also visited thcO daughter and family, Mrs. ; Fred Hollister Ht Springfield, ; and spent a shortime with their flaugnier, ncien ai n e w p o r i, I Wash. She recently accepted a po- sition with One army engineers I corps in eastern Idaho. Formerly ; she was juvenile officer at Med Iford, Ore. O ! Mrs. Walter Kruse accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kreuger and I Mr. and. Mrs. Clarence DeCamp to Mcdford last Tuesday to attend 0i insurance meeting. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mathew- man, Mrs. Tash of Chicago, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Warren and ! family went to Winchester Bay Saturday and Sunday for a fishing trip and an outing. BOY FUGITIVE HELD A 16-year-old escapee from the Western Washington slate hospital, a Tacoma mental institution, was picked up Thursday south of Rse-1 burg and is being held fr hospilalyi authorities, state police reported. Police said he escaped from Jhe institution July 17 and hitch-hnced as far south as Roseburg. Authority To Suspend State Dept. Employes Exclusive With Acheson, Senator Told By MARVIN L. ARROWSMITH WASHINGTON (AP) Hiram Bingham, chairman of the civil service loyalty review board, has told Senator McCarthy that only Secretary of State Acheson has author ity to suspend State department employes. Bingham, it was disclosed, made the statement in a let ter to tne Wisconsin Republican in which he also declared the review board has no jurisdiction. The letter was in reply to Mc Carlhy's dema.vd to know why An,-bassador-at-Large Philip Jessup, career diplomat, John Carter Vin cent and 24 other State depart ment employes had not been sus pended on security or loyalty grounds pending a hearing. McCarthy put the question to Bingham in a letter last Friday. The senator noted that the de partment had announced the day before the suspension of two high ranking officials while security charges against them are being investigated. Those suspended were John P. Davies, a member of Acheson's top level policy planning staff, and Oliver Edmond Clubb, director of the department's China affairs of fice. May Grill Chambers The house un-American activi ties committee, chairman Wood (D-Ga) said, may question Whit taker Chambers in connection with the suspension of Clubb. Cham bers, a confessed Soviet agent, once gave the group testimony about an "Oliver Edmond Chubb", and Re. Velde (R-Ill) has said he feels certain Clubb and "Chubb" are the same man. The State department said sus pension of Davies and Clubb was mandatory under the law once it had been decided to file security charges and conduct formal hear ings. The announcement empha sized the action carried no im plication of guilt. McCarthy told Bingham it was his understanding similar cnarges had been made against Jessup, Vincent and the other 24, and that the department had ordered their cases re-opened on recommenda tions of its loyalty-security board. The department has not con firmed that. McCarthy wanted to know why suspension of those individuals had not followed automatically if it were true that the department had no alternative but to suspend Da vies and Clubb. Not Board Question Bingham's reply, made avail able to a reporter by McCarthy, said in Pfcct that the senator's question regarding the 26 was a slate department matter outside the provincejif the loyalty review board. 0 Bingham noted that the depart ment acted, in the case of Davies and Clubb, under 'terms ofl a law whirh gives Acheson "abso lute discretion'' to suspend any employee "when deemed neces sary in the interest of national security." Bingham also pointed out that the 1947 executive order under which President Truman set up the loyalty-security program dele gates suspension authority to "the Sutherlin. . By MRS. BRITTAIN SLACK Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert ButTer and children of Tiller spent Oie week end at the A. L.Wjde home. Mr. and Mrs. K. D. Bielman of Roseburg. are the parents of a son, Stephen Robert, born Tues day, July 17, weighing eight pounds, 14 ounces Grandparents and Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Bielman o( Sutherlin. Mr. and Mrs. Matt Afcjropp were in Eugene Monday where Mrs. Aldropp received medical treat ment. Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Groshong and daughter, Connie, moved to Roseburg Tuesday. They will make their home there. The Grosh ongs have resided in Sutherlin for several years, and they owned Sutherlin Drug store until Jsjfew months ago when it was sola to Mr. llson. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Bielman spent last Sunday at Corvallis vis iting their son and family, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Bielman. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Wade, of Sutherlin and Mr. and Sfcjs. Gil bert Butler and children of Tiller spent Sunday at the Floyd Morris home east of town. Mrs. Malt Aldropp, who has been seriously ill at her home on East Central avenue is belter but expects to be confined to her bed for at least another two weeks. Joe Polland. who was confined to his home for a week wih the measles, is well again and able to he out. Harry Norton went to Portland Tuesday evening with a truckload ol sheep. Donald Green made a business trip to Portland Wednesday. NEW",RG"S0N :aiae-iveiivery Rake It 0 Tni ndpwrini nikinir net ion 0 Flint, gentle ii-bar offset reel Tractor-mounted, triwpo)d Kinder Tip Controlled 0 Power tnke-orT driven LEE MORTENSEN, INC. j 200 S. Pin Dial 3-7534 i e ! head of the employing department or agency." Court Dicision Cited Bingham then said the courts, in interpreting the constitution, "have construed that the power to discharge, which necessarily in cludes the right to suspend, is in herent in the right of appoint ment." He added: ". . . it has always been held, traditionally, that the head of the department is the only person who may suspend or remove a per manent employe from the federal service. . . "The regulations and directives of the loyalty review board must recognize that the agency head has exclusive power to suspend an employe. Therefore, the board has not reserved unto itself the au- inonty to direct the agency head to suspend employes, but has left the matter to his discretion." McCarthy told a reporter he has "no quarrel" with Bingham's in terpretation, j "He has made it very clear that the whole matter is up to Acheson," McCarthy added. "I am going to try to find out why Acheson has done nothing about the situation." McCarthy has named only Jess up and Vincent among the 26 state department employes whose cases he says have been ordered re opened. But he reiterated that unless Acheson takes some action, "I will feel called upon to start giving the names of those yother individuals to the senate.'1 Use Of Schools In N.Y. Barred To Communists NEW YORK - (TP) -Communist and Communist-front grouos were barred Thursday from the use of any New York city public school property. The action, voted by the city's board of eduiQlion, bans such or ganizations from holding meetings or other activities in school build ings or on school property. Board President Maximilian Moss, explaining the board's pos ition, said the nation's courts have held communism is an "organ ized conspiracy." "It therefore seems inconceiv able," he added, "that buildings owned and supported by the Amer ican people should be used as meeting places by those engaged in the 'organized conspiracy.' " 11 - T J p .A,t If i-'t ms 0 - C I J:fm1 I! . .... 3 :.. i t, jar , .' i i- i f r4r c, YOUNG MONARCH TAKES BELGIAN THRON E Twenty-year-old King Baudouin I, stands in front of his throne in Brussels as he takes the oath of allegiance formally making him Icing of the Belgians. The youth succeeds his father, Leopold III, who abdicated after an unhappy 17. yoar reign. State and church dignitaries attended the ceremony. Joseph Cardinal Van Roey and Archbishop of Malines is seated at right. (AP Wirephoto via radio from London) if M : I i s I r '.V .' i 1 FREED Actress Madge Mere dith walks out through the gate of California's Tehachapl State Prison for Women, on her 30th birthday, after serving three years of kidnap sentence. She was released on Gov, Earl War ren's commutation of sentence. (AP Wirephoto) m BUT ... Is It Fair? The business man who doesn't advertise reminds Sss a bit of the batter who gets a walk. He arrives at first base safely enough, but from then on he is dependent on the hitting of others. Often he "dies on base," but if he is helped alorag and finally scores, the cheers are. not for him but for the hitters. In the summarhis ac complishment rates as "no times at bat" and "no hit." Someone else even gets credit for a "run batted in." A team can get by with a player or two who "usually walks," if it has enough hitters. It's the same wayQwJth a town, and its advertisers. for display advertising Scots Lose Fight To Cut Allowance Of Princess LONDON (TP) Six thrifty Scots weat .down fighting Thurs day as the House of Commons okayed an allowance of 6.000 ($16 800) a year for Princess Margaret. The princess will start drawing the allowance upon he.' 21st birth day, one month and two days from now. She is at present the only member of the royal family with no pocket money of her own. The small but stubborn band of frugal Scot Laborites staged a vain one-hour battle to cut the allow - ance ,50 percent as the bill came up for disposal. COMPLETE LANDSCAPING 0 New Lawns Rockeries 0 Patios f) Barbecues 0 Retaining Walls 0 Weedmoving 0 Walkways 0 Rototilling 0 Spraying For Estimates, Call GARDEN VALLEY NURSERY AND LANDSCAPING CO. ' 411 Pacific Bldg. 0 Evenings . , Frank Denton 3 DIAL 2-2631 ". si- TF PAINTER ELECTROCUTED PORTLAND (TP) Jack Struve, a Portland painter, touched a high tension power line at the Reynolds Metals company aluminum plant at Troutdale Thursday. Death was instantaneous. Witnesses said Struve, about 46, was climbing a ladder to a steel tower, when he touched the line. The power capacity of rivers in the U.S.s.R. is estimated to equal slightly less than one-third of the potential water power capacity of the world. 1 It took 13 1 Suez Canal. years to build the . Dial 3-4437 Dial 3-7544 Ray Knatts that sells; iT&;ff tr-1 rjn 7 VM-m e A Ytw Own Hrml WEST OAK DIAL J-7011 teal i o 3 9 0 18 120