The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, August 13, 1951, Page 2, Image 2

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    2 The Newi-Revlew, Roseburg, Or. Mob., Aug. 13. 1951
Local
News
Returns Te Rouburg Ted
Ranlett of Roseburg has returned
to his home after spending two
weeks vacationing in Washington
and California. InVeradale,
Wash., he visieM his parents. He
is employed by Jo e Richards
Men's store.
Returns To California Pvt.
Richard Shields who has been vis
iting his mother, Mrs. Claude Har
vey of Sutherlin for the last two
weeks, returned to Camp Stone
man; Calif., Friday. Pvt. Shields
recently completed his training in
automatic weapons at Fort Bliss,
Texas, and expects to be sent
aomewhere in the South Pacific
soon.
Ace Flier Killed
In Crash Enroute
To Father's Rites
SEATTLE UP) A Washing
ton State air hero of two wars,
who came unscathed through 102
missions over Korea, met a flam
ing death Wednesday on a flight
to his father's funeral.
He was Maj. Raymond Schil
lereff, 34, of Seattle. Members of
his family were notified that he
was flying the F-S6 jet that col
lided with a B-26 bomber near Hill
air force base, Utah. Two men
aboard the bomber parachuted
safely.
Schillereff gained fame in 1950
after he was Identified as one of
the first Amor . n airmen to shoot
down a Russi:..i-niade plane in Ko
rea. It was among six chalked up
In the first two days of the Ko
rean fighting.
He later caught the national
alt
IVY
or
SCTMAO
Science nee discovered an excollent
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poisoning. It's gentle and safe, drlee up
the bllsterein a rarprlsingly short lis-,
often within 24 houre. At drngglsfa 69c
fc'IVY-DRY
Roseburg
Rod and
Gun Club
Membership Meeting
Tuesday, Aug. 14,
8 P.M.
Winchester Club House
mmmm.
OUR TIMED AMD
SPACED DELIVERY
WILL SERVE VDU MOST
CONVENIENTLY .
On phon call to 3-8522 will
rtllevt you of any bother ovor
fuol oil. Takoi only a minuti to
happily lolvo that.
Your Guarnrt at Quicker
Cltontr Heal.
100 DISTILL ID, TOO'
JIM MYERS
Douglas County Dlltributor
Of SIGNAL PRODUCTS
1856 N Sf.phim.
DIAL 3 1511
It's time for a
the working conditions of your farm.
Ask Us for a MlE "Showdown" Demonstration en Your Farm
Then Yom'II Set WHY FERGUSON'S the BUY!
LEE MORTENSEN, Inc.
200 South Pine Dial 3-7534
COMPLETE SHOP
S E RPV
eye when his picture appeared on
Life magazine a cover.
He was a holder of the distin
guished flying crosi and an oak
leaf cluster.
In World War II he wa credited
with downing four German planes
; over Europe.
j Major Schillereff was flying
' from ,ks air base on the east coast
i for thV funeral of his father, John
i T Chillnrnrf Mpmhers nf tile fam
ily had gathered at Cashmere,
near Wenatchee in eastern Wash
ington, for the funeral.
Vehicle Accidents Kill
Two In Douglas County
(Continued from Page 1)
las county for the last four years.
He was born In Oregon City on
April 11, 1B11.
He is survived by the widow.
Opal, and two sons: Frank and
Deane; one daughter, Mrs. Janice
Finley, all of Sutherlin: parents,
Mr. and Mrs. George Gill, Mc
Minnville; three step - children:
Betty, Bonnie Faye and Woodrow
Weir; two Ivothcrs: Manuel and
Lester; and a sister, Mrs. Evelyn
N. Moody.
Funeral services are scheduled
Wednesday at 11 a.m. in the Meth
odist church in Drain. Interment
will be in the Mountain View cem
etery, Oregon City. Stearns mor
tuary was in charge of the ar
rangements. Farm-To-Store
Price Spread Hit
In Senate Probe
WASHINGTON UP) A sen
ate report on food prices says that
for most products there Is too big
a spread between the farmer's
price and the grocery bill.
The report Indicated that middle
men may be taking too big a cut.
Senator Aiken (R-Vt), member
of a five-man subcommittee which
investigated food prices, said a
complete investigation should b e
made in Chicago to find out why
consumer milk prices are "so high
compared to what the farmers and
darymen get."
"I've heard rumors," he told a
reporter, "that some milk route
dcilverymen get as much as $15,
000 to $16,000 a year." Aiken ii a
former dairy farmer.
Most of the price levels used In
the subcommittee's report have
been outdated by the sharp price
boosts since the Korean war be
gan. But it noted that a 13 percent
dron in farm orices in 1949 re
sulted in a reduction of only four
percent in the retail price of food.
The report recommended that
Justice department anti-trust in
vestigators "conduct investigations
o f possible price agreements
among bakers in those markets
where Interstate commerce is in
volved." Aiken said milk producers serv
ing Chicago got $2.12 less for a
hundred pounds of milk than
those serving Washington. 'And
yet Chicago prices to consumers
for a quart of home delivered milk
is a cent higher than Washington,"
Aiken added.
Land Bureau
Holds Meeting
A meeting of the advisory board
of the Roseburg district. Bureau
of Land Management, was held
August 10, 1051. Members pres
ent were: Harold Woolley, Henry
Jacobson, Ai Flegel, John Ama
cher, Ted Prusia, Sidney Leiken,
W. D. Love, Ben Martin, and Judge
Carl Hill. The bureau was repre
sented by Regional Administrator
Rosecoe E. Bell, Distirct Fores
ter James Watts, and Merle Winn
and Maynard McCormack of the
local office.
Officers elected for the coming
year were: chairman Harold
Woolley, vice chairman John
Amacher.
A presentation of progress on
the 1051 timber sales plan was
made and comments were made
on the 1952 timber sales plan. Fol
lowing the business meeting Re
gional Administrator Roscoe Bell
addressed the group.
Julia Etta Hardisty Dies
At Son's Home In Sutherlin
Julia Etta Hardisty, 77, died at
the home of her son in Sutherlin
Saturday, Aug, 11. She was born
near Martinet, Calif., Dec. 24,
1873, and she had been In Suther
lin about two months.
Survivors include one daughter,
Mrs. Ellen Raymond, Strathmore,
Calif.; a son, Ralph Hardisty, Suth
erlin; three grandchildren and six
great-grandchildren.
The body will be shipped to
Webb Funeral homo at Lindsay,
Calif., tonight, Stearns mortuary,
Oakland, is in charge of local arrangements.
To get more for your money in a tractor,
rot a "SHOWDOWN" Demonstration ot
Ferifiuwn's ability to do a hotter job undr
bC E
Hunger Strike
Starts To Regain
U.S. Citizenship
BREMEN, Germany UP)
Crusading German born Teut
Becker continued his hunger strike
today in an effort to get back the
U. S. citizenship he gave up three
years ago.
The 37-year-ol( Becker, who
gives his hometown as Bend, Ore.,
has been wandering around north
ern Germany ever since he gave
up his American citizenship. His
peculiar crusade Includes wearing
a donkey's ears and tail, which he
said symbolizes "the spirit of the
people."
He gave up his citizenship, he
said, because in his one man
campaign he "intended to do
things that might have embar
rassed the American government
if I had done them as a citizen."
The crusade Is to prove that
"activities pursued for gain con
tribute to conflicts that lead to
war." The donkey Is the symbol
of the people's spirit because it
"pays for everything," and on Its
back "all tyrants ride but in the
long and slow course of time,
nevertheless, conquers and sur
vives every Idol."
Becker, who said he got the idea
of preaching while working in Eu
gene, Ore., wants to go back to
America now.' He started his
hunger strike two weeks ago in an
effort to realize his desire. He
said he wanted to go back to
America, die of hunger or go to
jail.
Becker says he slipped into Ger
many in 1948 after working his
way from the U. S. on a Danish
freighter to Marseilles.
Air Units Quit
War Games Plan
As Spat Result
NEW YORK UP) The New
York Times says that navy ma
rine air units have withdrawn from
the big war games at Fort Bragg,
N. C, because of differences with
the air force over the system of
air control to be used.
The story, by Hanson W. Bald
win, the Times military expert,
says the cancellation represents,
"according to informed sources,
an indirect by - product of far
broader service differences about
the control of aviation assigned to
the front-line support of g r o u n d
troops."
The "exercise southern pine1'
maneuvers, termed the largest
joint training exercise in this
country since the end of World War
II, is scheduled for the Fort
Bragg-Camp Mackall area from
Aug. 13 to 28.
Taking part will be three army
divisions and other ground troops
totaling 85,000 men, 400 air force
planes and 12,000 air force per
sonnel. But, the Times says, navy and
marine squadrons totaling more
than 100-aircraft have been with
drawn. In discussing "the differences be
tween the services about air sup
port" Baldwin writes:
"Fundamental, however. Is the
air force belief not shared by
the other services that close air
support is the least effecltv eand
most wasteful way of using air
power "
"Higher priorities of the tactical
air force were defined as the
winning of air superiority and the
severance far behnd the enemy
front of enemy supply lines," the
article said.
In contraast, Baldwin says, the
navy believes In close air support
of fighting ground troops.
The differing concepts, B a 1 d
win concludes, "must be settled at
the joint chiefs of staff level, all
services agree, and not in the
field."
Bids Being Received
For Highway Building
Bills for the construction of a sec
lion of the North Umpqua highway
will be received by the bureau of
public roads in Portland until 10
a. m., August 24, according to W.
H. Lynch, division engineer.
Tho project is located east of
Glide and three or four miles west
of Steamboat creek. Some of the
largest remaining stands of virgin
timber in the nation is being made
accessible b yhte highway, which
is one of the BPR's major highway
construction projects.
Clearing on the site of the road
way is underway at the present
time. Bids are being accpted for
grading a portion of the cleared
section. It is adjacent to a newly
graded section on the west.
Private Funeral Held
For Mrs. V. P. Tanton
Private funeral services were
held today at Long k Orr mortu
ary for Mrs. Verna Padrun Tan
ton, 81, who died Aug. 10, follow
ing a prolonged illness. Following
the services, her body was taken
to the Eugene crematorium for
cremation rites.
OLYMPIC
CEMENT
IT GOES FARTHER
Per Sack
Vj" 5HEET ROCK S2.10 Per Sheet O
VV PLYWOOD 13c sqft.
OPEN SUNDAY 10 TO 4
DENN WHOLESALE dCO.
North Umpqua Rood Phone 3 3$f2
p, p. ......,.11,1, mv , , p,lVNV. ,wvysl,rrw.,.,vBF.w, ;iry-rQ
A fvv
Mr.
FATAL COLLISION Oscar Lee
above collision which occurred
Phetol
fci ' . Bt"
' ' ' - ' I .r-y v . !
R. L. DOOLITTLE, left, Cottage Grove, Is shown just before receiving $150 as first prize in the
power saw bucking (3'i to 4'i horsepower) event in the annual Douglas county Timber Days
celebration in Sutherlin. Last day of the event was Sunday. Jack Buchanan is next to Doolittle,
special policeman William A. Crowell leaning over, and Bob McCarl, master of ceremonies.
(Jenkins Photi) .
Funeral Services Held
For Dottie! W. Jones
Funeral services for Daniel Wea
ver Jones, 13, who was killed when
a lot; rolled on him at Seaside Fri
day, were held in the church oW
the Nazarene in Roseburg at 2 p.m.
today. The Rev. J. E. Krantz of
ficiated. The boy was born at Myrtle
Creek,-. April 11, 1938, and had
moved to Seaside about a year ago.
Survivors include his step-father
and mother, Mr. and Mrs. J. E.
Van Horn, Seaside; and the follow
ing brothers and sisters: Mrs. Jean
Black, Mrs. Arlene Meghton,
Mrs. Blanche Newton and Mrs.
Joanne Gulbranson, all of Myrtle
Creek, and Dicki and Marci Jones,
Seaside, and a paternal grand
mother, Mrs. Eleanor Jones, Myr
tle Creek.
Concluding services and inter
ment followed in the IOOF ceme
tery at Myrtle Creek. Long 4 Orr
mortuary, Roseburg, was in
charge of arrangements.
William Belton Williams
Passes While On Vacation
William Belton Williams, 43,
resident of Henryetta, Okla., died
Monday morning after an illness of
two weeks. Ho came to Oregon two
weeks ago to visit relatives in this
community.
He was born Oct. 8, 1907 in Al
bion, Okla., and had been engaged
as a smelter worker in a zinc min
ing company.
Surviving are the widow, Myrtle,
Henryetta, Okla.; two duughters:
Mrs. Billie Poivre and Miss Norma
Jean Williams, both of Henryetta;
three brothers: Earl and John
Williams, both of Sutherlin, and
Milt Williams, Overton, Tex.; three
sisters: Mrs. Nettie Wise, Keokuk,
la.; Mrs. Parlee Barnes, Sioux
City, la., and Mrs. Roxie Thomp
son, Keokuk, la.; and one grand
son. The body will be shipped by the
Roseburg Funeral home to Hen
ryetta, Okla., for funeral services
and interment.
'Hit-Run' Picketing
Begun In Phone Strike
SEATTLE (.) Picketing
started at eight western Washing
ton telephone exchanges early to
day. Officials of the Communications
Workers of America (CIO) said the
$1.45
o
1
Long, 71, Winston, died as the
Sunday near the Melody Inn on
strike picketing would be sporadi
cally on a "hit-and-run" basis.
The Pacific Telephone and Tele
graph company reported service
was being maintained on a normal
basis everywhere but Aberdeen.
It was described as on an emer
gency call basis there.
The issues over which company
union negotiations collapsed were
seniority clauses and the compa
ny's refusal to submit dismissals
to arbitration.
New British Rifle
Fails To Convince
WARMINISTER, Eng. UP)
Britain took the wraps off her new
rapid firing .280 rifle in impres
sive tests yesterday, but she
failed to convince western mili
tary men that it is the best
weapon in its field.
The stockless weapon that looks
much like a sub-machine gun was
put through its paces before some
200 military attaches and SO re
porters. The tests showed the new gun
can be fired faster than either the
United States' semi-automatic .50
caliber Garand or the old British
303 bolt action Enfield, but lacks
penetration and shocking power.
The new weapon will be thor
oughly checked, however, by a
committe of the Atlantic Treaty
organization.
French Cabinet Member
Shot To Death By Wife
ORLEANS, France (tF)
French authorities today ordered a
sanity test for Yvonne Chevallier
who shot and killed her war hero
husband barely 24 hours after he
took his first cabinet post.
Police said the woman, who is
being held in Orleans prison, con
fessed firing five shots into 42-year-old
Pierre Chevallier Sunday when
he told her he wanted a divorce.
Chavallier had just been named
secretary of state for technical ed
ucation, youth and sports.
Mrs. Chavallier told Investiga
tors that after a furious quarrel
about his absence her husband
said he wanted a divorce.
Police said she drew a revolver
she had bought a few days earlier
and shot him five times. He died
instantly.
Child Dies After Biting
Off Vaccination Scab
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. tP)
Two-year-old Margaret Amelia
Kennedy died Sunday of a throat
infection suffered after she bit the
smallpox vaccination scab off the
arm of a playmate.
Her physcian said the infection
closed the child's windpipe. Mar
garet was the daughter of Mr, and
Mrs. Joseph Kennedy.
BERGH'S APPLIANCE SERVICE
AUTHORIZED SALES and SERVICE
MAYTAG WHIRLPOOL DEXTER WASHERS
MONARCH RANGES IRONRITE IRONERS ADMIRAL
We Service All Makes of Home
Laundries and Refrigeration
SEI US FOR RENTAL WASHER)AND REFRIGERATORSQ
200 S. Stephens
G)
result of injuries suffered In the
highway 99 near Winston, (Staff
Reds Refuse To Cease
Parallel 38 Demand
(Continued from Page 1)
kols would not say what the other
questions were about.
Rail Centers Bomb.d
U. S. Fifth air force planes flew
nearly 300 sorties today in strikes
at Red troops, railways, roads and
bridges.
Pilots reported they inflicted 65
casualties on Communist troops
hit 75 supply buildings, four
bridges and three small boats
Fifty of today!s sorties were flown
before dawn in continuing around'
the-clock attacks.
Heaviest attacks Sunday were
directed against rail centers by
B-29s and jets.
Arms Cuts Celled
Contrary To Need
WASHINGTON WP) Senator
Connally (D-Tex) said today Con
gress can't provide for a buildup
in the free nations' defease
strength and cut military spending
at the same time.
Connally's comment was made to
a reporter in announcing that the
senate foreign relations and armed
services committees will go t o
work Monday on revising the
$8,500,000,000 foreign aid authori
zation bill.
The house foreign affairs com
mittee has sliced $651,000,000 from
the total. Connally, however, said
he believes any sizeable reduc
tions made by the senate commit
tee must come out of the economic
aid.
Russell Erases Chance
Of West Point Probe
WASHINGTON (IP) Senator
Russell (D-Ga) just about erased
today any possibility of a formal
congressional investigation into
the pending dismissal of 90 West
Point cadets for cribbing.
"Personally, from what I know
about it now, I see no need for an
investigation by our committee,"
the chairman of the senate armed
services committee told a re
porter. ROSEBURO SHEET METAL
S23 North Jackson Dial 3-405!
Dial $4348
OO
Loggers Thrill Throng
At Sutherlin Carnival
(Continued from Page 1)
T.mo. w Smith! and third prize
of $5 to John McCreary, Sutherlin.
a -lnch preiormea wire rope wo.
used. ,
Donating prize money in me iwo
power saw bucking events were
McCiillnoh Chain Saw Sales and
Service Co., Pacific Chain Saw
Co. Inc., Western Equipment Co.,
all of Roseburg.
One of the hiehlilhts of the three-
day festival was the grand parade
staged late Saturday morning. Fol
lowing the queen's coronation en a
gigantic log donated by the Weyer
hauser Sutherlin operation, 25 float
entries rolled wn Sutherlin's
main drag in one of the biggest
parades in the city's history.
Float Winners Listea
After 10 minutes of deliberation,
the judging committee of Mayor
Claude Kesner, Mrs. I. Groleau
and Ernie Cox returned a first
nrize decision for the Business
Women's club. With the slogan
Let's Boost Our Park", the float
showed children playing on sev
eral recreational devices which
would appear in the park. It was
backgrounded by fir boughs and
ordered rows of red paper flowers.
This prize winner was worth $75.
Second prize of 550 went to the
Rebekahs with a float depicting
Rebekah at the well, surrounded
by Hebrew women and surveyed
by Queen Esther. Third prize of
$25 went to Fair Oaks Grange.
With a slogan, "The Farmer Feeds
the World", the float showed far
mers of different countries holding
white ribbons attached to a large
world globe.
Special prizes of $25 went to the
Mt. Scott Retail yards' float, fash
ioned by Rodney Hague, and the
Lions' and Lady Lions' float. The
Mt. Scott entry was a logging op-
peration in miniature covering the
whole bed of the truck. The Lions
had a trailer showing a lush for
estland on one side and a charred,
fire-gutted forest on the other
labeled, "Keep Douglas County
Green."
Following the official announce
ments of the float winners, the
kids got attention in a pie eating
contest. With the inducement of a
$5 bill, Donald Jeffords of Suther
lin gulped his way to victory, down
ing the pie in a little less than
five minutes.
Tenmile
By JULIA BREITENBUCHER
Mr. and Mrs. R. M, Degner en
tertained friends at a picnic at
their home on the Reston Road
Sunday. Those attending were: Mr.
and Mrs. William Person and Don
of Wilbur; Mr. and Mrs. Merland
Larson and Sandra; Lolly Darling
and Nancy Bodine ot Winchester;
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Sullivan, Mr.
and Mrs. Lytel and Richard; Mrs.
Anna Mofford, Mrs. Massey, Mr.
and Mrs. Sam Campbell, Ms. Vic
toria Ploss of Roseburg and Mr.
and Mrs. O. M. Hopple of Winston.
Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Lockwood,
Vernon Murdoch and Joann De
Dobbelaere enjoyed a picnic at
Shore Acres state park Sunday.
Miss Kay Lakey visited relatives
at Myrtle Point last week.
A son was born recently to Mr.
and Mrs. Alvin Blrman of Med
ford. Mr. Birman is a son of Mrs.
Esther Birman.
Mrs. Opal Annette and son, Vir
gil, of Cottage Grove and daughter
of New York were visitors last
week of Mrs. Annette's mother,
Mrs. Alice Pierce.
Mrs. Capella Shelley of Bend
visited her parnets, Mr. and Mrs.
Elbert Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Byrd Smith, Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Breitenbucher, Ir
win Breitenbucher and Edward
and Walter Petersen went to River
ton Sunday for a picnic and to
fish.
Catholic Priests Jailed
By Chinese Commies
HONG KONG - WP) Church
sources report that Communist po
lice have jailed 19 Catholic priests
and closed 12 of Peiping's 17 par
ish centers in the "most frontal
attack" yet on Christianity in
China.
The rest of Peiping's 80 foreign
missionaries were reported under
house arrest.
A similar drive against other
Christians throughout Red China
was predicted.
Catholics arriving here from the
Chinese Communist capital re
ported that among those arrested
was Father Harold Rigney, for
mer rector of Catholic Fujen uni
versity and the only American mis
sionary remaining in China.
Th Thinnca RoHe h,uo hun
campaigning for an "independent"
uauiouc cnurcn wnicn would nave
no connection with the Vatican.
Come In ...
cheek by our factory trained mechanics
-Givn your car the FIRST CLASS SERVICE
that puts economy and dependability into
your driving. 0
tXPIRT MPAIR SAViS TIMS AND MOiSfY o
afc,
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urs for ttc askincj
Shakespearean
Plays Offered V
By Highjalent
By CORINNE WOODARD
Last of our pioneers, Will Shake
speare has come to Oregon to
make his home. Saturday night's
performance in Ashland of "King
Lear," by the Oregon Shakespear
ean Festival players, drew attend,
ance from all over the continental
United States and Hawaii, demon
strating once again the popular
ity of the Immortal Bard.
Perhaps Shakespeare's attrac
tion for both actors and audiences
can be credited to the simplicity
nf his nortravals. which appear
only in broad outline through the
action and dialogue, lending mem
selves to infinite variety of inter
pretation. In this respect, the fes
tival players are praiseworthy ar
tists, with the performances of
Richard Graham as "King Lear"
and William Oyler as "Edmund,"'
outstanding. In the latter role, Oly
ler drew applause second only to
Graham, athough he was playing
an unsympathetic character. Herb
Greer's "Fool" was perhaps over
played, as was that of John Bren
ner's "Poor Tom." Brebner, how
ever, as "Edgar of Gloucester,"
performed with excellent reserve.
From Middlesex, England, Bren
ner has been at Sanford univer
sity on a scholarship this past
year. Others of the troupe are
drawn predominantly from the Pa
cific Northwest. One, John B u
chanan, is from our neighboring
town of SutherUn.
Pathos In Superlative
which are supposed to be found In j
"King Lear," we didn't find any
such implications. Perhaps the
psychology of love and trust be
trayed is not well understood ex
cept by the layman and Shake
speare, who know how end
less self-questioning can lead to
emotional turmoil and nervoue
prostration. Add physical exhaus
tion, and it is plain that even the
young may be temporarily crazed
by grief. Lear is indeed a pitiable
being when, at his reunion with
Cordelia, he dares not trust his
recognition of her. No more poig
nant lines could be given an ac
tor to speak than Lear's, "If you
have poison for me, I will drink
it."
Presented on an outdoor stage
within the old Chautauqua shell
in Ashland, these plays progress
without pause for intermissions
between acts. This allows unin
terrupted action in rapid tempo,
with a cumulative dramatic effect
not possible otherwise.
Now in its eleventh season, the
Oregon Shakespearean Festival is
currently presenting "King Lear,"
"Twelfth Night," "Henry IV, part
2," and "Measure for Measure."
The 1952 season will feature per
formances of "The Tempest,"
"Julius Caesar," "Henry V," and
"Much Ado About Nothing."
500 Escape Death When
Passenger Train Plunges
FOUR OAKS, N. C. (P) Hun
dreds of passengers escaped death
or serious injury near here Sun- i
day in the wreck of the Atlantis!
Coast line's streamline passenger
train, the East Coast Champion.
According to C. G. Sibley, ACL
assistant vice president for oper
ations, more than 500 persons were
aboard the Miami-New York train
which crashed two miles north of
here at 1:20 a.m. The railroad an
nounced no one was killed and no
one was seriously injured when the
nine middle cars of the 18-car
train were derailed and three can
plunged down a 20-foot embank
ment. Bond, Check Forgeries
Swamp Secret Service
WASHINGTON UP) Govern
ment bond and check forgeries
have been so numerous that on
July 1 the secret service had a
backlog of 15,000 awaiting inves
tigation. Reporting this, the service said
drug addicts have been stealing
and forging government checks to
give them money for narcotics.
for a complete motor
We recommend what your cor
really need.-NOTHINO MOHE.
Hansen"
V
MLTT0R C0.O S
& Stephens Dial -4446 j
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