U. of 0. Library Eugene, Oregon 0 COiUr CMt'iFIF mm talks . Air Bombing CATSKINNER A member of i pt r ( c i k I a Murrain m t li a r I a ra fire at the end of Hayden road, l P.- I i.-l : iUr. DroKB Trom cgniigi in mi area Timber Brings Record Offer Al A..-J,:. U,- a i muwiiwm ncic A record bid of $49 per thou sand board feet for bureau of land management timber in Oregon was made by the Roseburg Lum ber Co. Wednesday at an oral auc tion timber sale held at the local office. The parcel, located near Mt. Scott, consisted of 4,270,0(H) board feet Douglas fir and 165,000 board feet' of other species and brought $211,077.50 as compared t the appraised price of $117, 564.50. The next high bid was made by the Martin Brothers Box com pany, which bid $210,010 for the tract. The previous high was re ceived last year for Douglas fir at $48.50 per thousand board feet near Alsea, Ore. In addition to the above tract, five other parcels were sold in volving an additional, 8.235,000 board feet. They sold at the ap praised price of $184,123.75. Five additional tracts resulted in no bid sales. Other successful bidders were Iverson Lumber Company, Inc., of Roseburg, and Pass Creek sawmill of Drain. According to Assistant District Torester Merle H. Winn, who con ducted the sale, the next regularly scheduled sale will be held Oct. 9. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS . From Frankfurt (in West Ger many): "Communism's big propaganda drive HAS FLOPPED in West Germany, U. S. High Commis sioner John J. McCloy says. . . "German support for Western defence has increased and the Communists' chief propaganda agencies have been thoroughly dis credited, rejected and even out lawed by an aroused West Ger many." Is that good? Or is it bad? I wouldn't know but let's try putting it this way: Suppose you were Stalin, and wanted Germany more than anything on earth be cause you figured that with the mechanical minded Germans on your side you could lick the world. Suppose you saw Germany slip ping away from vnu and getting readv to GO OVER TO THE OTHER SIDE. You'd then face this S64 question: "Shall I let Germany team up (Continued on Page 4) The Weather Mostly cltar today and F riday. Highest temp, for any Aug. . Lowest ttmp. for any Aug. Hightst ttmp. yesterday Lowest ttmp. 'est 14 hours Precis), last 34 hours Precip. form Aug. 1 Preeip. from Sept. 1 Eejest from Sept. 1 Sunset tomorrow 1:03 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow, 4:21 a.m. 9 . 1M 3! ..... 7 $0 T T 40.41 . 7.t0 the Johnson Lumber mill crew 4r-il m4 nurLai itm J n l r ! out of Cleveland. Driven by a I I wenKini Half-Filled Tank Of Gas Survives Callahan Fire Ordinarily a 285-gallon tank half full of highly inflammable gas would be expected to burn when surrounded by fire. ' But one on the Callahan road be longing to Pacific Utilities came through Tuesday evening's raging fire in the Elgarose district with out so much as a puff of smoke. Witnesses said flames swept on all sides of the tank and even un der it. British-Iran Oil Huddle Collapses TEHRAN, Iran UP) -Oil talks between Britain and Iran ground to a halt today and Bri tain's chief negotiator, Richard Stokes, prepared to fly home. W. Averell Harriman also made readv to leave Iran for Washing ton. He will report to President Truman, who sent him here last montn in a last-ditch effort to keep Iranian oil flowing to the west. Harriman appeared more op timistic than others close to the negotiations and issued a state. ment saying the talks were merely ausfienaea not oroxen olf. Iranian Premier Mohammed Mossadegh said "it is finished " The breakdown after 19 davs of talks between the British and Iran ians came over management of oay m aay operations at the Bil lion dollar Abadan refinerv. The refinery was taken over from the British - controlled Anglo - Iranian Oil company by nationalization. The real obstacle to agreement appeared to be Iran's fear that British management would be a revival of the Anglo-Iranian com pany in another guise. It was clear Ihc iron-willed Iran ian premier would not retreat from the drastic nationalization 1 a w mshed through parliament two days after he came to power. Diplomatic circles here believed that no agreement tan be reached so long as Mossadegh remains in power. Polio Strikes Parents, 4-Month-Old Infant FORT WORTH, Tex. f.P) -A family is in a hospital polio ward here. Mrs. Lester Huelon Collier was stricken five weeks ago. The next day her four-months-old baby son was brought to the hospital. Two days later the father joined them. Collier is in an iron lung. The wife and baby are in adjoining rooms. But Mrs. Collipr is cheerful about it. "Cogiidering everything, we're getting along fine," she said. "I hope we'll all be going home together soon." Watch Twice Stolen; Two Sentences Meted soCTHftEND.ind.-w-wii.jJ-'l Term, Fine Of $200 lie patter, 30. pleaded guilty in Handed Drunken Driver a watcn irom miss .Mary nicnara son. 26. Then the court tried Miss Rich ardson and found her guilty of stealing the wa'tfrom Miss Boba Tharbs. -3 Bolh. admirers of the watch drew 30-day jail fences and (35 fines. operates a tractor in almost inin ua.. i a iU f gusty wind, the fire repeatedly ' School District Four Boundaries Told By Elliott Paul Elliott, superintendent of city schools, has redefined bound aries of Roseburg school district 4 for the benefit of parents who may not know in which district they reside. The same as last year, the bound aries are as follows: Eastern boundary extends from a line north and south just this side of where the Deer Creek road and North Umpqua highway join. Northern boundary extends 150 yards north of the motel above the highway scales beyond the Chrys talite Tile plant. Northeast boundary crosses the Garden Valley road just beyond the Darley Ware property. It crosses the Melrose road at Rocky point iust this side of the oil well. Southern boundary crosses high way 99 at the second cut through bordering rock, about one half mile beyond Nielsen's, Tipton road is in cluded. Hours for Roseburg district 4 schools, which open Sept. 4, have been announced by Elliolt, as fol lows: All elementary schools open at 9 a.m. and close at 4 p.m. Junior high school classes begin at 8:35 a.m. and close at 3:30 p.m., with lunch time from 11:40 a.m. to 12:30 p.nw Senior high school classes start at 8:40 a.m. and are dismissed for the day at 3:25, with lunch time from 11:42 a.m. to 12:28 p.m. Woman Dies Day, Hour That She Predicted REDWOOD CITY, Calif. m For a month after Mrs. Edythe Hanson returned from a hospital, she repeatedly predicted: "I shall die at 11:45 on Aug. 21." - "She was a woman of groat faith," said her husband, "and people with such faith have pro monitions not given to others. At 9 o'clock that night she went to sleep. I called the doctor. At 11:45 he pronounced her dead. Mrs Hanson was 32. She leaves two sons, Donald, 9, and James, 7, Fire Victims Also Losers In Flood At Dillard If anyone wants to know about two of the county's largest disas ters, just ask Mr. and Mrs. Ivar Lindstrom, who live in the Elga rose district. They've been through both. Last October they lived at Dil lard, where they were caught in the swirling watcVi of the flooding Umpqua. But they moved and got to Elgarose in time to catch the sweeping flames of the Hubbard creek blaze. Carl H. Smith, 43, Dorris, fJlif., welder.Qvas fined $200 and sen tenced To 30 days jn the county jail Tuesday on a drunk driving charge in Canyone municipal court, according to City Recorder Laura Goodell. Smith was arrested by Canyonville police. Established 1873 Elgarose Firefighters Aided By Break In Weather Humidity Rise Speeds Mopping-Up Operations In Hubbard Creek Area The toll of charted homes rose to 19 today as late reports of Tues day's fire disaster were tabulated. But cooler we.tther and a few drops of rain gave the more than 500 fire-fighters an 'opportunity to stop the spread of the 10,000-acre Hubbard creek blaze. The prob lem now is to hold the hard earned progress made against the fire, said a Douglas Forest Protective association spokesman. It would take a strong wind to cause the fire to break out again, the spokesman said. Another 100 man camp was set up yesterday to contain the blaze on the south boundary. Light raindrops Wednesday aft ernoon dissolved In the fire and raised humidity values, it was re ported. The rain was a "blessing trom liou," said ncd aoutnwicn, district fire warden. A similar amount of rain on any day of the fire would have given them a chance to control it, he added. The entire lire line has been trenched with the possible excep tion of the Elgarose district, which hadn't been checked early today, Southwick said. From 40 to 50 men are working in that district using three cats. Mopping Up Progresses Fire-fighters now arc engaged mainly in mopping-up operations to strengthen fire lines. They are falling snags and doing other mop up tasks. The southern boundary of the fire is still about the same as yes terdayabout three miles south of .I.- T I 1 I ' uie uaiiui-i s iwuivuiu am-. There may be small blazes that look as if they are burning pretty fast, said Soulhwick, but in gen eral, the fire is under control. The seven-day-old fire started in the Forest-Hall timber opera tion south of Umpqua about 15 miles northwest of Roseburg. Families that still had homes to go to were moving back into those structures Wednesday as the fire danger receded. Toll of Houses Completed The Carl Johnson home, which was reported yesterday to have been burned, is slill Intact, it has been learned. But according to later reports, additional houses destroyed in clude those of Mrs. Ben Fenncll, .laek Wells, C. J. Fulmcr, II. L. Van Fossen, H. G. Shipps, Lee Brown. Roy Jacobs, Ray Martin and F. A, J. do Ilaan. Another re port said (hat a Mrs. Shea had lost her home to fire. There were apparently no sub stantial animal losses with (he ex ception of J. N. Sands who lost about 1,300 chickens. Firefighters Wednesday found by air observation a spot fire they hadn't been aware existed. It was suppressed. The six lightning started fires in Ihe Diamond lake district of the Umpqua national forest are under control, according to local forest service headquarters. Smoke-jumpers, who went into the area Wednesday, have been re inforced by about 24 fire fighters on the ground. Supplies are being dropped by air lo men fighting a small blaze on Potter Mountain. (Continued on Page 2) Inferno That Devastated Elgarose Subdued After Taking Costly Toll By GEORGE CASTILLO ffewi-Revlew Staff Writer A flaming arm of the Hubbard creek fire roared into the sprawl ing community of Elgarose Tues day afternoon and evening and wiped out almost a dozen homes before it was controlled. An estimated eight to ten homes were razed on Becker and Elgarose roads, northwest of the school house. The hardest hit section was found on Becker road, which branches off Elgarose road to Ihe west. Wednesday morning, smoke shrouded the area, punctuated only hy scattered snags slill in flame. Only the blackened ashes of five houses and several sheds attested to life once there. Three houses an a brooder, dir- ectly in the path of the fire.Miad Deen miraculously spared Ijg Ihe j shed remained. Near it were some caporious wind and stalwart ftrk j whitcfared Herefords grating by lire crews. One surh had been I pea"ed(llv. In tbe front yard uf evacuated, but the flateVs h a d : annther'-lire-levfVd house, a small stopped ' at the back fence while i bulldozer had been ronvertod into another tongue of fire had burned a n impromptu moving device, the front fence. j Resting on its blade was an elec- Far up the ridge, however, in a iric stove. It had apparently been hollow overlooking Elgarose, were j Mt before Ihe rampant fire, but the remains of a farm Identified , the flames h4 gone around with as that owned by Joe Sands. The i out damaginsTthe articles. o ROSEBURG, ORECON Homes ' Toll Increased To 19 Dope Peddler Does $500,000 Annual Business From N.Y. Hospital Cache Officers Work 3 Months To Nab Him NEW YORK (AP) An alleged dope peddler was accused here of using big Bellevue hospital's main waiting room as a sales office to operate a $500,000-a-year narcotics business. Police said the peddler cached his drug stock in the hos pital's underground engine room and kept daily "office hours" at the institution. He was not employed there. Army Suspends Another Officer For Irregularity WASHINGTON UP) The army has relieved Ihe command ing officer of an ordnance depot at Toledo, Ohio, where house in vestigators last week reported they had found evidence o f "highly irregular conduct." It announced that Col. S. W Mcllwain has been relieved of command of the Kossford o r d nance depot, hut gave no reasons. Chiarman Hardy (D-Va) o I a house expenditures subcommit tec said last week the group had found evidence of "improper deal ings" with contract-holding firms by procurement officials he d i d not name. The army also said that over seas orders of Brig. Gen. David J. Crawford, recently suspended as commanding olficer of the De troit automotive ordnance center, have been held tip. Crawford had been assigned to go to Heidelberg, Germany, early in September, but the army said he woufJI remain on temporary duty in Detroit instead. It said an investigation ordered recently by Secretary of the Army Pace is continuing. Pace ordered the inquiry after a congressional committee accused Crawford of accepting hotel hos pitulity from holders of govern ment contracts and of using a gov ernment truck to move trees to his home in Maryland. Crawford said he had done noth ing wrong. Sena lor Byrd (D-Va) said he thinks the army suspended Craw ford's overseas orders because he asked for a full report on the case. A member of the armed services committee. Byrd called the case "another horrible example of Ihe moral deterioration which ob viously is taking place at many points in the federal govern ment." A slatcmcnt by Rep. Weichel (R-Ohio) recently said the Ross ford depot which Mcllwain com manded had paid as much as $3,600 each for repairs to army motor vehicles although it had parts and equipment lo do the work itself. K. Of C. Urges U.S. Break Off Relations With Soviet PITTSBURGH UP) The su preme council of Ihe Knights of Columbus has urged the United Slates to break off diplomatic and trade relations with Russia and its satellites. The resolution declared that In such nations, which is referred to as "international outlaws, t h e "basic right of religious freedom is repeatedly and cynically v i o lated, freedom of information re pressed, and accredited journalists harrassed and imprisoned." The national body listed Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Ruma nia. Bulgaria and Communist- ruled Yugoslavia." flames had raced down and wiped out the house and five other build ings. Only a gaunt chimney and a charred telephone pole stood as a marker. Heat Cooks Chickens The signs of Ihe savage swift ness of the fire were more evi dent. Scattered over a 200-foot area on the hillside were scores of white Leghorn chickens which had been cooked by the intense heat. Further reflecting the violence of the forest blaze were Ihe gutled remains of a pickup and two coupes. Appar ently the fire had moved so quickly they could not be moved out. , On another tributary road a mile up Elgarose road, three other farms had been buxjjed to t h e groftmri. ACone ruin, identified as Carl Johnson's, only a ramshackle THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1951 Three narcotics squad detec tives, two men and a woman, cracked the case with the arrest of 42-year-old Mariano Rubino, a resident of Manhattan's lower east side. The officers, with the coopera tion of hospital authorities, worked three months in the sprawling nos- pital. They posed as everything from doctors and nurses to at tendants and porters. Rubino was arrested on the city nnerated hosDital grounds as he al legedly passed a packet of heroin to a man identified as Arinur ui cardi, 29, of Manhattan. Operation Described For the past year, police said, Rubino operated in this manner: At about 10:30 every mornin?, accompanied by a dog, he parked his big car near Ihe hospital. He remained at Ihe institution until 7 p. m. each day.- He met his clients, who num bered from seven to nine daily, in the main waiting room. The drug customers, posing as patients or relatives of patients, mingled with legitimate visitors. After contacting a client, Ru bino went to the hosptial's engine room, climbed a ladder to a wooden platform atop a generator and got the drugs concealed in a ceiling crevice. Cache Discovered The detectives said they found an ounce of uncut heroin in the ceiling cache, having a retail value of about $5,000. . The exchange of drug packets was made on the hospital grounds outside the waiting room, where the client always minded Rubino's dog while he made the trip to the engine room. Police said Rubino was arrested after carrying out this routine and in the act of turning over a pack age of heroin to Ricardi. Both men were booked on charges of illegal possession and sale of narcotics. Detectives said small quantities of heroin were found in the apattments of both men. Bellevue hospital is five city blocks long. Its 13 buildings house about 2,600 patients and more than 4,500 persons are employed there. Outdoor Art Exhibit Dated At Library Park The second annual outdoor art exhibit of Ihe Roseburg Art asso ciation will be staged in the city Library park this Friday and Sat urday, it has been announced. There will be exhibits, all done by members of the local art group, of oils, watercolors, pastels, pen cil sketches, ceramics, and china painting. All are originals with emphasis on landscapes in color. Prices will be posted on most of the works and visitors may purchase any so posted. They will be exhibited from 10 a. m. lo 10 p. m. Friday and from 10 a. m. to 5. p. m. Saturday The group expects lo have as many works as last year when 90 were exhibited before more than 1,000 visitors. In the predawn hours, the fire was slill burning brightly on Ihe west side of the ridge away from Elgarose. It was from Ihere that the flames exploded over the lop of the ridge into Ihe slash of the Engle Bros, lngging operation at about 4 p.m. Tuesday. A west wind suddenly swept the flames in a giant draft. Fire fighters tried vainly to trail and backfire, but Ihe fire crowned and sent fiery embers and faggots over Ihem. Many fighters were trapped tem porarily, bul fought Ibcir way out. By 8 p.m. the whole hillside was a furnace. Evacuations began soon after the fire broke over the ridge. All threat- i ened homes were cleared of occu I pants and personal belongings by I midnight. Evacuation operations ' I were sSrted with local vehicles, ! but a majority of the household j articles were moved out shortly I after by a fleet of trucks from j Roseburg companies. The fire had eaten Its way as far as Reston road, completely I razing Lander's lookout. A report at 9 15 Wednesday mornjj r e jvealed It had hern controlled it I this point. 199-51 9 Likely Dead In New N.W. Plane Crash ANCHORAGE, Alaska UP) A C-47 transport plane with nine persons aboard crashed at Sum mit, 152 miles north of here on the Alaska railroad, Wednesday night. First reports indicated all were killed. The plane was enroute to Elel son air base near Fainbanks from Elmendorf air base at Anchorage. A Civil Aeronautics adminis tration radio officer at Summit re ported he had talked to the pilot of the plane shortly before the crash but was not informed of any trouble. Contact was broken and the op erator said he saw the plane div ing into the runway of the Sum mit landing field. Bad weather kept search planes from Summit. The Alaska railroad sent an am bulance car lo the crash site with doctors and a rescue team. The air force withheld names of those aboard. Latest In Disaster Series The crash was the latest in a month-long series of major aerial mishaps which have claimed nearly four-score lives in the Pa cific Northwest and Alaska. On July 21 a Korean airlift plane with 38 aboard vanished off the Alaska coast on a flight to the Ori ent. Six days later three persons were lost when an Alaska Norse man disappeared while making a glacier study. On Aug. 4, a Queen Charlotte airways plane with seven aboard was lost along the British Colum bia coast. Nine, persons wei'd ; killed two day- later when a navy patrol plane crashed Into Pugct sound, and 12 were lost Aug. 12 in a navy plane crash on the Alaska penin sula. A B-50 bomber crashed into an apartment house In Seattle the fol lowing day, killing six aboard the bomber and five residents of the building. Hurricane Hits Tampico; Damage Exceeds $1 Million TAMPICO, Mcxicn CP) The killer hurricane that raged over tropical seas all week taking more than 150 lives and causing millions of dollars in damage, was blowing itself out today in the mountains of Mexico. The storm described as Ihe worst recorded In Mexico spent Its final fury over Ihe oil port of Tampico Wednesday. At least one person was killed here and the damage was expected to run far above $1,000,000. Advance warning and knowledge of hurricanes probably saved many lives in I his rich oil port of 100,000 population. Several hundred persons were rescued from the wreckage of their homes. Four thousand fami lies were reported homeless. WANTS SENATOR JOB SALEM (Pi Waller J. Pear son says he will be a candidate for state senator from Multnomah county in Ihe Democratic primary election next year. Pearson, slate treasurer, an nounced recently he would not seek re-eleclion to his present post. Fire fighting operations in this area were generally disorganized in the early stages, but were rap idly coordinated Wednesday morn ing under the direction of Rose burg Civil Defense Director Col. M. Crawford. The danger points were being watched carefully and Crawford was in touch with all crucial areas by mobile radio sets supplied by timber companies and the Douglas county sheriff's office. Several caterpillars, a crew of men and three trucks were held In re serve at Melrose store, the disaster headquarters, in case of a new out break. Crawford reported" that a 1 1 fires in the Elgarose, Lander's t lookout and Reslon road areas'! were "under control." He said the condition wisfild remain good un less angler west wind of some strength blew up. Meanwhile, crews remained tirelessly on the line in case of further complica tions. Crawford complimented Rose burg, Douglas county and slate polit-e for their traffic control, com-muv-ations and coordinating operation Of Kaesong Reason Given Ridgway Labels Charge 'Frame-Up' Fixed Ahead Of Alleged Assault MUNSAN, Korea OP) -The Communists called off the Korean armistice talks "from now on" Thursday on a bombing charge which the United Nations com mand said was a complete frame up. The Reds, In a dramatic night time maneuver, accused an Al lied plane of bombing Kaesong, site of the deadlocked negotiations. In a sharp reply issued in Tokyo, Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway said 'he Allies made no such bomb ing, and that the timing showed thi Communists had decided to break off the talks even before they made their trumped-up com plaint. The U. N. commander's state ment called it "a frame-up staged from first to last." Allied statements said no U. N. air force or naval plane was in the area, no Allied artillery fired Into the area, and the Reds pre sented no evidence that there even wis a bombing. An investigating American offi cer said the evidence he was shown in the early morning black ness was "ridiculous." A Red liaison officer, pulling prepared notes from his pocket, promptly announced truce talks w?re "off from this time." The Reds made this announce ment only two hours and twenty five minutes after the alleged bombing incident, Ridgway said. Since this obviously was a high level command decision, the U. N. commander noted, it was evident the break-off was planned in ad vance. May Not Be Permanent Despite the appearance of final ity, high-ranking Allied officers Thursday night had expressed be lief the breakdown was "by - no means permanent." Red broadcasts displayed some confusion in announcing the ac tion. Communist China's official Peiping radio said that onlv Thurs day's sub-committee meeting was canceled. Later it quoted a Kae song dispatch as saying "further meetings at Kaesong have been suspended." This dispatch predicted "a fur ther format protest," presumably from a higher level, would be lodged with the U.N. command. The Red Korean radio added further uncertainty by saying the Communists would consider the U. N. did not want to continue talks unless the Reds received a satisfactory answer to their long scries of complaints. All these complaints now have been answered. The U. N. com mand said all the alleged inci dents cither did not happen or were the Reds' own fault. 'We'll Slaughter Them' The abrupt Red announcement that talks were off brought varied reaction. New York dispatches reported United Nations officials were de pressed, but hopeful the talks would be resumed. Secretary General Trygve Lie was pictured as viewing the breakdown with "gravest concern." Washington reported the feeling (Continued on Page 2) AFL Teachers Union Denounces Loyalty Oath GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. UP) Loyally oalhs for school teachers stand condemned by the AFL teachers union on grounds of "in dignity and personal injury." The American Federation o f Teachers, in convention here, de nounced such oaths in a resolution. Loyalty oaths, the resolution said, "inflict indignity and per sonal Injury on the honest and loyal teacher by implying he is disloyal until he swears he ia loyal." The AFL further assailed t h e loyalty oath, declaring it is a means of "intimidating" teachers and "does not create true loyally nor expose those whose loyalty lies elsewhere." The federation re-elected John M. Eklund of Denver as presi dent. Eklund. named to his fourth term, defeated Carl Megel of Chi cago, by a vote of 507 to 382. Federation vice presidents elec ted included Mrs. Cecile Oliver, Portland, Ore. Auto Wreck Rescuers Overlook Little Child WINAMAC, Ind. UP) Re cuers overlooked three-year-old Kathryn Dilts when they pulled her father, James Dilts Jr., from his overturned automobile. The father murmered "Katy" several limes to doctors, working on him in a hospital Wednesday. The rescue group returned to the wreck and found the child's body under the car, her face pressed into a mud bank. Doctors said (he apprently had suffocated. Levity Fact Rant r L. F. Reizensteln Blessings on the, gentle drops. Don't restrict your powers; Next timt you spout, Com down all-out fijii give ut thundershowen. O G