1
2
2 Th Nwi-Rviw, Roseburg, Ort. Frl., Sept. 21. 1951
Charles E. Hausotter
Serving In Far East
Charles E. Hausotter, aviation
structural mechanic, third class,
USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
E. Hausotter of box 1.18, Riddle,
is serving in the Far East aboard
tne seaplane lender usa rine is
land.
The Pine Island services the
large Naval patrol planes which
are used in aerial reconnaissance
work, and quarters the crews. '
During its present tour of duty,
the Pine Island has visited Japan
and Okinawa and the Philippine
Islands. Its crew is entitled to the
Korean Service medal, the Japa
nese Occupation medal and the
China Service medal (extended.)
The Pine Island served in 1946
as the flag ship of the eastern
task group of Rear Admiral flyrd's
famous operation High Jump on
the Antarctic survey cruise. The
ship was seen in the motion pic
ture "The Secret Land," a por
trayal of the Antarctie expedition.
Two Glendale Sailors
Servo Aboard Carrier
Two Glendale men, Ralph R.
McDowell, commissaryman, third
class, USN, son of Mrs. George
C. May, and Glen C, Meads, avia
tion boatswain's mate, third class,
USN, son of Mrs. Cecil Meads, are
serving on the 27,000-ton aircraft
carrier USS Essex in Korean wa
ters. A veteran of 68 World War II
combat operations, her aircraft
destroyed 1.531 enemy planes and
sent 111 Japanese ships to the
bottom. The carrier was removed
from mothballs and recommis-
sioned last January at Bremerton,
Wash.
During the last two years of her
five-year retirement from active
service, the Essex underwent a
$40,000,000 structural moderniza
tion program, to enable her to
handle heavier fighters and fighter
bombers. The carrier arrived in the Ko
rean theater In late August to re
lieve the aircraft carrier USS
Princeton.
Two Local Men Enlist
To Serve In Air Force
Milo M. Claughton Jr., son of
Mr. and Mrs. N. Claughton of
Camas Valley, enlisted in the U.S.
air force on Sept. 18. On comple
tion of his basic training at Lack
land AF base, San Antonio, Texas,
he will be assigned to one of the
many air force technical schools.
Also enlised In the air force
on the same date was Wayne K.
Neptune, son of Mrs. Ruby Nep
tune of Roseburg. Neptune was a
recent graduate from the Rose
burg high school and was em
ployed by United Petroleum cor
poration, Roseburg, prior to his
enlisting.
LEGION AUXILIARY SERVES
The American Legion Auxilii
ary, Unit 16, urges all members
to bring sandwiches or salads to
be served to the men who will be
working at the Kohihagen building
on N. Jackson street Sunday.
DRESS UP YOUR LIVING ROOM WITH
A NEW WOOL RUG.
These new rugs have Just arrived and art In the latest
fall colors and designs.
PRICED FROM 84.50 UP
Guest Speaker Slated
At First Baptist Church
The Rev. Dewey Mullholland will
speak at the First Conservative
Baptist church tonight at 8. A
potluck supper will be served at
7.
The Rev. Mullholland Is enrol; te
to Brazil, South America, where
he will be engaged In missionary
work. His father, the Rev. Ralph
Mullholland, who is now in Mon
terey, Calif., was pastor in Rose
burg several years ago. The public
ia invited.
Torch Used To Cut
Trucker From Cab
SPOKANE OP) A young
truck driver, his body pinned
sua nst the steering wheel, his leg
broken and his safely twice men
aced by fire, was cut free by an
acetylene torch Thursday after his
truck and a switch engine col
lided. David E. Knittle, 24, spent more
than 30 harrowing minutes inside
the crushed cab of his truck. He
was finally lifted out and taken
to a hospital with a broken leg
and foot, chest ana possiDie in
ternal injuries.
Twenty police, firemen and pas-
sersby gathered to get him out,
Knitile, unable to move but con
scious all the time, watcned as a
garage mechanic cut through steel
with the torch to free mm.
The train crew nut out one fire
that started In the cab shortly
after the crash. The torch started
another but it was auickly doused,
The truck was carrying a load of
heavy, damp hog fuel.
Oregon Beach
Home Purchased
PORTLAND m The T. H.
Banfield beach home, a 160 acre
estate in a picturesque setting at
Otter Rock, has been sold to
Yachats motel operators.
It was understood here that the
new owners, H. B. and Lillian Mc
Even and Inez Vaughn, planned
to convert into a resort hotel some
time in the future, possibly next
year.
The buyer recently sold the Pad
dock, a 24-unit motel south of
Yachats to Mr. and Mrs. H. C.
Garrison, formerly of Texas for
a sum reported greater than $200,
000. The price paid Mrs. Banfield for
the Otter Rock property was not
disclosed.
Fir Production
Heading For Top
PORTI A Mil irm n.,i..
fir production, up last month after
a jury lau-ou, may ne neacung
for a record high, the West Coast
Lumbermen's association reported
inursaay.
Harris E. Smith, association sec
retary, said that in the first 35
wenkfl nf fhls vpnr nrnHuptinn uoa
7.SAS R4fl OOO fppt mmnniwil with
6,863,301,000 at the same time last
year. And last year's production
set a 12-month record.
Orders and shipments also are
up, Smith said.
The August weekly averages
were: production, 221,781,000 board
feet; orders, 195,365,000; and ship
ments zusiz.ouu.
Unfilled nrripre nt thn anA nf
August were 533,236.000 feet and
gross stocks 886,889,000' board feet.
Blocked Alleys
Warning Needed
The city fire or police depart
ments should be notified if alleys
are to be blocked overnight or for
longer periods, according to Tony
Shukle, assistant fire chief.
The principal offenders in block
ing alleys are persons who must
have their wood dumped there,
and in some cases cannot get the
wood moved Into their woodsheds
Immediately.
mn wnnH in aIIpvu. if thev have
no other place, but in cases where
thA umnH pannnf hp removed until
the next day or longer, the city
should be notified, tms is to Keep
fire department trucks from turn
ing down blocked alleys in case
of fire, said Shukle. The delay of
the fire truck may prove costly,
be pointed out.
25-Ft. Boat Sea Trip To
Continue Despite Mishap
EUREKA, Calif. P) Despite
another mishap, a Salem, Ore.,
couple plans to continue a round-the-world
trip in a 25-foot boat.
Towed to port here by a coast
guard cutter, Mr. and Mrs. Luis
A. Martine-Lally said they would
repair the engine of their boat
"The Magic Carpet," then would
set out again on their voyage.
They admitted they were a "lit
tle scared" when their boat sprung
a leak off-shore, their engine
wouldn't work, and a dense fog
surrounded them. They feared they
could not be found in the fog, after
calling for help by radio.
The cutter found them, though,
and by that time Martine-Lally had
plugged the leak.
From here they plan to sail to
San Francisco, then to Los Ange
les and on to Honolulu.
A series of mishaps has delayed
the couple, who left Astoria four
weeks ago.
Alaska Company
Given Contract
WASHINGTON UP) The Bu
reau of Reclamation announced
Thursday the awarding of its first
major construction contract out
side the United States for a
part of the Eklutna project in
Alaska.
The contract went to Palmer
Constructors, Omaha, Neb., on a
low bid of $17,348,865. The firm is
a combine of three companies,
Peter Kiewit Sons, Coker Construc
tion Co. and Morrison-Knudsen Co.
The price is almost $4,000,000 less
than a low bid received last June,
when the bureau rejected 8? $21,
321,695 offer as excessive.
The Eklutna project is expected
to cost $33,800,000 and to provide
more than 164,000,000 kilowatt-
hours of energy for the achorage
area. A 30,000-kilowatt power plant
will be built at Tidewater on the
Anchorage-Palmer highway.
GIBSON TO RETURN
Cpl George G. Gibson. Riddle
Is listed among 1,077 combat vet
erans from Korea who will arrive
Saturday, aboard an MSTS trans
port, the name of which will be
disclosed later. The passengers
include rotation combat personnel
coming home for reassignment
and enlisted reserve corpsmen re
turning to civilian life.
HARTFORD DIES
NEW YORK -UP) John A.
Hartford 79, chairman of the
board of the A. c P. chain food
stores, died yesterday after a heart
attack in a Manhattan skyscraper
elevator.
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BOTH FOR ONLY 59.50
Ridqway Withholds Reply
To Red Resumption Offer
TOKYO UP) Gen. Mathew
B. Rldgway withheld his answer
today to communist proposal to
resume the Korean truce talks at
Kaesong.
The battle of words over how
to get the wheel of peace re
volving again was as muted as
the United Nations' limited offen
sive action was loud.
Even Red China's Peiplng ra
dio the Communist sounding
board that pours out tens of thou
sands of words each day in anti
United Nations command propa
ganda was notably silent.
There was only a dribble of
hashed-over complaints of Kae
song neutrality violations where
torrents used to flow.
Battle For U. S
Institutions
Urged By Truman
SAN FRANCISCO OP) Pres.
Ident Truman has called for an
all out fight to safeguard the
United States and its institutions,
which he said "are threatened
as they have never been before."
In a message to the AFL con
vention, the President said the
nation and its institutions are
threatened by communism, infla
tion, and reaction.
"They are threatened by the
danger of Communist aggression,"
the President said.
"They are threatened by the
danger of inflation with its terrible
burdens on the great body of our
citizens.
"They are threatened by re
action here at home; threatened
by people who want to turn the
clock back, who wanted to strike
down all the social and economic
progress we have made, and by
people who are using the threat of
communism as a screen for their
attacks on the very foundations of
our civil liberties.
"These are real threats, threats
that must be met."
The President paid particular
tribute to the AFL and cllled the
working men and women of the
nation "our greatest single re
source." Earlier, leaders of the AFL had
assembled evidence charging that
Russia is engaging in kidnapings
jn western Germany, Austria and
other free areas of occupied coun
tires. The AFL said it would place
this evidence before the United
Nations.
WALLACE, Idaho UP) The
mayors of the mining towns of
Wallace, Kellogg and Mullan have
joined in proclaiming the week
of Sept. 23 as "anti-communism
week."
The mayors, C. A. Magnuson of
Wallace; H. C. Seeber of Kel
logg and Dan Colohan of Mullan,
in a joint proclamation declared
they believe "that all subversive
activities against the govern
ment of the United States of
America should be brought to light
and destroyed," and that "all
Americans and all, other peoples
. . . . should be cognizant of the
Inroads of communism creating
a dangerous condition existing in
our localities in the United States
and abroad."
The proclamation says the week
is proclaimed "in order to call
attention to such subversive ac
tivities and this dangerous condi
tion," and it Invites "all the
people in our communities to as
sist in stopping subversive activi
ties.". SHARE RECEIVED
Douglas county recently re
ceived $3,478 as its share of the
soil conservation service dividends
for the year ending June 30, 1951,
according to an Associated Press
dispatch. Payments made to Ore
gon counties amounted to $813,-522.
'..X - I
"TYLE-BORD" the Magic
Word in HOUSEKEEPING!
"TYLEBORD" is a magic word to good housekeepers
who look ahead. They realize they can have walls in their
kitchens and bathrooms that need not undergo annual patch
ing, painting or resurfacing . , . Walls as. easy to keep clean
as a modern refrigerator.
Because the plastic-coated surface of TYLE.BORD ia
baked on, it does not fade or lose its original beauty and
luster. TYLEBORD is always fresh and colorful . . .
always easy to keep dean.
Idleyld Park
By MRS ARTHUR SEBLY ....
Mrs. Arthur M. Selby wrote th
article appearing in Thursday'!
News-Review concerning the Lone
Rock bridge. Mrs. Selby's by-line
on the article was unintentionally
omitted.
Guests of the Forrest Losee'i
the past week were Mr. and Mrs.
Royal Wilkinson of Eugene, sis
ter' and brother-in-law of Forrest,
and his brother and wife, Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde J. Losee, of North Hol
lywood, who are fishing on the
North Umpqua. Clyde Losee is the
general maintenance superintend
ent of the Chrysler assembly plant
at North Hollywood.
Idleyld Park has three new
families: Mr. and Mrs. G. R.
Greenup and children, Jerry and
Sharon, moved from Cloverdale
Park to the Brown property.
GreenuD is eniDloved by the Kuc-
kenburg Construction Co.
Also, Mr. and Mrs. tins uamp
bell and children, Linda, La Juana,
Wayne and Rosella, who moved
from a house on the Wellborn
ranch on Lone Rock road to the
Sncllstrom property. Mrs. Camp
bells parents, Mr. and Mrs. Liaie
Wilson, and granddaughter, Vicki,
brought their trailer house onto
the same property. Campbell and
Wilson are employed by the Holm
Lumber Co. The Wellborn house
had been sold to an Elgarose
couple who were burned out by
the lire.
Mr. and Mrs. Si Enlow and
daughter, Harriet, have returned
from a week's visit to Enlow's
parents in Tacoma, Wash. They
returned via Astoria to visit
friends there.
T. B. Daily of Oakland, Calif.,
a guest at idleyld Park lodge, spent
a week fishing.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Lobe of Gait,
Calif., accompanied by their son
and daughter-in-law, spent a week
at the Idleyld apartments owned
by Clyde Watkins.
Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Hicks of Man
hattan Beach, Calif., have been
spending the last two weeks as
guests of Clayton Milner. Mr. and
Mrs. R. G. Allen of Portland were
also weekend guests.
Rov Sills has sold his property
to Jack Lambright who is from
Oklahoma. Lambright's son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Watts, have moved into the cabin.
The Watts have a new son, born
Wednesday, Sept. 19.
Mrs. W. Davis is the new clerk
at the Idleyld store.
Mrs. Lonnie Brooks has just re
turned from a 3-day visit with
relatives in Mapleton.
Checker Game Draws Son
Into Death With Mother
LONDON UP) The story of
how a young mother played her
seven-year-old son a deadly game
of checkers in a gas-filled room
was unfolded at an inquest here.
Coroner P. B. Skeels found that
Mrs. Dorothy White, 34, kept her
son's attention by playing the
game until both died in the kitchen
of their home. Friends said she
had been despondent because of a
nervous breakdown.
The jury returned a verdict of
suicide and murder.
Fatal Heart Attack
Ends Anniversary Trip
KLAMATH FALLS -IIP) The
25th wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Whiting, Glen
dale, Calif., ended in tragedy
Wednesday.
Vacationing In this area, they
left their motel to spend the wed
ding anniversary at Crater lake.
As they were leaving the lake to
return here, Whiting, 57, died of a
heart attack.
EAGLES SPONSOR PROGRAM
The broken toy program that
provides gifts at Christmas for
needy children is being sponsored
by the Eagles Lodge Instead of the
Elks lodge as reported earlier.
Last Of 10 Escapees
From Idaho Captured
SAN DIEGO, Calif. UP)
James Henry Cesena, 21, surren
dered to FBI agents last night,
ending a manhunt that started Sat
urday when he and 10 other federal
prisoners escaped from the county
jail at caldweu, idano.
Cesena was the last of the . 10
still at large.
The FBI said his. surrender was
arranged by relatives. Agents
quoted him as saying he gave him
self up because San Diego police
had put on "too much heat." ,
Another of the 10, Richard T.
Fisher, 21, of Phoenix, Ariz., was
captured here Tuesday by a po
liceman who questioned him as a
loiterer.
Jap Wife Draws
Forgery Charge
TOKYO UP) The Japanese
wife of an American army cap
tain was charged with forgery to
day in occupation provost court.
She is accused of forging 14 bills
of exchange in a Japanese bank.
The aggregate sum was 450 mil
lion yen, which is $1,250,000 at the
legal rate of exchange.
The woman, who is the wife of
Capt. Thomas E. Wood, surrend
ered voluntarily and was released
immediately on her own recog
nizance. Capt. Wood, from 5625 Grand
Ave., Dea Moines, is stationed at
Yokohama. They were married
Feb. 17, 1951. The alleged forgeries
took place in August, 1950.
Orginally indicted by Japanese
courts, Mrs. Wood' held that the
Japanese courts had no jurisdic
tion because she was the wife of
an occupation officer. The Tokyo
district court upheld her motion.
Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, su
preme commander of the occupa
tion, then authorized the occupation
court to assume jurisdiction. No
trial date has been . set.
Aluminum Slated
For North Dakota
WASHINGTON UP) Senator
Young (R-ND) said a $100,000,000
aluminum reduction industry Is
"assured" for North Dakota if
railroads serving the area will re
duce shipping rates.
Negotiations are now going on
with the railroads, Young told a
reporter. They are the Northern
Pacific, Great Northern, and the
Soo Line railroads.
"Among those interested in put
ting in an alumunum plant in
North Dakota are Olin Industries
and the Aluminum company of
America (Alcoa)," Young said.
British Bookies Give
Odds On Conservatives
LONDON UP) British book
ies Thursday offered six to four
on the Conservatives to win the
British national election Oct, 25.
Professional politicians among
the Conservatives warned against
ovcroptimism, pointing to the
United States presidential elec
tions in 1948.
"Remember the Republicans,'
one Conservative leader said.
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Highway Project
To Be Discussed
At Sutherlin
Citizens of Sutherlin will discuss
the relocation of highway 99 at a
public meeting in the old gymna
sium of the high school Sept. 24
at 8 p.m.
The decision to hold the meeting
was made Tuesday night when the
five-man committee appointed by
the city council to study the re
location convened.
The hearing is being held to ac
quire information from the public
on the relocation problem prior
to presenting the case before rep
resentatives of the State Highway
department Oct. 9.
Sutherlin committeemen will be
given 30 minutes to lay their pro
posals before the representatives.
During the public hearing the
type of access roads to the city
will be discussed, the arguments
for and against the relocation will
be considered.
The state Highway department
will hold similar meetings in
towns affected by the highway
construction project.
Power Executive
Blames Fishing
PORTLAND UP) James H.
Polhemus, president of Portland
General Electric Co., said Thurs
day that fishing interests were
partly 'responsible for the current
power shortage in the Northwest.
He said they had blocked for
two years construction of Pelton
dam on the Deschutes. With that
dam turning our power, the pres
ent shortage would be less severe,
he said.
John Beaten, chairman of the
Oregon Fish commission, said
Pelton dam wouldn't be big enough
to be much of a factor in the
northwest power picture.
Plans announced by PGE last
spring said Pelton would have a
peak capacity of 120,000 kilowatts.
That is about half of the inter
ruplible power cut off by Bonne
ville last Monday.
Jury Convicts McCracken
Of Murdering Child
SANTA ANA, Calif. UP) A
jury Wednesday convicted Henry
Ford McCracken in- his second
trial on charges of murdering 10-year-old
Patricia Jean Hull last
May 19.
The hulking hillbilly musician
was found guilty of first degree
murder. The jury did not make
any recommendation. Under Cali
fornia law the death penalty would
be mandatory.
In his first trial, which ended
Aug. 2, a jury was unable to agree
on a verdict on the murder charge,
but convicted the 34-year-old gui
tar player of child stealing. It
acquitted him, however, of kidnap- .
ing.
' IRWIN HELD
Herbert Leonard Irwin, 59,
Drain, is being held in the county
jail pending arraignment in dis
tirct court on a charge of driving
while under the influence of intox
icating liquor, reports the state po
lice. FOR SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER
More Women Are Needed
In Service, Says Group
WASHINGTON -UP) An ad- T
visory committee on women in the
services recommended to the De
fense department yesterday that
present figure of 30,000 women in
the armed forces be increased to
112,000 within the next few months.
In an initial report made to the
department after hearing ad
dresses by top officials, the com
mittee said the need was urgent
and that:
"There are sufficient numbers
of American women to meet all
the needs of maintenance of home,
industry, educational and medical
institutions as well as military re
quirements." GOP Disputes
Truman Outlook
WASHINGTON UP) Repub
licans blasted at President Tru.
man's 1952 victory predictions to- .
day while southern Democrats took
grim note of his intent to help draft
his own party's platform.
Almost to a man Republicani
disputed hotly the President's as
sertion at a news conference yes- ,
terday that his opposition has no
issues and is resorting to misrep
resentation and smears.
Senator Knowland (R-Cahf) put
the sentimeat of many of his col
leagues into words with the dec
laration that "the people will have
a chance to decide whether there
are any issues in 1952 and they
will express themselves on
efficiency and integrity in govern
ment by electing a Republican
president." I
. '
Baby Sitter Penalized
In Death Of Two Tots
OWENSBORO, Ky. UP) A
19-year-old baby sitter whose two
charges suffocated in her absence
faces a 90-day jail term.
Anna Louise Dillingham wa
convicted of involuntary man
slaughter by a circuit court jury.
Miss Dillingham, crippled by
polio. since she was two, was
charged with two counts of in
voluntary manslaughter as a re
sult of the deaths of Ronald
Wayne, 3, and Sheila Ann Holt,
1. She was tried for the boy's
death.
The children suffocated In a
smoke-filled bedroom in the apart
ment of their parents, Lt. and
Mrs. Harold Holt, last Feb. 21.
Lt. Holt, now stationed at Fort
Sill, Okla., was in Korea at the
time. Mrs. Holt had hired Miss
Dillingham to watch the children
while she was at work.
Miss Dillingham admitted leav
ing the children for an early morn
ing trip with a Fort Knox soldier
whose name she had forgotten.
Fire broke out in the Holt apart
ment after the baby-sitter had
departed.
ARRIAGNMENT SET
Two men will be arraigned in
district court today, reports the
state police. They are Fred Jack
son Marshall, 633 E. 2nd Ave. S.,
who was arrested Thursday on a
charge of being drunk in a public
place, and Newman Edward V
O'Brien, 57, California, who was
arrested in the Happy Valley area
and charged' with vagrancy.
22nd
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