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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1951)
if. of 0. Library Eugene, Oregon COkP 1 Ss. (NKA Rtiio-TtUpkatat DENOUNCES DISARMAMENT PROPOSAL-Soviet Foreign Min ister Andrei Vishinsky delivers denunciition oJ the AUied proposal for world disarmament it the United Nations General Assembly meeting in Paris. Be did, however, call for s world conference to be held June 1, 1952, to discuss disarmament, including the outlaw ing of atomic weapons. Truce Negotiators Haggle 6ver Future Adjustments In Tentative Peace Draft By NAT6 POLOWETSKY MUNSAN, Korea IM U. N. truce negotiators- today gave up the idea of swapping hard-won land in central and eastern Korea for Kaesong in the west, if and when a cease-fire line is drawn. A new proposal submitted by allied negotiators at Panmunjom called for a cease-fire buffer zone based on the line of contact and Jirovided for only "such minor ocal adjustments as may be. mu tually considered desirable." The line would be determined after GOP Scramble Reveals Crop Of Candidates ' By1 JACK BELL ' WASHINGTON IIP) The scramble between Senator Taft (R-Ohio) and backers of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower for nomi nating votes seemed likely today to bring an early crop of Repub lican "favorita son" presidential candidates. Gov. Earl Warren of California, second man on the defeated 1948 GOP . national ticket, apparently was on the verge of making him self available for the top spot in 1852. Warren said he wilt announce a decision in a week. Senator Know lafcid R . Calif), close political friend of the governor, predicted Warren will be in there pitching for delegates.' Harold E. Stassen, former gov ernor of Minnesota who now heads the University of Pennsylvania, told a Chicago news conference his plans for 1952 will be open for analysis until January. Stassen, who has said he won't support Taft for the nomination, indicated it was less likely he would run if Eisenhower does. Neither Stassen nor Warren is, strictly speaking, a "favorite son" candidate in the sense that either will have to depend solely on his own state for support. But War ren will have to lean primarily on California's backing and Stassen will have to loota to Minnesota un less the political picture changes rapidly. In New York, J. Russel Sprague, national committeeman, was quoted as saying he has been '-'as-sured" that Eisenhower would run. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS In th past week or so I've driven through a couple thousand miles or more of arid desert. I mean ARID. not semi-arid. There never was much loose water in thra area wlfich includes Nevada, Arizona, neiv Mexico and part ol Laltfof nial There isn't ANY now. I'm talking, of course, about what for want of a better word I think of as loose water. There is enough to drink, of course, and enough to wash your clothes and within reasonable limits enough to bath in, but many hotels and moels have signs in the bath room asking their guests to go easy In the matter of depth of water in the tub and PLEASE see to it that the taps arc all turned off tight so that none of the precious fluid may be wased down the drain. Making casual conversation with a bellhoD this morniic. I aaid! has it rained here within the past weex or sor "Men," ne answered, "It hasn't rained here for seven years." He was stretching It a bit for emphasis, but he wasn't too far off, at that. From Carson City, Nevada, (Continued on Page ) to The Weather Shewtrs this morning ktmin partly cloudy this ettarnoon and Sunday. Highest tamp, for any Nov. 7 Lowest ump. fev tnf Nov. . 14 Highest tamp, yesterday $7 Latest ttmp. last 14 houra 4a i'P. last 24 hours M from Nov. 1 .78 from San. 1 Til i J. ' 1.8 Sunsat today, 4.S4 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow, 7:01 a.m. other points on the armistice agenda are settled. In nearly all oast proposals the allies demanded "appropriate ad justment" be made in fixing the line. Observers have taken thia to mean that the U. N. allies wanted compensation for whatever terri tory they were giving up when the cease-fire line was settled. The allies have said they were willing to give up territory In the east for Kaesong in the west, because it is vital to the protection of allietl held Seoul, South Korean capital. Kaatong May B Hald The possibility remained that Kaesong might be in United Na tions hands when a cease-fire line eventually is plotted. Presumably both offers will be discussed when the subcommittees meet in their 18th session Sunday morning. Red China's Peiping radio Sat urday ni?ht quoted a story by a communist newsman at Panmun jom as saying "if the Americans give up their demand for Kae song, a settlement can be reached in a matter of hours." The story was by Allan Winning ton of the London Daily Worker. Winnington said Brig. Gen. Wil liam P. Nuckois, official U. N. spokesman, had lied and had dis torted the communist position. Nuckois said at a briefing the Red reaction to the new united Nations offer was "geoeraU nega tive, buf they didn't close the door." The red proposal was that the demarcation line and buffer zona be established immediately. A. B. Cays Pilots Plane Involved In Air Collision ' EUGENE VP) An airliner with 23 aboard and a single en gine plane collided last night above the Eugene airport. But the airliner landed with no mishap and the light plane didn't crash until later when it ran out of gas. J. T. Feeney, CAA inspector, said preliminary reports indicated the light plane grazed the West Coast Airlines DC-3 just as the larger plane was preparing to land. Feeney quoted the pilot of the small plane, Archie Bernard Cays of Roseburg, as saying that he thought he bad collided with a bird. The tail of the airliner was slightly damaged. The light plane flew 40 miles north to Tangent, Ore., where it crash-landed when it ran out of gas. Cays suffered a black eye in the landing. He was treated at the Albany hospital and later returned to Eugene where he reported to the CAA. Passengers in the West Coast plane were transferred to another plane' and continued their trip north. The CAA said its investigation would continue. THREE-ACT COMEDY Western Arms Proposal Termed A Smokescreen MOSCOW m The West's disarmament proposal to the United Nations was described in the Soviet press today as a "smoke-screen." and the way it was presented was called A "three-act comedy." It was the first press reaction to the joint American-British-French proposal for a census of the world's arms including atomic weapons made two days ago in Paris before the U. N. gen eral assembly. (Monitors in London, however, said Radio Moscow yesterday used up 14t hours of its broadcasting time transmitting repeatedly Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Vishin sky's rejection of the plan.) Said Moscow's Literary Ga zette; "Every time the western diplomats try to lull the vigilance of the peoples they resort to a smokescreen of neace srnnnsali. This is what hmune th. ivlh session of the general assembly of 1 the V. N. got underway." Marines Blast Red Positions In Big Assault AKi HaMnq forti. i Mm Stiff Rt!itatK; ChlntM Mov Troop By OfCKOf A. McAKTHU U. S. EIGHTH ARMY HEAD-; QUARTERS, Korea UP) North j Korean troops on the eastern front : were unwilling "guests" of First; division marines celebrating the corps' lT6th birthday today. The Leathernecks marked the anniversary with a terrific aerial and artillery attack on a line of Communist-held hills, northeast of the punchbowl. Another anniversary Armistice day, Sunday wilt be "business at usual" for the U. S. Eighth army, ita commander. Gen. James A. Van Fleet, (aid in a ststement. Allied raiding parties met stub born Red resistance Saturday as they stormed Commjnitt posi tions along the Western front. The Reds used small arms, automatic weapons, mortars and hand gre nades against the U. N. troops. Artillery. Pounds Enemy After the raiding parties re turned to their own linea United Nation! artillery pounded the Reds. An Allied officer told AP corres pondent Milo Fsrneti the Chinese Reds were "apparently moving in a whole new corps" (about 30,000 men) to replace the one badly chewed up near Kumsong last month. Eiuwhere an the ouiet. cold bat tle front, U. N. command patrols met only light, sporadic resistance Saturday. Ua rhtaacttloA Mat Allied iet fiEhter awept the North Korean skies without spot ting a single Communist plane up in noon todav. the air force said. For several days marine planes dropped pamphlets on North Ko rean lines invitin? Communist trooDS to the Leathernecks' birth day party. After Saturday's bar rage, the Marines cut big birth day cBkea uown m ty neucopier. Elsewhere, an Eighth army briefing officer said, no Red force larger than a company had been reported in action anywhere on the battle line since Friday. O'Leary Continues To Lose Weight In Hiccup Battle LOS ANGELES VP) Jack Leirv appears to be losing ground in his three and t half year fight against hiccups. The former market manager weighs a. scant 78 pounds, the lightest he has been since the spasms started jolting him on June 13, 1948. At that time he weighed 135. And since then he has hiccuped at least once per second :night and day except for a four-day respite a month ago. In those four days be picked up a pound and was able to retain food. Then the hic cups started again. His mother, Mrs. Margaret O'Leary, said the spasms stopped during three - week sojourn in Phoenix, Ariz. Somehow, she said Jack feels better while there. She added that doctors told her it must be some "mineral reaction" in the air. Jack has visited other desert towns without apparent benefit. He spent his 26th birthday last Mon day quietly at their home here. Jack began hiccuping after his appendix ruptured. A! ore than 200 doctors have tried to help him. He has received suggestions from over 20,000 sympathizers from ail parts ot the world. Former College Professor Arrested On Drug Charge LOS ANGELES VP) Wil liam Lempia, 46, who says be was formerly a criminology professor st the University of Chicago, was arrested yesterday on suspicion of selling narcotics. Lempia, who has bachelor's Bnd master's degrees from the Univer sity of Southern California, was discharged from the Los Angeles police force in 1933 for conduct unbecoming an officer. Matt O'Connor, state narcotics inspec tor, said. Officers said Lempia had five heroin capsules on his person when he waa arrested. He told police he taught criminology and ele ments of police science at Chicago about 10 years ago. "A three-act comedy was played out," said the Gazette, "consist ing of the so-called three-power declaration by the U.S.A., France and Britain, Truman'a radio speech and Acheson's sddress at the general assembly." The paper, charged that the United States was not "interested presently in lessening interna tional tension," and is "still less interested in making any conces sions on Soviet proposals." The western proposal was de scribed as a flop which was com pletely exposed by Vishinsky. Vishinsky, in his rejection speech before the general assem bly, dismissed the propessi ss lu dicrous, trifling and apuriout. Ho countered with a four-p o i ti t tic part, urging an Immediate cease-fire in Korea with with drawal of all foreign troops within 30 days, suggesting a worid con. ference on disarmament before June 1, 1952, and asking for Big fivo pac pact) ferebthhed ltn KOSUl. OMCOM SAKHtOAV, KOVlMttl IS, Ittt jr proposal m To Co Before Voters Soon The orooosed consolidation of 11 i outlying school districts with dis trict four (Roseburg senoots) wmi be decided upon In district elec-j tions soon. . That waa the announcement! made Friday by Paul S. Elliott,: district four achool superintendent.; Petitions to the boundary Board from each of the districts asking for election dates have been re ceived by County School Super intendent Kenneth F. . Barneburg. The action followed a meeting of district four school board with representatives from the outside districts Nov. S. Schools and districts ' affected by the decision re; Wilbur, dis trict two; Green, three; tenroue, seven: Lookinggiass, 13; Roberts Creek, 37; Garden Valley, 43; Umpqua, 4S; Melrose, 71; Win chester 94; Diltard, 118, and Riv ersdale, 123. Would trtcraat Enrollment Approval of the consolidation is sue by all schools would mean the administration ot schools contain ing 1214 elementary pupils and 314 Junior high school students in addition to those in district four, or a total of 4868. The fig ures quoted were taken from sta tistics compiled Sept. 22, 1951. ' Pupils now enrolled in Roseburg total 1623 elementary children in grades from one to six, and 464 junior high school students in tb seventh and eighth grades. Eighty-six percent of $he total days attendance of the tuition stu dents in the county com from these districts. The report released by the school board of district four states: "The school board ot school dis trict four, in light of recent de 42 Listed Dead As Direct Result Of Auto Accidents The county's traffic death tott officially stands t4J.. ior tin? year, ' ' Oistrict Attorney Robert G. Sa vls made the announcement Fri day after a thorough check through accident records in the county. The toll was previously listed at 32 to date but investigations re vealed a descrepsncy in figures reported by the secretary of state's office. Ten cars involved in serious ac cidents in Douglas county this year went on display today on Jackson street aa part of the county's traffic safety campaign. Officara Explain A public address system was broadcasting taped interviews of accidents provided by the Wash ington state patrol's "Could This Be You" radio program. Officers were on hand to explain the acci dents and answer Questions. A map o the county showing a red "X" denoting each fatal accident this year also went on display this morning. The map was drawn by Dbb Mondolovich, News-Review staff artist. included in the ten wrecks on display are a 1948 coupe in which a man was fatally injured in a car train crash Oct. 23, a 194 Buick in which another man was fatally injured when his car crashed into a truck Oct. 21, and a third vehicle which smashed into the rear ot a truck Oct IS snd sent four to the hospital where they are still confined in serious condition. Traveling Officials Press Air Group By FRANCtS i. KELLY WASHINGTON im -So many congressmen are going abroad that the military air transport service is aaid to be hard pressed to provide them suitable planes. In addition, the State denartment is reported running -abort of escort oificera. Approximately 80 House mem bers and 39 Senators are now over seas or are planning official ex cursions during the current ad journment of Congress. Others completed - tour earlier in the year. Although a few groups chose to travel by ahip, most of the law makers preferred to go by air, covering a greater amount of ter ritory. Several of the journeys catena arouna tne worid. The Defense department Ss find' ing it a headache to rustle up enough planes of the type usually assigned to vtfS very import ant persons official say. Prac tically all insist upon plush, four- engine ships. An exception is one small group planning to iesve soon for South America, where many airfields will accomodate only the smaller two-engine Jobs. WELLSELOVED? SAVANNAH, Ga. (P John R. Wellbeloved doesn't think he it Ha aaid yesterday that bis wife, Mrs. Margaret M. Wellbeloved, fussed, nagged ana argued con tinually," which made life pretty misers Die. It all came out In a divorce ce fition ha filed in superior court. P f f II w Mi velopments such ss th Increase: of assessed valuation of in ats-i trict, non-high school revenues available to districts in the vi- i cinity of Roseburg, and uncertain-: ties of the Holy bill now under: referendum, is now of the opinion: that the proposed consolidation may sot, at the present time, be to the best interests of either achool district four or the district involved." Superintendent Elliott said it was imperative that the people oi the districts should hsv an oppor tunity to vote upon the issue, and the good feeling that now exists should be maintained. Wilt Take Students In the statement released, it was also stated that district four would continue taking out-of-dia-trict high school students on a College Professor Admits Burglary, Asks For Mercy DR. GWYKHE NETTIE SANTA BARBARA, Calif.-UP-Debonair Br. Gwynn Nettlcr, a sociology . professor by day, pleaded guilty yesterday t o charges that be was a burglar by night, then threw himself on the mercy of the court. "He was led astray by the emo tion bred in bim by sordid love affair," declared the professor' attorney in asking for probation. Dr. Nettler, who was called the best dressed professor on the Santa Barbara college campus, waa jailed after a comely divorcee. Mrs. rrsBcme scnaeier, uiratu in tfe authorities a signed j account of Nettler's second story activities. Trapped by the letter, She 38- year-old P.H.D. confessed every thins yesterday and waived his preliminary hearing. He is charged with three count of burglary and one count of carrying a concealed weapon. A great mina nss gone sssray, aaid Neuter's lawyer. W. P. But cher. "Because of Dr. Settler's high intellectual qualities he has an insight into hi problem and the ability to redeem Jumseii. : Nevertheless. Jud?e Ernest Wagner ordered the professor to submit to a psycnialric examina tion, results of which will be an nounced when he comes up lor probation hearing on fiov. Zd. Kashmir Mediator Given Time T Settie Dispute PARIS OPi The U, ff, se curity council gave it Kashmir mediator six more wees Ky i try to get India and Pakistan to puil their troops out of Kashmir. It adopted a U. S. -British reso lution empowering Dr. Frank Gra ham to continue efforts he made last siuhmer to get a demilitarisa tion agreement which would al low the' predominantly Msiltffl people of Kashmir to hold V.H. plebiscite on whether they want to join Hindu India or Moslem Pakistan. Kashmir's Hindu Ma harajah acceded at the time In dia became independent. Britain' Si Cladwyn Jebh and Ernest Gross, U. S., speaking for sponsor of the measure to ex tend Sr. Graham's task, said they were heartened by cooperative statements made by Indian lead ers recently. Wind Break Tr Fork; Damages Two Automobile The morning hevy wind broke out one fork of s locust tree, which feii upon two crs parked on the Lock wood motors car lot at Oak and Rose streets. The tree fork, shout on and one-half feet in disnscter, smashed the top, hood and fender of O. U Seli't car. The other automobile. owned by Al Sandert, wat not bsdiy dsmsges. McCuilocb Chain Saw Co. wat caiied to saw up tad remove Hit Ire. f f i v I m Jiooi tmerger tuition basis for as additional year for the scfewi year 18K-S3 or until audi time a they are given t iesst one year nonce oi discontinuance. This action supersedes a motion approved by school board mem bers at a meeting ate. jk, isw, when It waa voted to diacontinue enrolling outside students for the 18S2-SJ school year. '. There are 443 tuition high school j students who tre being taught st the Roae&urg Senior high achool; this vesr. becsuse their diirictsi do not maintain bisa schools. Tui tion is financed through a tax levied by the rural school board on all districts in the county, ex cept first ciass district four. This cost would have to be paid by each district alone if th merger becomes effective. Censiderarf Earlier At a meeting of school district four board of directors Feb. 3, 353, the problem of consolidation waa discussed, and it was Bfisoimousiy agreed that the southern districts live, seven, 13, 37, 116 and 21 would benefit more sa a long- term, basis by consolidating with each other. Four schools Billard, Ten; mile, Lookinggiass and Csmis Val ley balloted on consonsauon; earlier la tn year, but Looking-: glass and Catties Valley rejected the . merger. While Biilard and Tenmiie did consolidate, a remonstrance waa fifed at the regular school election June 18 and the cenaolidattott waa dissolved. Superintendent Elliott said the present proposal was initiated to give districts ss opportunity to pass upon ins issue. Mother Charged With Child Cruelty After Burning Son j DETROIT m h mother Jrh0r.dids.t wsnS-rny- jcMdren to grow up to be bad" today atosa accused of stringing one boy up by ilia thumbs and of tocaing a fSaromg, oil-soaked Tg Into his taped hands, Mrs. Ethel Lssnbrook, S9 thrice-; married mother of four, is to be; arraigned today en a formal; charge of cruelty to children. The; cruelty, police ald, inflicted; for wrong-doing. The dark-haired Mr. Lashbreolt : aiaa it said to hays made h?r chiidren kneel bare-legged on pop corn kernels for long periods of time with their hands' upraised, "That's what my parents used ia do when I wa a girl," Prosecu tor Gersld K. O'Brien quoted her aa aaying. , Sometimes, she added, .the chil dren were made in acrub floors In lieu of the "kernel" treatment. The sentences, she said, were or dered during a "court" around the dinner table. Her husband, Clif ford, 48, waa judge and the wat prosecutor. , , ; The children, ahe aaid, tome- times made suggestions for pan ishme&t. The thumb torture. Prosecutor O'Brien aaid, waa used en Harry Zoller, 31, a son by a previous marriage, and David WIckiBitd. s 30-year-old playmate. She oue ; tioned them then about the theft of j missing $29 hill. David finally confessed faking the money, she aaid. , Earlier, at punishment: for set ting the back parch on fire, O'&rien said, Mrs, Lsshbrook taped Harry's hands together, psims up, and dropped the lam ing rag into them. The boy -tossed off the rag, and o escaped with out terioua burns. TENSION GROWS Threat Of Crisis Mounts In New York Dock Strike NEW YORK VPS The poas-; aibilily of a new crisis hovered over the New York waterfront to-; day aa rival factions in the Aft,': International Longshnremen'a at-; ctttkrs f!LA) charged each other; wish truce violation. With a record pier strike caiied ott 24 hour ago, leaders in the inlra-union dispute traded accusa tions of discrimination against striker and aon-siriker. The dimident !A group charged that underworld figure Anthony Anttiatit, an SLA hiring bos, locked out IT wildcatter! who sought to return to work yester day at Brooklyn piert. Asstteai, in a telephone interview, aaid be refuted to hire two men en order from hi employer. Threaten T Ouar H.A President Joseph ?, Ryart S cousterPd that the reoei local were threatening tn outt long- shoremen who worked during tha 2S-dty, feliiion-doiisr tieup of th worid' greatest port. Dissident Atomic Hoax Nets Swindler Large Purse Sy FftAfiK O'SKlf H I WASHINGTON t! 8m-; uei B. Mason wat sentenced her yesterday on charge growing oat; of "fantastic iBSchinsfjOBs" a sen-: at atibcommittee aaid h used is; convert fears of atomic sttsck into SSSS.OSS swindle. Oa counts of perjury, grass jar ceny and failure is ssxk income tax returns, Mssoa waa sentenced, ia district court to four to 32 year in prison and fine. Th pudgy little New Yorker wiilt i peg kg, big ideas and a pen chant for the race track as tounded members of ihe scssi investigation subcommittee; it summer with what Chsirmsa Heey iD-MC) called "one of the jsott fantastic jtorie ever told." fritt Sypped Two priest of the Creek Cath ijiie church, s Boiton contractor tad- Philadelphia foreign lan guage newspaperman said Mason got total of about (2Sa,S4 from Ssem. They said he toid iaent It was "sewer money" bribes la hi paid government official ia position to swing leases en govern ment feuikSincs. The baadtngs, they aaid Mason predicted, would be yacsted wSwb th government moved tela un derground quarters to , escape atomic homhinc. Mssott admitted getting ssool lioa.oae, and asked the senators;; "What wrong with that?" For; answer, the senators issued a -: port branding Mason as "com-: piete fraud" and turned th ess over la the Justice department. Mason told th senator he paid 2 bat 2S percent of what he tonic ia with hi atomic attack iwtoale to "Vine EBBgsrt," ia Wash ington, and that Eungarl had gon to Australia. The report canes Etmgart "figment of Mason imagination. Ob Oct. tt Mason pleaded SU&?lSCtllt$ W&SrCsffOI a ti muni im aeriarv ioe-i ? fore the senators) snd grand lar ceny, ana later to twa coams m failure to fii income tox reports ia 1844 ana IMS. 36 Coses Slated For Court Hearing Ttiirlylx cases ara asaeuulea' to b trifl" Before circuit court: jurie starting next Tuesday waea; to jury torra ot sas touri o-; - . ' , i Of lit, seven r criminal, th remainder civil. Tiia iirt caa casduld on taa docket is to state's esse sgsicst Robert H. W. Leathers, Reeaapori accountant indicted by fee grand Jury on an emijeizleBjent charge. Leather pleaded Innocent to ins charge accusing him of emocr iling soma -I.S09 from a Reedsport port citiieu and has bees released at tS,m bail, Judge William East will aei lh first esse. ' Oi the SS eases, 12 ara cned uicd tor trisi with a short jury panel, either four or tlx persona, toilowing th esses with the reg ular 12-persoB Jury, Drunken Driver Receive Large Fine, Sentence Two men received stiff peist tie in district court- after t Jury had found them guilty oi drank anvmg, Arthur Robert Snow, , Win lion, wat fined and sentenced to 5 day in jail en tha charge Friday after th iury had ton- victed feim, according ia judge A, J. tJefides. Oien Oacir Epperson, JS, of 3B81V 'Wiinut street, wat fir iSGO end given 33 day on th same ;chrge, after a trial Thursday irt :wb-cb Be was soma gaiity, (iea fde taid. leaders did not comment on thai Kysn Katement, A New Yorla siat rart-ftndliHF 1 hoard carried out it promise to! continue hearings into the 3LA) fight Involving a new work coa-5 tract. Those were tha oaiy port ! hut down by striken. ii But th hearing were disrupted ' yesterday when Peter S. Johnson, ij counsel for th triker. announced i Ruler Refi.i!,i United States Of British Roll Peeufior Rititi Taken j Cirtrf At Main for AmricoR Sttpportj tONBOS j& PriBM t ister Winston GsurcniU broi suggested !tt sight that United Siie gif th "fullest i aiderattoB" to Srftsis's b4 financial Iseip for few retrmaa program and her ssggtoc sosy, - j "i fJ sur ihis iU not h aled us," CsurciiiH tid, tpeaj st the annual dinner sivea hr Lord Mayor of London. j At 8s 5S-yearid wartime S er's auggetttont were being m A British treasury official a& govemnjeBt witt s or toe ) Sins ia 11 taenia ior fresh ( lar siii. One informant estimi Britain would ask for Vrnftxi, &l(vs Country WHi JtSvj Churchill hated his Belief j Britain wossid get Amt-rleaa j liberation of the fact that j country has provided iiss prj pa! forward U, S. atomic feM "It mut act be forgottea,1 said, '"tost under the Sat (Lsi government we took peculiar 1 iss providini t& principal sis feat for fee United State a 3 Aagli stora Eaioa1, J that is coBtequence we piteea jeive in ta very forefront of vset antagonism, -j "We nave, tiitrefore, every t Bi ry right to seek sb4 eeive ilte iulleat nmtlaert frsat Americans tor Sur peisj view, and I fi aura tni will ie denied ta." ChurcBili't reference ia Br! at taa principal V, 5. atoasit i pertained to the ism thta 3! American men i air e pt sii over to country. But no Si iss er American official wsata witeifler any atom nemos ; 1 are stores in ,ggBu CSurcBia ta B wastes ta BrsUia "play acr fall part' H sBii-CommuBist world. But fee) country lint must resail asncisl solvency. j Tite Conservative Prima U tor paid aigit . prsis to Aa Continued aa ? j . New Veneer Co EostOf Rosebun Kssesurg't Perftis'a Vara newest sitss this Week- Th slant. sroducea creert veneer only, rated ioag th sorth id oi North titnpau road about miles east oi Roseburg, j of the sew cas is vested la about doxea j scjne of whom iw have isim i Forrest Veneer Co. at tu The two orgsnixstSsBj i headed by WilUam. Farret president, Jerry Smith si 4 sbs j (finny ri secretary. George Forrest it supertl dent ot the total concent aad B Jaeohsoa ia plant foreman. . Ta Over 1 ft it rennried that a third cera, wbieb Include sonj oi same stock hoieers snd under taken over the eld battery a iter pitat aorta oi Diilard sr. Batting is a finishing plyi operation. It i expected to operation som time in eces 'fha soseourg piaia wnia electrically operated, will a shout 15 roes fa shift, and produce about ZW& beard i green veneer on one-shift i ation. Only ana abifi will ia ployed t present, hat another-: he added next tpring, aceorriis Forrest i The BisBt wiU bar if fe the open market aad presenfiy seii green veneer on th open i ket. Tss local ope-stioa consist a pond for log storage, i -tnch Jackson lathe, a Co clipper, green chain and rs burner. Flan ara to double- th veaeer trays for storage peer which, hat sot bees taroaga. the clipper, tha ar injf delays in lath open caused by possible slackened, I per work. Oreosn Wsrefe Soeoki To Chamber Of Cemmf "A New Projtraas for the goo State Poniienfiary' wili hi topic ol a talk to b given Wtrdes Virgii i, O'SJsSey ! Koaeourg chamber oi coma forum luncheon Moods y soa taa Hotel tlmpqua. Many change have hees s and are confemplsied at Ore) peaal institatiaa iace O'M took over recenfly. The ehs are reportedly ia Una itit panel brought ihe strike to an end wishes of the Stat hoard oi yesterday. The disputants agreed tool. there would fa no hiring disrrimi- Al McEee, forum program C nation because of the wtikouf. man, in aBBOUBcing the apes Longshoremen streamed back to issued special iavitatioa to work bera and in Boston ss she contBterce nsemhers to aiteai gy 1. F. SeiienttelB be hd jtist received word of th SeiSobio rajwts ar rhr alleged lockout incident. sh5 8i ond temsd Jisrftn P Clherwood, Cornell ' . ar,t ta, profeator and head of the three- we Je man board, caiied attorney fo pwf with st tha two parties into conferenc. j other f th tutsioa peilti Then the panel returned ita work. ft quit probable thtrt evi Later Cstherwood declined to i tkfl fc wi comment. T panel wili rr.t fj ?tt? tZl recommeadatioa tiler th bear- Jf? P inc. i wi s H t8 vitsk ! 1 . J