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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1952)
2 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ike Appoints 3 More Men To Major Jobs (Continued From Page One) tive committee of the National City Bank, Cleveland; director of fhe Phelps Dodge Corp.; chairman o the executive committee and di rector of Industrial Rayon Corp. Has Experience Humphrey has some background in government work, having been former chairman of the Industrial Advisory Committee of the Eco nomic Corporation Administration. This committee dealt with repar ations and the dismantling of Ger man plants after World War II. He was chairman of the Business Advisory Council of the Commerce Department in 1948. Stassen has long been active in Republican politics. At the GOP convention, he was an aspirant for the nomination, but switched his votes to Eisenhower to give the general the nomination on the first ballot. . Brownell, a long-time righthand man of Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York, took a leading role in masterminding Eisenhower's strat egy at the GOP convention. He also was a key advisor dur ing the general's campaign. He had played a similar part In the unsuccessful Dewey campaigns for the presidency. BREAKS WRIST Ed Carroway, Glendale logger, was treated by a Canyonville physician Thursday for a broken wrist suffered in a logging acci 1 dent. Ike shortest route to .11 the EAST See yoc local But Agent AUTO INSURANCE TOO HIGH?? No Increase in Rates for the Past 5 Year.! N fl Travel I 'the shortest route ; No EXTRA CHARGE for ages 21 to 26! 370,000 New Policyholder gained In 1951! Over 2 Million Autos Now Insured with the Nation's Largest Full Coverage Company . - State Farm Mutual Auto Insurance Co. BRUCE FISCHER Loco I Agent 321 S. Stephens (In the Moose Bldg.) Phone 3-6233 4.io 45 QT. PINT 86 PROOF THE OlD S u j H BRAND IUCRYSTRAI llLSii BURBON WHISKY, f V , tortile tv l Or.-Frl., Nov. 21, 1952 McKay's Ideas In Full Accord With Ike's Views SALEM, Ore. Wl The appoint ment of Gov. Douglas McKay of Oregon to the cabinet will give President-elect Eisenhower a man who appears to reflect Eisenhow er's domestic views almost exact ly. In the past, the next secretary of the interior has: . Favored stale ownership of oil tidelands, , Favored statehood for Alaska and Hawaii. Opposed a Columbia Valley Au thority, but favored big federal power projects, provided the state has a voice in operation of the projects. Once his appointment was an nounced, McKay refused to dis cuss these or any other policies. He said he would confer first with Gen. Eisenhower. There were a few cries of "re actionary" when the appointment was announced yesterday, but gen erally among public office-holders and newspapers of the West com ment appeared favorable towards the 59-year-old McKay. Among Republiczns of Oregon he is generally considered a mod erate and his stand on public power is cited as an example. He has made his position clear in re peated speeches over the four years he has been governor. Private Utilities First The McKay stand is that private utilities should, be given first chance to develop water resources. Whn the job is too big for private investors, the federal government should take over but not have full say on how to develop or run the projects. The state also should have a hand in running things. McKay calls It- federal-state co operation. On that basis he opposed a Col umbia Valley Authority. So did the general. Also on that basis McKay has participated actively in the Colum bia Basin Inter-Agency Commit tee, a group of federal and state agencies that advises on how to Od r.' m HERMITAGE COMPANY, -m-jr OLD Hermmge Residents Of 4 States See Flash Of Meteor HUTCHINSON, Kan. 11 - A bright ebecf, apparently a me teorite, lit up the sky over South Central Kansas like a gigantic flare last night. Witnesses reported here end at Wichita that the bright, white light flashed across the sky In a southwesterly direction and then burst Into a number of vari-colored pieces like ,sky rocket. The concussion of the explod ing object shook large buildings and rattled windows at Wich ita. Persons In Amarlllo, Tex., and Gage, Okla., Oklahoma City and Trinidad, Colo., alto report ed seeing the bright flash in the sky. More Community Colleges Advised For Future Needs PORTLAND Ufi A college pres ident urged Oregon counties Thure day to begin considering a plan that could solve problems or an anticipated boom in college enroll ment by.lWO. The plan Is for community col leges, Dr. Morgan S. Odell, presi dent of Lewis and Clark College, told the 47th annual convention of the Association of Oregon Counties, The crop of war babies will be gin reaching the colleges in I960, and enrollment will increase 75 to 100 per cent or from 19,000 at present to 40,000 students he said. Community colleges, authorized by the state and already tried at uenu and Klamalh rails, could help carry the load, he said. lie also said he favored making Portland State College a four-year, degree-granting school, but not un til about i960. The association decided to ask the Legislature for laws safeguard ing the counties' authority to reeu late traffic and prevent damage on county roads. The group also proposed to make permanent ine uoou Koads Alli ance, an organization that opposed some trucking firms on tax meas ures in the recent election. The convention closes Friday af ter election of officers. develop the Columbia Basin. This stand has won him some enemies, especially among liberal Democrats. On the other hand some Demo crats approved his appointment. "A very fine choice," said Os car L. Chapman, recent secretary of interior. "Oregonians of both parties like Doug McKay personally," said Monroe Sweetland, Democratic na tional committeeman. Among those disapproving of Mc Kay was Sen. Wayne Morse of Ore gon, who has feuded bitterly with the governor. Morse, who bolted the Republi can party in the recent campaign, characterized McKay as a "stooge of the tidelands oil thieves, the private utilities gang and the sel fish interests," 7 BRAND FRANKFORT, KENTUCKY. w 1 School Amateur. Hour At Glendale Attracts Several Participants By MRS. GERALD B. FOX The Senior Amateur Hour held last Friday evening in the school gymnasium saw a large group of young people participating in the contest, from pre-school through the 12th grade. The grand prize, went to Sharon Heyne, with group prizes going to the following: Group 1, John Fish; Group 2, Patricia Boxxi; Group 3, Mary Pate; Group 4, Lloyd Clark; Group 5, Clair Hurst.' Judges for the event were Mae Basye, Mrs. Verne Dark and Mrs. Meeks. Mrs. Cooley was accompanist for most of the numbers. Examined ' Raleigh Johns went to Portland last Friday for a medical examina tion, returning to his home .near Azalea on Sunday. He was accom panied by Dale Johns and by his nurse, Mrs. A. Carlisle. : Ladies of the Azalea Faith Chap el held their missionary meeting on Thursday of last week, doing some sewing and renovating of garments to be sent to a mission field. Mrs. C. Morris father, Mr. Fin ley, of Klamath Falls, has been visiting with her in Azalea. Mrs. Virgil MCollum will spend Hie holidays in Arkansas with an invalid sister. The Azalea Grange will be hold ing its Harvest Dinner for Grangers and friends this Friday evening at the hall. The dinner will be follow ed by a skit "Consolation," pre sented by Mrs. Dorothy Hurst, Mrs. Grace Croft. Mrs. Mary Diltz, Mrs. Hazel McPhcrrain, and Calire Hurst. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Moore enter tained their son and daughter-in-law from California over the week end. Mrs. Ella Dunning is seriously ill in the Portland Sanitarium. She entered last Wednesday. No deci sion has yet been reported as to the cause of her illness. The Country Club had a dinner meeting last Sunday evening at the Dudley Ross home near Barton Road. There were 27 present. Jim Croft's daughter, Marilyn, was seriously ill last week at her home near Roseburg, and Mr. and Mrs. Croft visited her there. Mrs. Dorothy Clayton of Quines Creek will be spending the Thanks giving and Christmas holidays in California and Colorado. Thanksgiving Service Glendale will have a United Thanksgiving Service at 7:30 p.m. November 26, at Hie Olivet Presby terian Church. All the churches of the area have been invited, and as many as possible will participate in the program. Rev. Claude Miller, new pastor of th Glendale baptist Church, has been scheduled as the evening's speaker, while Dr. J. K. Howard, of the Presbyterian Church, will preside. Rev. Ed Grafstrom pastor of the Assem bly of God Church, is to lead in prayer, and Rev. Goode of the Church of Christ will read the scrip ture. Mrs. Blaipe Johnson, officially representing this section of Ore gon, attended the Cancer Work shop in Portland last week, which was held Thursday and Friday at the Multnomah Hotel. According to Mrs. Johnson, reports were giv en on progress in cancer research, motion pictures presented concern ing cancer and the problems of its control, and some discussion of plans for the cancer drive next spring. . Marilyn Ramey was home from her classes at Ashland last week end, visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Ramey, in Azalea. Ilene Swank left Monday of last week for Camp Roberts where her husband, Bucky (Maurice) Swank is stationed. Harlcy France, who purchased the Griffin place near Azalea, has "far Our Storage rates are so very reasonable, you can take your time about finding that new home! ROSEBURG Transfer & Storage 130 N. Pine St. CALL 3-5311 FREE ESTIMATE . . . SI DILLARD 340 North Stephen Roseburg, Mimm rented his home there to Mr. and Mrs. Alan (Shorty) Caswell and their daughter and has gone to Los Vegas, Nev. to be gone for about a year. Mrs. Sara Frank of Cow Creek was injured recenty in an automo bile accident in Sacramento. Her car was struck by another automo bile, and she was hospitalized for two days. She was able to drive her car home, but it was badly crushed on one side and requires considerable repair. Mrs. Judy Osepian drove to Port land last week, taking her daugh ter, Janice, to the Portland Clinic for treatment. Gsts Elk Ted Miller returned Saturday from an Eastern Oregon hunting trip. He got his elk. Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Martin, of Glendale, have remained in Neva da, following the recent death of their son, Wesley Martin. They are stayjng over in order to be with their son, Rafe Martin, when his wife, Mrs. Ruth Martin, under goes surgery. Mrs. Av.vle Martin of Bakersfield, Calitoria, is visiting with the Whit ing Martins in Glendale. Mrs. led Baiter s sisier irom Canada is visiting her at her home in Azalea. Mrs. Bill Gibson suffered a num ber of bruises after a bad fall Sun day. She was taken to the Forest Glen Hospital in Canyonville for X-rays and examination but is back home now. Mrs. Susan Pete has gone to Banks, Ore. for a visit with her son. Leslie Pete, and his wife and ' four children. She will also spend some time with her other two sons, Henry Pete of Sandy, Ore., and Jarley Pete, of Vancouer, Wash. Last weekend Mr. and Mrs. Rob ert Karstens and their three daugh ters, Marlene, Judy and Robyn, of Albany, visited with her sisier, Mrs. Howard Hutto, and family in Glendale, and with Mrs. Karstens and Mrs. Hutto's father, Mr. Mont gomery. The occasion of the visit was Mr. Montgomery's 85th birth day. Oregon Governorship Situation Confused (Continued From Page One) new legislators had been elected Nov. 4, and the old legislatori no longer could be considered in of fice. He thought that removed the Senate president and speaker of the House from the picture and left the secretary of state, as third in line of succession, ready to take over. Neuner said the legislators were out of office all right, except for the Senate president and the speaker of the House. These re tain their positions until successors are elected, he said. May Ge To Courts The matter has never been tested in court, though, and there is a possibility the State Supreme Court will be asked to rule on the matter. For his part in the picture, Marsh said he hoped McKay would resign before Jan. 12, so that the matter will not go before the Senate. "Otherwise, people would say 30 men elected the governor," he said. McKay has never expressed him self publicly, but it is generally believed that he would prefer Pat terson over Newbry and would time his resignation, if necessary, so that Newbry would not succeed him. And since Newbry ti believed to want to be governor, that makes the question of whether the Senate president stays in office past the expiration date of senators' terms, the determining one. Winston Man Completes 7th Month In Korea Pfc. Donald I. Nuzum, whose wife, Vivian, lives in Winston, re cently completed his seventh month in Korea with the Seventh Division Artillery. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Chamblen, Route 4, Rose burg. Nuzum entered the army in March, 1951, and is serving as as sistant chief of the service bat tery of the 31st Field Artillery. LOCAL NEWS Hard Time Dance The Rose burg County Club will sponsor a Sadie Hawkins, hard time dance it the Country Club Saturday, Nov. 22. All members and invited guests are urged to attend. There will be prizes for the best cos tumes. CASE GOES TO TRIAL The state's case against Rich ard A. Worrell, of Cnnyonville, accused of reckless driving, went to trial in district court this morn ing. DRIVE IN TODAY MOTOR CO. Dal 3-6626 Oregon Chinese Red Attacks Fail At All Points South Korean Soldiers Figure Prominently In Successes Of Allies SEOUL W Allied infantrymen smashed a fanatical Chinese as sault today on Sniper Ridge on the Central Korean Front and stopped lesser attacks elsewhere on the battle line. He said an estimated 750 Chinese stormed the frozen, forbidding slopes of Sniper Ridge but were killed, wounded or driven back by stubborn South Korean troops who jave lost and retaken the height in times in 38 nays. Some of the fighting was hand to-hand. A Red battalion slammed against Pinpoint Hill, the dominating ground of Sniper Ridge last night. The Communists supported their assaults with a tremendous bar rage of mortar and artillery. Within an hour, one company of Chinese pulled out and left two companies to push ahead. But by 10 p.m. the drive was blunted. The Allied spokesman said four Communist armored vehicles, probably tanks, rained 50 caliber machine gun fire on ROK positions on Sniper just before midnieht. Allied artillery drove off the vehicles. Suicide Platoon Pails Both sides kept up a crackling exchange of gunfire, and earlv this morning a suicide platoon of Chi nese charged Sniper Ridge, hurl ing hand grenades when they got near the ROK foxholes. But the South Koreans held their ground and shortly after dawn the Chinese pulled out. Eighth Army headquarters re ported a series of Communist at. tacks all along the 155-mile battle line. On the extreme Eastern Front, North Korean troops stab bed twice last night and twice this morning at Allied positions south of Kosong in the Anchor Hill sec tor. All the probes were driven off. Rosenbergs To Receive Dea'th Sentence Jan. 12 NEW YORK Ml Federal Judge Irving R. Kaufman Friday set the week of Jan. 12 for the execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, con victed atomic spies. Last week the United States Supreme Court refused for a sec ond time to rehear the case of the husband and wife prisoners. They were convicted March 29, 1951 of passing atomic secrets to Russia, and for many months have been confined in the death house at Sing Sing Prison. 18 G. N. Freight Cars Derailed On S. P. Line EUGENE I Freight cars were reported piled up two and three deep on the main line of the Southern Pacific at Chemult in Southern Oregon Friday following an 18-car derailment. Few details were available here as work crews set out. It was a Great Northern freight pulled by a three-unit diesel over Southern Pacific rails which left the tracks. There were no reports of injuries. Passenger trains can he re routed over the old and slower Siskiyou route into California. Six freight trains were waiting between here and the derailment point. SUTHERLIN Wtr Central, m BUY IT f 0NLY 1 DOWN S . . ...... $225.75 1 V"!VlW.5rr' SCOMC wTX Dulles Aims To Capture j Initiative, In Cold War (Continued From Page One) consultant position to be free to, .riiioi7 the administration and to . campaign actively for a Republi can victory in novemuer. , In the course of this campaign he j 1 .,ll.r ttinnnrtfirl all efforts to Uiunui; juhv.. unify and strengthen the Allies, but j sharply criticized wnat ne consia-j ered to be the administration's failure to develop a truly offensive global strategy in the cold war. To accomplish such an objective and put Russia on the defensive Dulles advocated not only the crea tion of a super cabinet council perhaps through revision of the present National Security Council but also: 1. A psychological campaign by "peaceful means" to make Russia uncertain of its hold over its satel lite nations in Eastern Europe and over China. A Kremlin worried by the desire for liberty in those lands, he contended, would have less time to devote to making trouble this side of the Iron Curtain. 2. Development of means to de fend weak nations on , a global basis, probably by threatening Russia with direct retaliation if Communist forces tried to open up any more Koreas. Big Korean Army Favored 3. Action to streamline relations between the departments of the government dealing with, foreign affairs such as state, defense and the Mutual Security Agency so that decisions on legislative action could be more efficiently worked out and the time of cabinet mem bers spared for policy making. Dulles' lines on Korea has been exactly the same as that of President-elect Eisenhower. In a speech at Boston Oct. 11 he estimated that 20 million South Koreans should be able to provide an army which "could gradually replace the j estimated zau.uuu u. a. iruups now in tront line positions. - The displacemnt of Americans by South Koreans, Dulles said, should speed an end to the Korean Wa- honaitoa t1 Pnsci. u.nitlrt than I lack the incentive of continuing the war to Keep American troops uea up there, and (2) it would deny the Communists their propaganda charge that the Korean struggle is really a white man's war against native peoples of Asia. Vital Statistics Marriage Licenses LILLIE-WELTY - Wayne Don ald Lillie, Seattle, and Frances Joan Welty, Wilbur. ' Divorce Suits Filed DAVIES Owen vs. Elsie Da vies. (Annulment) "I must deliver my baby myself! Her husband missing or dead her right arm useless, her leg broken, she faced the long Alaskan winter and childbirth alone! Yet de spite theoverwhelmingodds, Bhe vowed, " Will Live and Have My Baby!" 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