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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1953)
s Ms I S3 3 in .9 8' v l Q MO 215-53 David Ryan P. 4 Freda Ml 2-15-53 Rose & G. J. Schorabel ; 142 2-15-53 Ernest Schosso dba 'i Schosso & Hammond . 143 2-15-53 Frank E. Seywert ,144 2-15-53 J. T. it Vera G Shackelford , 145 2-15-53 Conlev C. Sheltnn 146 2-15-53 Charles J. Smith dba uovtr ur. co. 141 2-15-53 Howard R. St. Clair & Si -n , " ba 149 2-15-53 C. 1. St. Pierre 150 2-15-53 Roy C. Stageberg : 1M 2-15-53 Stateside Construction Company IS 2-15-53 Milton Sutherland . 15S 2-15-53 G. L. Swanson : 154 2-15-53 Bruce Tandy 155 2-15-53 Edgar G. Tanner 15S 2-15-53 P. E. Thomas 157 2-15-53 W. F Thomason 158 2-15-53 Mary Thrush 159 2-15-53 Cliff ard William Town- sley & Velvin Horace u.ri Fulton dba T. & F. Logging Co. 160 2-15-53 R. B. 4 Effie Turner 181 2-15-53 Harvey & Maria Voss ,162 2-15-53 Henry & Ina Wagner 163 2-15-53 J. M Ware & Son 164 2-15-53 Ed Warner dba Warner Gen. Repair & Welding .165 2-15-53 E. 0 Wear 166 2-15-53 Roy Wells dba ; Glide Store 167 2-15-53 Farrell West 169 2-15-53 Ern 'st E. Wright 170 2-15-53 Vervl Young 171 2-15-53 Earl Vates dba Earl Vates Lbr Mill 174 2 15-53 Robert Aiken 4 George Blomgren Dba as Hi- Peak Logging Co. i'-' Immediately upon completion of service by publication of the above described warrants, if the delin--quent taxes and interest and cost .of service shall not have been Said, each such warrant or a dup cate thereof will be filed by the tax collector 'vith the county clerk . for entry in the judgement docket . of Douglas County. . The amount .if each warrant whin rforkptpri tnepthpr with add - ed cost charges, will become a lien Date ol first publication of this notice February 14, 1953 Date of last publication of this notice March 7, 1953 C. W. BAIRD Sr. County Sheriff & Tax Collector , . . for Douglas County, Oregon ROBERT M. STULTS District Attorney for Douglas 1 '; . Definition of abbreviations: County- 0re8on Mdse. Merchandise Mach. Machinery Equip. Equipment Imp. Improvements f Fur. Furniture Fix. Fixtures Impl. Implements .,; Inv. Inventory , '' Misc. Miscellaneous LEGAL NOTICE Or FINAL SETTLEMENT NOTICE 1b hereby given, Thit Mon day. March 16, 1953, it 10 o'clock A.M. In the County Court Room, tn the. Court Some to Hoibur. breiw' W b..n : dead .ughrwhale washed onto 'nf "' 0"" . f u, fixed by order ol the County Court for s Francisco's Ocean Beach nls farm. making lt one ol the SStRir'. WrtSr3St - carted away "P"" " " there be. to the final Account Hied by yesterday much to the relief of ,; ., . . j . ., the undented .dmini.tr.tor ot th. sensitive.nosed residents and sun- v- C. Hartmar hired a dnler ""U' "r'obert w. ELowt "d,ntn. , dry authorities who disclaimed re- team when the old well on his prop , utr.wr ante of M.. c. More : sponsibility for the carcass. ;erty "Bed with sand. The team voTirr to cRrniTOR. Thc decaying whale was spoiled tiM 1,700 feet to strike a vein All per."" fJmi ct.Z. ..m.t the the police, and the Society for the of water in sand rock, out. of Kins c.riiie. dece.ied. now i.jnoreaux. Police said it was out- The new well, now nearing corn- . Dendlns In the County court ot Dou.la. County, Oregon, .re hereby notified to B resent the ..me. properly verified, to . L. Whipple, Attorney .t Lew, U. S . N.tlon.l Bank Biilldins- Roachur.. Ore - gon, within aix month, from the date or thl notice, which I. J.nuary 24, 1953. BERTHA CARLILE : Administratrix of the F.lUt. of Kins C.rlile, Deceased. Secrecy Shrouds Meeting Of United Nations Allies UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. W -The United States told its U, N. ' Allies Thursday about future di ' plomatic steps planned for dealing witn tne Korean nar, oui insi-iv-u on public secrecy about them. " COIM u. a. Delegate nenrj Cabot Lodge, Jr., after an hour's conference with representatives of 13 countries who have sent . troops " to Korea, told newsmen "actions will speak louder than words." In a brief statement, i-oage sam. "We have shown by our actioni - we really believe in the orincipio ' of collective security. We coun - selled tcdav on steps to take in ' the future." Too Old, Ruth Elder's Husband Tells Her LOS ANGELES tfv-Ruth EWer, .who failed in 1927 in her attempt to fly the Atlantic, nas nDiaincn a divorce from her sixth husband, Ralph King I HOLLYWOOD im uuy Madison "He said I was too old for him m Gail Russell of the movies that he wanted a young chirk," have announced a temporary scp she testified Thursday. "He called aration but say they don't plan a tne I gray-haired old bag." divorce. LEGAL NOTICE .2 & 'B S as. Livestock 1949 Inv., Fur., & Fix. Farm Equip. A Livestock Mdse & Equip. Mach, & Livestock 1951 1950 1949 1948 CatUe Mill 1949 1951 Mach & Equip. 1948 1948 Mach' E1U'P Livestock Fur. & Equip. Power Shove' Mdse Mdse 1951 1948 1951 1949 1950 Farm Mach. Mdse & Livestock 1951 1949 1951 1948 1949 Farm Mach. St Livestock Furn. & Equip. Equip. Livestock Livestock Equip. , Equip. Livestock Livestock Mach. Equip. & Livestock Cattle Cattle 1948 1948 1948 1949 1949 1950 1948 1949 1850 Equip. Equip 1949 1951 Mach., Equip. & Mdse Equip., Mdse, Fur. 1948 1949 Mach. & Equip. Mdse & Equip. 1949 1951 1951 1951 1949 1948 1948 1949 Log. Equip. Farm Impl. Equip. Mill Mill Mill & Mach. Lowing Equip. Logging Equip. 1351 1952 upon the title of any interest in real property ..wued by the person against whom the warrant is is- sued, and the taxes on personal properly embraced in such war rant, with interest, penalties and costs applicable thereto, will con tinue as a lien on all personal property of 'he person assessed as otherwise provided by law. The efiect will be uic same a; inough 1 the Deonle of the countv had re I covered judgement against t h e Soap Co. Takes Unwanted Whale SAN FRANCISCO Wl-A six-ton side their jurisdiction, thc Coast pletion, required 560 bags of co Guard said it was on shore and ment used to make concrete to therefore not theirs, the Public pour arouni the pipes. In addition, Health Department agreed with 10,000 gallons of water were hauled the police, and the Society for th two miles from Granville to the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals farm to make the concrete. There and the State Fish and Game De- partmcnt indicated they were In- tcrested only in live wnaies. In des-ieration, police suggested letting Norman handle thc prob lem on thc basis of "finder's keep ers." But late Thursday, the Royal Tallow and Soap Company appear ed with a crane and hauled off the whale to reduce it to grease, tal low and fertilizer. . ! Dodge Heir Again Weds, jhi j- y Actress i pALM BEACH, Fla. OP-Actrcss Cr(,2 Sherwood became thc fifth wife of Horace E. Dodge II, veiV.'ny member of the automobile family, in a ceremony Friday at thc Palm Beach home of Dodge's mother. It was the second marriage for Mi"t Sherwood, who gave her name as Dora Mac Fjelstad and har mnn a. 90 In tho tir-on.ft- .nnli. cat;0n; Dodsc is 52. SEPARATE .28 14.33 22.47 1.00 2.91 163.26 11.20 37.55 3.47 200.81 14.67 2.64 . .134.28 .61 9.40 3.25 143.68 84.73 2.76 26.27 111.00 114.62 5.11 R so 4.78 ' 6.79 372.70 292.95 ' 87.60 .33 2.10 19.09 67.38 13.14 29L79 360.33 100.74 461.07 19.96 37.01 7.66 26.32 95.48 121.80 18.65 30.09 7.16 20.09 77.63 1.31 6.92 .50 6.23 17.85 2.46 6.10 01.60 236.40 .76 1.89 28.40 54.37 3.22 7.99 120.00 290.77 1.23 410.77 48.32 6.51 34.83 ' 3.00 .45 3.45 21.07. 6.53 27.60 6.38 1.47 7.85 6.77 1.02 7.79 43.24 92.86 21.36 114.22 49.01 3.43 52.44 . 166.66 68.98 21.38 90.36 57.81 13.30 71.11 16l747 326 40 75.07 401.47 31.46 2.20 33.66 17.10 1.20 18.30 3.67 .26 3.93 16.32 3.75 20.07 70.60 21.89 92.49 239.76 74.33 314.09 425.52 97.87 523.39 929.97 389.84 189.94 , 579.78 364.34 189.00 25.50 .94 person charged for the full amount of the delinquent taxes covered by the warrant, together with interest thereon an3 costs as provided by law. Services of publication of this notice is made by four consecu tive weekly publications thereof in newspaper of gereral circulation the Koseburg News-Keview, a in Douglas county, pursuant to tne order of the Douglas County Court, I dated January 14, 1953. Costly Well Drilled On Big Illinois Farm GRNVILLE, 111. 11 A Put- "m."1? ", "K"?''??: are 14 inch pipes for a depth of 180 feet, 200 feet of 10-inch pipe and 600 feet of eight-inch pipe. Britain Plans Record Spending For Defense LONDON HI Prime Minister Liiui Linus government announci'ii Thursday It cinertjt In unpnr! 636,760.000 pounds .5S.V72d,noor on defense in the 1953-54 budget vpsr This is a record level for Britain in peacetime. , A white paper giving the figures said the estimates include 140 1 mil - of defense support aid provided in dollars by the United States. Cigarette Sales Heavy In Portland Stores PORTLAND -Cigarette sales were reported unusually heavy here as well as elsewhere in the country in anticipation of a.i end to price ceilings. The Fred Meyer stores' tobceo merchandiser said customer buy. insr was "very heavy" Wednesday. When ceilings go off, the retail price may go up 2 cents a package, i retailen reported, Prinevilie Men Again Apply For Milk Right PRINEVILLE I Four Prine vilie men Thursday accused the Stqte Milk Marketing Administra tion of arbitrary conduct in deny, ing their application to open 1 ner dairy in croon County, tration said their Portland appear-1 ance was. a waiver of their right 1 10 a puouc nearing in ltook unin ty, the applicants said. They protested this and request ed a public hearing here, where consumer witnesses could be heard. 1 In the Portland meeting, milk officials disclosed a report that a i'rineville creamery, then the only one in business in Prinevilie, had 1 -iHHpH nnwripreH milk in stretch ' its milk. Thf nnnllran'c nrntestMl that the milk administration . made it 1 appear that this report came from them. Actually the report was made by a Central Orcfon field in spector of the State Department of Agriculture, they said. At Portland Thomas Ohlsen, milk marketing administrator, said the Prinevilie rnuu's application had been received, but that no ac tion would be taken until the state Division uf Foods and Dairies com- pletes an - investigation of the prinevilie Creamery. Ohlsen said it would be up to the board to decide, after that, wheth er or not to can a nearing in f nne ville. r . Visit To Volcano Is Planned By Head Of Parks ANCHORAGE, Alaska UB The National Park Service's Alaska superintendent and two compan ions planned a daring observation trip Thursday into the valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, after three ! days of great volcanic eruptions last weekend. Grant Pearson, veteran of 30 years service in the territory, Ray Peterson, president of the North ern Consolidated Airlines, and John Walotka, a resident of the area 15 years, planned to fly in with a light plane and set up a base camp. The eruptions were apparently subsiding. Navy fliers said, but a half-mile wide stream of lava was reported sighted boiling down one mountain side Wednesday. The Valley was also still covered with a gray blanket of volcanic ash. Pearson said the camp would be set up at Brooks Lake, on the floor of the valley only 20 miles from the craters of Mis. Trident, Nova Ruppa and Katmai, three cf the most spectacular of the volcanoes. Patrol plane crewmen said smoke was belching through fis sures along the entire floor of the , va"eVi Increase Board For NLRB To 9 Is New Proposal wAamiNixj.ure un nep. iveams (R-Pa) came up Thursday with a proposal to increase tne member ship of the National Labor Rela tions Board from five to nine members. Sen. Taft (ROhlo), majority leader and co-author of the Taft Hartley Labor Law, has called for upping the NLRB membership from five, at it is at present, to seven. The CIO has expressed "strong disapproval" of this idea contend - ing it would put the board into partisan politics. Reams' proposal was offered to a House labor committee, which Is holding extensive hearings on amendments to the Taft-Hartley Law. Secretary of Labor Durkin an- nounced Wednesday he has chosen a 15-member advisory group to draft the Labor Department's re- commendations for changes in the law. Durkin said his 15-member ad - 2 by the milk board in Prinevilie k t( f i'.l. ASf 7 I f f Mu lf "f I f 4 if lf '4 The appUcants. Leslie Clausen Cf. K J V Alii V JLYS A' i 1 . -iHj,?'' ,i Jll'l- ti- 1 and James Frakcs, dairymen, and K.fivY'JM I'V' 1 . u Z ' T vf i Lester Moen and Travis Allen. 4 If J., N . . " " H" M . ? ""I lM creamery workers, conferred with lt It Lii't 1 it,- i? ' 1 ,, the milk board in Portland last I ')rCVl 1 - f tlv v I I ;5S week, and said later that the board , !''WVi f -f " 1 "! li fc. W 'u'unti denied.their application. J . I - I T V! - k -fl Furthermore the milk adminis-' ..- ' k visory board would be made up of jn a fight with another man Thurs l.i bor, management and public ; day over a woman named Grace. representatives. Tilt secretary will act as chairman. California Bus Crash Kills 6 Farm Workers BRAWLEY, Calif. Wl A South ern Pacific train crashed Into a bus loaded with farm workers of Mexican descent Thursday and Police Chief Joe Gabard said six were killed. Gabard said 12 persons were taken to Pioneer Memorial Hos- i Pital here, six of them in trltical nore the collision sent a streak of fire o icet 1UK me .,roau ir. ine ous was carnen inu vara anu ! " crumpled and twisted into de- Dru- ; Workers Ruled Right To Picket Co-Op Plant OREGON CITY I Workers have a right to piekct the Milwau kie Plywood 4 Door, Inc., plant at Milwaukie tecause there Is a legitimate laoor dispute. Circuit Judge Ralph Holman ruled Thurs day. He refused to issue a temporary injunction against picketing of the plant, which be?an Feb. 11 after the mill was sold to the co-oncra- : live by Western Door 4t Plywood. The AFL Millmen's Union said large-scale layoffs resulted when co-op members took over jobs from onion workers. it! U ' U .'Li-OUUlU. J T7 u -1 VyihfnA'-Wt w" V i f w.K M BRIDCEWORK Douglas County crews meet the challenge of progress with the instal lation of modern metal sheeting on the Oak St. Bridge to replace the hogwlre which was formerly used for protective purposes. (Picture by Faul Jenkins.) . . PIRATE'S TREASURE Any romantic pirato would gladly walk the plank for Joanne An drinne. who's appropriately dressed (7) for the annual pirate . "invasion" of Tampa, Florida. Is Questioned . Vatican Diplomat Is Questoned DUBLIN, Ireland m An Amer ican author charges that Roman O'Hara's service as Vatican dip lomatic representative to Ireland violates the McCarran Act forbid ding U. S. Citiiens to serve a for ticn nawer. The Vatican Wednes- ' jay denied 11. Faul Blanshard, author of books : cruizing Koinnn uatnonc in fluence in America, filed a petition wth the U. S. embassy here ask ing Washington to revoke O.Hara's citizenship. The embassy declined to comment. In Washington, a State Depart ment spokesman said the depart ment has asked the Dublin em bassy to forward the papers on j ,ing He ,,,,,,,, he didn.t know wnat the matter to wasningion lor nana- provision ol tne MCLarran ci Blanshard was citing but that O'Hara "is a native of America and has traveled back and forth on a passport for years as papal nuncio." . , , r ; POrtlander S tonOITIOn Fair After Shooting PORTLAND H Joe Bcttig, I about 70, in fair condition in a hos i p.tal here, told police he was shot Police Sgt. Bard Purcoll said Henry Sigrist, 84, admitted shoot :ng Bettig on n downtown street, but said he feared Bettig was going to beat niin up. Bettig, shot twice, continued to chase Sigrist .1 block before a third bullet brought him down, witnesses said. Sigrist was Jailed under $5,000 bond. Singapore Warns Aid To Finnish Tanker SINGAPOHE I The Slnga- government warned Friday it would punish any person ship ping supplies to tne rinnisn tanit- Wjjm- anchored 20 miles out, ... vnrt -ri, without an export permit The tanker, carrying 7,000 tons of strategic jet fuel originally con signed to Rot CNna hi. be"" anchored outside the territorial waters of this free port since Feb. 11, even thou eh authorities declare it runs no risk of seizure iflt comes in. PLEADS INNOCENT BOMBAY. India (At R. K. TmtiSSn? BnePr0p,eaded infioccnt Tuesday to charges of forging a letter under the signature nt V. S. Ambassador Chester Bowles. The charges resulted from the publication of a letter purported to be from Bowles agreeing to attend a meeting of Communists at Karanjai'i home. Payroll Padding Costs Millions, Reports Prove WASHINGTON Ifl Investiga ting senators reported Thursday that "payroll padding by racket eers and local politicians at a New Jersey waterfront" added millions of dollars to .his nation's airbase building program in North Africa. The report, (uVd by a committee headed by Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson (D-Tox), described what it called "unsavory" conditions at the Claremont Terminal in Jersey City, N. J. Johnson said tho report was de layed until now to enable the New York city Anil-Crime committee to complete lis investigations of racketeering ,n the waterfronts. A Senate committee is scheduled to hold hearings soon on alleged crookedness on the waterfronts. The Senate preparedness sub committee, which Johnson headed in the old Congress, reported that Dade Brothers, a waterfront oper ator, obtained a blanket contract to handle shipments of all mater ials needed for the rush airbase projects in North Africa. ' lt said this contract spiraled from an original 1150,000 job up ward until the waterfront firm asked nearly rine million dollars. When Senate investigators work ing with other crime investigating bodies discovered payroll padding and ex-criminals hiring waterfront workers, the contract was can celed, the report said. Testimony Slows Pace Of Hearing On Natural Gas WASHINGTON to -Complicated geological testimony Wednesday slowed the pace of a power com mission hearing on applications iur author.ty lo pipe natural gas to the Pacific Northwest. Stanley Bcndorf, geological wit ness for Pacific Northwest Pipe Line Corp., Houston, Tex., dctailei his reasons for extending the prob able gas producing area of the San Juan Basin fields of New Mexico and Colorado, lt is from this basin that Pa cific Northwest proposes to pipe gas over a. 1,400-mile line to Bell ingham, Wash. It is the only one of five applicants that proposes to use American gas. The others would lap supplies in Canada. Bcndorf has testified that Pacif ic Northwest has a three-trillion cubic foot gas supply in the San Juan Basin. The amount is suffi cient, according to Bendorf, to supply the Northwest for 27 years based on an estimated daily con sumption of 306 million cubic feet by the third year of operation. Binford Arney, counsel for Pa ''fl 2"' 7 j n nti." ed to the frequent interruptions of Bendorf s testimony by counsel for rival applicants. They contended their questions were essential as a base for later cross-examination Ca,- i,- u kiartL I rOTegy lYieei Called By Lodge UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. Ul - Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., Wednesday called a strategy conference of tho U. N. Allies in Korea, apparently to discuss plans fur the U. N, Assembly meeting next luesuay. Bids went out from the U. S delegation to representatives of every country witn fighting forces Korea to meet in Lodge's of- Mice at 11 a.m. Thursday. j India, which has only a medical unit with the U. N. forces in Ko - rea, was not invited. , The American delegation had no immediate comment on the meet ' ing or its purpose Some diplomats commented that discussions on Korea were long overdue. They have been grum ; bllng that the U. S. was taking ' too long to Inform Its Allies of its plans for the Assembly, at , Kore. wUI be the top issue. ENDORSE STATEHOOD SALEM (At A memorial en dorsing statehood for Alaska and Hawaii was approved by the Sen ate Resolutions Committee. It has not been passed by either House jet. , Sot., Fob. 21, 1953 The Nowt-Rovltw, Roubur, Or. 11 1 STEWARDESS Betty Baiicom (above), of Miami, Fla., one of two stewardesses aboard the Nationol Airlines DC-6 .lisslng and ' presumed lost with 46 persons aboard oh a fliqht from Tampa. Fla., to New Orlenns, La. She is pic tured with her tronhv nfter he woe. sepr"' "Mi Minml Bflach" In 1950. (AP Wire photo) Communist Spy Accuses Connors WASHINGTON Ifl The policy chief for the Voice of America was confronted Thursday with a pur ported confcsslin by a Chinese Communist spy naming him as a man who "leaKcrr diplomatic se crets to the Reds during the post World War Two struggle for con trol of China. He denied there was any truth in 't. W. Bradley Connors, policy di rector for the State Department's overseas broadcasts, swore also to Senate investigators that he bad never been a Communist or member of any "fellow traveller" group. Connors, a big, gum-chewing self-possessed man. was in the witness chair before the Senate in vestigations subcommittee direct ed by Chairman McCarthy (R- Wis). British Oust Argentines For Antarctic Control LONDON m Tne long-standing international contest over control of the Antarctic was stirred anew Friday by Britain's announce, ment that it nas ousted an Ar gentine parly from Deception Is land, In thc disputed Falklands, and ripped down Argentine and Chilean buildings there. The British have maintained a weather station on the barren nine- mile-widc island for 10 years, but their claims lo the region have been challenged bv the two South American countries. Both of thc latter claim jovoroignty over all territory between their southern borders and 'Ji? South Pole. Brit ain rules the island group as a crown colony. Youth In Iron Lung Registers For Draft PORTLAND (At An 18-year- old Oregon City High School senior was registcrcu lor tne dratt Thurs day at a hospital where he is con fined to an iron lung with polio. rimer A. Whittekcr was 18 on Friday, Feb. 1.1. Aware that under thc law he was required to register for the draft within five days, he notified his board he couldn't com ply. Selective Service headquarters sent Mrs. R. C. Youngrcn, a clerk, to him and the registration was completed. e Airmen Running. Out Of Targets: In North Korea SKOUL in Allied airmen laid Thursday they are hitting the Communists where It hurts but are running out of lucrative tar- -gets in North Korea. - The Air Force lets the Reds re- -build their shattered war plants, then sends Its piloti back to knock them down again. Svruw trlD-hammer blows bv nearly 600 Allied fighter-bomber Wednesday and Thursday ravaged a Communist tank and infantry training center near Pyongyang. ' Lt. Col. Brad Evans of Palo Al to, 3alif., laid -'there't a scarcity of lucrative targets" and "in many cases we have to wait for loo , Communists to build them up. "We let the enemy expend max . Imum labor and money to rebuild these areas, then we hit them." Me referred specifically to in dustrial targets and troop and sup ply buildup areas. As for rail lines, roads, trucks and similar targets, Evans said, "we have to go back all the time and keep hitting them, There will always be those kinds of targets. H;e enemy is always trying to bring up supplies." The spokesman laid the Redi have no usable airfields in North Korea because "we keep them knocked out." Representative . Wishes He'd Stayed At Home SALEM m Rep. Mark Hat field, the boyish university profes sor from Salem, made a call on -the Elections - Committee of the august Senate Wednesday, and now he wishes he hadn't. . "I'm going to go see the com mittee and pry my bill off the table even if I have to uss a jack," said Hatfield as he departed lor the Senate side of the Capitol. He was referring to his House-, passed bill to require candidates, who file by petition for delegates to national party conventions, to sign pledges that they would support the winners of the state'! presi dential primary. The Senate Elections Committee' tabled It lew daya ago. That means the committee buried It. So Hatfield went to see the com mittee, which not only kept Hat field's bill in its grave, but also changed another Hatfield bill that it had previously approved. t This other bill, as passed by the House, would let persons whose names are entered in the state presidential : primary ' withdraw their candidacies when their names ar filed against their wishes. The Senate committee changed It so that any candidate for presi dent could withdraw in Oregon. Duties On Briar Pipes . To Get Special Study WASHINGTON Wl ' President Elsenhower Wednesday asked the Tariff Commission to make a fur ther study of import duties on low priced briar pipes. He deferred ac tion on its recommendation that the duties be hiked. The case, while nf little econom ic consequence fn itself, it at tracting wide attention because the handling of it could have far reaching implications as to tariff policies of the Eisenhower admin istration. ' The general significance of the pipe case is due to a provision in tne Dasic tarm law permitting American manufacturers to ask higher duties on competing im ported products n tneir industry l being seriously Injured. In this instance, a rise In the import duty on pipes might lead to a flood of applications for in creased duties on other commod ities. 'Cup Size' Atomic Bomb Explosions Are Denied WASHINGTON OH - Swift denial of a rumor that "cup site" atomic bombs were dropped recently in testa in Northern Minnesota came Thursday night from the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC). U. S. atomic tests on this con tinent are conducted only at the proving grounds in Nevada, com mission officials saia. A spoxes man for the Civil Defense Admin istration said that agency had no information on any Minnesota tests. The Air Force, which pre sumably would take part in any such tests, had no comment ; British Turb-Prop Liner Lands In Canada MONTREAL I? A four-engine' British turbo-prop airliner sam ple of a type scheduled to fly air routes next year between Canada and the United States landed at Montreal last night. It wag the first transatlantic flight by a civil ian jet-powered plane. 1 Unlike true y.is, the 40-seat Vlck-ers-built Viscount uses jet power to drive four propellers. It has a longer range than a fully jet-powered plane but not as much speed. Columbus Day Won't Become Legal Holiday SALEM tin Senate Democrats gave up Tuesday in their attempt to have Columbus Day declared a legal holiday. ' They Introduced a bill calling for observances in schools on Co lumbus Day. They announced that this bill is a substitute for an ear lier measure which would have made it a legal holiday. LIMITS BARBITURATES SALEM 1st A bill to prevent the sale of barbiturates without prescriptions was passed by the House Wednesday and sent to the Senate, The bill also would prevent re filling of the prescription! without doctor's orders.