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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 22, 1955)
T Argentine Rebels Fought Because Of Little Fears By BRUCE HENDERSON BUENOS AIRES, Argentina a iaDor leader ran his finger across his neck. "What happens now?" be said. A young Argentine girl said soft ly, "ine uuie Mings count soi much. Those little fears we were fighting against." These were fragments of the re action which ran through this cap ital Monday night and earlv Tues-I day, after the downfall of Juani Domingo Peron, Argentina's self styled "leader." What fears were the rebels fight ing? The young anti-Peronista girl spoke seriously: "We couldn't say what we thought for fear of being arrested. You were afraid of going to jail, and staying there indefinitely. You spoke in whispers, or not at all. "And when you went abroad you were embarrassed. You were an Argentine, and he was your presi dent. It was a stigma we carried. Those are what you might call the little things that are so important in life." Who will grasp the loose reins? What new road will this richest of Latin lands take? Crowds laughed at the cold, slashing rain. Some bareheaded, they skipped through rain puddles, kissing and embracing, waving flags in damp but triumphant pa rades. The blue and white flag of Argentina broke out of windows lining the streets. Militant groups broke into Peron ista Precinct headauarters scat tered around the city and ripped pictures ot Peron and his late wite Eva from the walls. Although Peron's supporters were not in sight, his miiuence was not completely gone. Argentina had known Peron, and only Peron, for all these years. His pictures and his words would not be torn down in a day. Argentines, untutored in guiding their own political fortunes, must learn the ways ot sell-government anew. In a nation still tied to the past, the first few hours of the future were confused and racked by doubt and uncertainty. Circuit Court CUSTOM PICTURE FRAMING Select from over 100 from patterns. KOOP'S Modern Photography and Art Gallery 222 West Oak Speedy X-Ray Camera Aid In Heart Studies CHICAGO A high-speed X. ray camera that can "freeie" the motion of a beating heart was de scribed to the American Roentgen Kay .society -Tuesday. Dr. Charles T. Dotter of the Uni versity of Oregon said the appa ratus can open and close the ex posure in a thousandth of a sec ond. Most X-ray devices current ly in use shoot at about one six tieth of a second. Normal heart motion and the ad ditional movement caused by fidg ety children or adults being X rayed results in the wastage of about $250,000 in film in the United States each year, Dr. Dotter esti mated. He said the new camera is cap able of capturing sharp detail, even under these conditions. The high speed device was de veloped by Dr. Dotter in collab oration W4th the Machlett Labora tories, Springdale, Conn. FEEL BETTER... LOOK BETTER IN 10 DAYS (jYm$M Dismissal Order Joan Smith, by guardian Eva Bever, vs. Pat Ryder. Case set tled. Probate Ordtr Robert M. Stults appointed ad ministrator of estate of August Speidel, who died Aug. 31. Speidel left no heirs. Appraisers appointed are Don H. Sanders, Jack .Myers and Maurice, Cairns. Judgment Orders Danny Bernatzki vs. State In dustrial Accident Commission. Based on stipulation of parties, plaintiff declared entitled to per manent partial disability award equal to 80 per cent loss of use of an arm, an increase of 40 per cent. Claim remanded to defendant for award conforming with judgment. Lee Roy Kelley vs. State Indus trial Accident Commission. Based on agreement of parties, plaintiff awarded disability cdmpensation e'jual to 90 per cent loss of use of an arm, an increase of 40 per cent. Lloyd Roach vs. State Industrial Accident Commission. Based on agreement of parties, plaintiff awarded disability compensation equal to 90 per cent loss of use of an arm an increase of 40 per cent. Lloyd Roach vs. State Industrial Accident Commission. Based on agreement of parties, plaintiff awarded disability compensation equal to 60 per cent loss of use of an arm and 25 per cent loss of use of a foot, being increased 25 per cent and 25 per cent. Order Clara Dorene Crowder vs. Ray mond Crowder. Decree of Jan. 29, 1954, modified. Complaint Filed Cecil Lowe vs. Herman F. Met calf and Southern Pacific Co. Plaintiff seeks damages of $1,093.- 53 and $232.50, alleging the de fendants were at fault on uct. b, 1954, when a dump truck of Lowe's was hit by engine operated by Metcalf at Winchester Road cross ing west ot Highway 99. NEW RUBICAPS MULTIPLE with B-12 The !vpr-Pofencr Mufir-VitomJil THRF.I MONTHS SUPPLY 1 00 Capsulettes 50 Capsulettes . .$3.95 Try tbt net 10-Day Rubhafi Nu trition Plan and if you don't fttl better,, .look better. ..your money back! Combat morning fatigue, lack of energy, that old-at-thirty feeling when due to vitamin deficiency with new RUBICAPS Multi-Vitamin capsulettes. The Super-Potency . vitamin that nukes sure you get a ' , Rii8iSK If jf big surplus of the vitamins and minerals you need, plus twice as much B-12 the activity vitamin as any other nationally adver tised vitamin product. Start the 10-day Nutrition plan today.. .fed better... look better! Alu nvallablo KUBtCAPS wHh llvnr and Iron and JtUBICAPf Super Potency Complex, Buick Motors ' Speeds Expansion FLINT, Mich. 11 Buick Mo tors, third largest of the world's car makers, is speeding up its huge expansion program. The company, which already this year has built and sold more cars than in any previous full year, expects to have a milhon-unit-a-year capacity within the next 12 months. That will be just in time for what has been generally forecast as the year of the auto industry's billion dollar model changeover the most far reaching in auto in dustry history. Buick showed its 1956 models to representatives of the press, ra dio, television and trade publica tions Wednesday. Ihe cars, re styled and with numerous engineer ing advancements, are not yet in assembly line production. Public presentation is scheduled early in November. Details of changes in 1956 models will not be made pub lic for several weeks. Buick ousted Chrysler's Ply mouth division from third place in production and retail deliveries last year, Most recent production figures show Buick has built about 600,- 000 cars so far in 1955. Plymouth, down for the model change over, accounts for about 536,000. Thu., S.pt. 22, 1955 Th. News-Review, Roseburj, Ore. 5 Benson Says Farm Program To Be Slowly Strengthened NEW ORLEANS I - Secretary of Agriculture Benson said Tues day the administration will contin ue to strengthen its farm aid pro grams, but declared it will not be "stampeded into ill-considered ac tions." Benson said the administration feels deep concern over declining farm prices and income, but the GOP farm chief added that any new sicpf taken by the govern ment must be weighed carefully lest they "destroy farm markets and work against the long term interests of agriculture." Benson also said that, "as a Aged Pair Takes Davy Crockett's Advice On Trip PERKINS. Okla. 11 Frank (Pistol Pete) Eaton, 95-year-old former U. a. marshal, and his 114-year-old Indian companion are taking the old admonition of Davy Crockett and calling off their trip to Denver. Earlier this month they an nounced they would go to the mile high city to let scientists see if they could learn their secret of long life. Both Eaton and the Iowa Indian chief, Big Bear Two Hands, de cided Tuesday they'd stay right at home here. "You know, Davy Crockett once said, 'Be sure you know what you're doing, then go right ahead,' and that's the advice we decided to follow," Eaton announced. We decided we don't like to fool with anything we don't know a thing about. I don't want to be a human guinea pig, and the chief feels the same way." A few weeks ago Pierce hospital at Denver asked the pair to par ticipate in a longevity study. "We wasn't afraid of the long trip," Pistol Pete hastily pointed out. "I've done quite a bit of trav eling, and the old chief, you couldn't kill him with a rifle." Mindszenty Freed, Methodist Cleric Told In Hungary VIENNA, Austria iff) U.S. Methodist Bishop G. Bromley Ox nam, of Washington, D.C., said Monday he was told while in Hun gary that Josef Cardinal Minds zenty has been released from pris on. Bishop Oxnam, arriving in Vien na from Budapest, said he had been informed by Protestant church leaders that Cardinal Mind szenty was living quietly in an un disclosed location. The American bishop also dis closed that a U.S. church delega tion will visit Moscow in the near future under the auspices of the National Council of Churches. Bish op Oxnam was in Budapest on a two-day visit to receive an hon orary doctor's degree on the oc casion of the 100th anniversary of the Budapest Theological Academy of the Hungarian Reformed Church. Saturday, the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano said the Hungarian announcement just be fore the Geneva summit meeting of suspension of Cardinal Mind szenty's sentence may have been only propaganda. Cardinal Minds zenty was arrested in 1948 and sen tenced a year later on charges of treason, espionage and illegal fi nancial deals. U.S. To Avoid Additional Talks With Red China WASHINGTON 13 ' The United States remains determined to avoid major political and economic talks with Red China until it has more evidence the Reds will carry out their promise to free all Ameri can prisoners. Diplomatic officials who report ed this Wednesday said the go slow attitude, however, would not stall the meeting in Geneva be tween American and Chinese Com munist envoys. The Slate Department is now reported awaiting a report from the British Embassy in Peiping which is checking to make certain that Americans now in Chinese Communist jails will be allowed to leave the country if they wish. ine American representative, will talk meanwhile with Commu nist China's envoy to draft an agenda of key issues which they win discuss later, sucn a meeting was held Tuesday. Johnson will not. informants stressed, begin actual talks on the problems themselves but only agree to the issues to be exam ined along with the order in which they will be taken up. spokesman for agriculture in the federal government, I'm deeply disturbed by any action which adds even one penny to the production costs of farmers at this time." He referred specifically to recent increases in farm machinery pric es announced after a wage increase in the equipment industry. The secretary said in Washing ton last week that the administra tion will have something specific to offer the next Congress to im prove the farm income situation, but he did not say what it would be. 'We will not plow under every Famed Swedish Sculptor Succumbs In Stockholm STOCKHOLM. Sweden UP. One of modern sculpture's towering figures. 80-year-old Carl Milles. died at his home here Monday. I ne aweuign-norn artist had De come a U. S. Citizen in 1945. Milles worked in the United States from 1929 to the end of World war II. when he moved to Rome. His sculptures are in most West European capitals and in many U.S. cities, including New York, St. Paul, Minn., St. Louis, Mo., and Wilmington, Del. He was an honorary member of the American Institute of Architects,' American League of Architects, American Academy of Arts and Letters and the Royal Academy of Brittain. third row of cotton or sentence little pigF to execution," he de clined in a speech at a meeting of the Farm Equipment Institute. He said that policies and pro- Biographical Sketches Topic Of Sorority Meet The study topic for the coming year for Xi Tau Chapter of Beta Sigma in Roseburg will' be bio graphical sketches of world-famous women, according to an an nouncement at the first Fall meet ing. The next meeting of the group will be Sept. 28 at the home of Mrs. George Crocker. Mrs. Ralph Hucstis will present a study of Anna Pavlova, Russian ballerina. Preceding the first meeting of the year, a potluck dinner was served. At the business session, plans for the coming year were discussed. The meeting was held at the home of Mrs. Morris Bow kcr. Thirteen members were present. grams alieady adopted by the ad ministration arc working to carry agricultuc through a postwar ad justment period "to a time whe i ne'.' prosperity will be enjoyed." "This has been a year of se rious readjustments for many farmers," he said. "Total net in come may be down as much as 5 per cent from 1954. "But you can write this on the back of your order books now farm prices and farm incomes are ning to be higher in the years ahead than they are today." APPLICATION FILED SEATTLE m West Coast Air lines said Tuesday it had filed an application with the Civil Aero nautics Board for the right to pro vide direct air service between Spokane and Vancouver, B.C. The announcement came four days after a similar filing for Spokane-Calgary service. The firm said the proposed routes would provide improved a if service for Eastern Washington, Eastern Oregon and Idaho. TRADE UNION APPEALS - COLOGNE, Germany (fl The West German Trade Union Feder ation Wednesday appealed to Com munist East Germany to release hundreds of Germans jailed for the June 17 uprising in 1953.. SERVING SENTENCE LONDON m Anthony Bonner began serving his 51st sentence Wednesday six years for stealing a peddler's pushcart. Police testi fied at his trial he had spent only four years out of prison since 1927, FALL CALL for ROOF REPAIRS Roll Roofing Asphalt Roofing Calvanixed Roofing All Flat Roof Materials Protect Your Roof Before Winter GERRETSEN BUILDING SUPPLY COMPANY 402 WEST OAK PHONE OR 2-2636 Edmonton, Alta., has grown from a trading post in 1900 to more than 200,000 population. YOU MAY WIN ABSOLUTELY FREE This Beautiful ENTER OLD WEAR-EVER UTENSIL CONTEST TODAY! WEAR-EVER TWO-PIECE HONEYMOON SEf with NON-TARNISH COPPER-COLOR COVERS . '. lukr. Jalltte utensils Vre'maovo'f adule . aluminum alloy that cooks superbly and fr I lasts a lifetime; and the copper-colored W J covers stay beautiful without polishing! ' J I Leaf-shaned i haneersrareflnrludert fcnl that they can be hung decoratively and wuTcrjicmif in ine Kiicnen., Have you a Wear-Ever utensil that has been in your home 25 years or more?- It may win you this "lovely" two-piece set of Wear-Ever's new est best looking best cooking HALLITE ware! CONTEST RULES 1. Submit a genuine, trade-marked Wear-Ever utensil that has been in regular use for 25 yean or more. 2. Submit a brief written history at to where and when thit utensil was bought (or received at a gift), the kind of use it hat had, and any par ticularly interesting element in its history, 3. We will place your entry on exhibit in a special display window, thow its age and ownership. 4. Entries will be judged on the basis of age and the most interesting ttory or history connected with the utensil. 5. Prize will be a Hallite Honeymoon Set. 6. Entriet will be accepted until closing time October 22nd. 7. Prize award will be made Wednesday, October 26th 2 p.m. 8. Utensils will be returned to their owners after their use in our window. BRING YOUR OLD WEAR-EVER UTENSIL IN TODAY. Contractors Win ' Final Award On I The Dalles Dam j PORTLAND W Two firms which jointly have done most of Ihe construction work on The Dalles Dam Tuesday submitted the low bid to complete it. Army Engineers said Tuesday that Guy F. Atkinson Co., San Francisco, and Ostrander Con struction Co., Portland, were low with a bid of $1319,085. The work, the last major con struction project on the huge Co lumbia Eiver dam, calls for build- j ing the last arm of the dam to close the river. There also will be fills and grading work, miscel laneous roads, removal of coffer dams and salvage of equipment from The Dalles - Celilo Canal, which is being flooded by the dam. After the dam construction is completed, bids will be called for installation of equipment in the powerhouse. The dam, to begin producing power in November, 1957, wifl nave an initial capacity of 1,222,- i 000 kilowatts with 14 main gener ators and two fishwater units. There will be room for eight additional generators which may be installed when more storage dams are built upstream. These eight generators would add anoth er 604,000 kilowatts. Egypt Reports Israelis Arrest U. N. Observer CAIRO, Egypt m Col. Salah Cohar, director of Egypt's Pales tine Department, told a news con ference Wednesday the . Israelis arrested a Swiss United Nations observer and injured three Egyp tians when they occupied the El Auja (Nizama) demilitarized area. Gohar said an Egyptian officer and two of four soldiers with him were injured when the Israeli armed force occupied the area early Wednesday morning. iHrnoQuavaum mi t i mm mMMMM 202 NORTH JACISOW JTMIT DIAL MUiMfal J lt It FALL HOUSE CLEANING read News-Review Want Ads for household needs and services. hunter SIP E What a Deal!... WITH PURCHASE OF KELVINATOR HOME FREEZER OF YOUR CHOICE! NEW SAVAGE, MODEL 340, REPEATING .30-30 BOLT ACTION RIFLE Pi 1 1 CI Y0UR DEER CUT UP tm V P ! AND WRAPPED FOR YOUR FREEZER! PLUS! $50 OFF KELVINATOR FREEZER! KELVINATOR 18 Cu. Ft. UPRITE DELUXE Regular $549 Deer Hunter's Special $499 KELVINATOR 15 Cu. Ft. CHEST FREEZER Regular $449 Deer Hunters' Special $399 KELVINATOR 12 Cu. Ft. UPRITE FREEZER Regular $449 Deer Hunters' Special $399 HURRY! Sale Effective Til Opening of Deer Season -- October 1 Only! Supplies Limited First Come, First Served BANK TERMS ON APPROVED CREDIT THE WORKING MAN'S STORE Phone OR 2-1411 Ul A fBi loVW (e IT 1835 N. 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