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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (May 16, 1956)
Fluoridalion, flew Tax At City 0! Roseb Fluoridation and an increased city tax base are on the ballot in a special election for Roseburg precincts Friday. A proposed increase in the tax base will be determined by the vote, but the vote on fluoridation will only serve as a recommenda - Uon to the. City Council. It is proposed to boost the tax base from $73,625.13 to 5265,617.67. The council says adoption of the second figure by the voters Willi mean a figure closer to the actual I Commitf eentan, Commlftaevoman Will Be Elected From Each Party In Friday Vote f '3 f J ROBERT T. MAUTZ ,5frt,ia D. GIRARD DAVIDSON National committeemen and committee women will be chosen Friday by voters of each party. The committeemen of each party bd ome part of the national pol itical organizations which develop party policies and strategy. One man and one woman will be elected from each party. The most hectic contest is be tween Robert T. Mautz and John llerrifield, both of Portland and both running for Republican na tional committeeman. Both back President Eisenhower. Each is an attorney, with Mcrrifield having served in the State Senate. Portland Attorney For Re-election To HALL S. LUSK T1 Ml" r; J L. B. SANDBLAST PROMOTED The Navy Dept. announced the! promotion recently of Bob J. Mc- Farland, of 714 W. Fairhaven Ave Roseburg, to personnel man third i class, USN, wiule serving aooara the Atlantic Flopt attack aircraft i carrier L'SS Forrestal. The promo-j 5' K w wi Ay i 3 "a ion followed SUCCCSSIUl completion; 10 spend i-i nmion uuuars ou snips of a Navy-wide petty officer ex-iin a year haded as marking tran- amination conducted in February. I sition to a nuclear fleet. urg Polls yearly budget and a possibile elim ination of the need for a popular vote to exceed the 6 per cent limi tation. The council calls the present base "unrealistic" in the light of the city's growth, pointing out that 1 the 1937 base was higher than it is this year. It was pointed out that it not mcan tai increase, The base is the amount to which 6 per cent can be added each year for city operation, The second issue on the ballot if JOHN MERRIF1ELD r w PAT DOOLEY The sole candidate for Republi can national commmccwoman is Mrs. Collis Moore- of Moro. There's also a contest for Demo cratic national committeeman. Op ponents are u. uirard Davidson, Portland attorney an assistant sec retary of the interior under Presi dent Truman, and Pat Dooley, Portland man who has served in the legislature. Two women are running for Democratic national committee woman. They are Mrs. Gladys Last and Virginia Grant, both of Portland. Term of each of the offices is four years. Opposes Lusk Supreme Court I Voters In Oregon Friday must I elect one State Suroreme Court 1. .u . -e t justices end at the end of tho year. Ifall S. Lusk is running for re election, but is being opposed by L. B. Sandblast, a Portland attor ney. Lusk has been in the Supreme Court for 18 years, two of them as chief justice. His opponent, Sandblast, propos es that the next two appointments to the court be made ' from the ranks of labor unions and women." No one filed against the other three justices, so their return to office is automatic, and their names won t appear on (lie non partisan judiciary ballot. They are Chief justice Harold J. Warner and Justices Waller L. Tooze and Earl C. Latourctte. The terms of office arc six years each. r 'Iv. ( If TV1 4r V -A J v i' - . CHARLES DOERNER, a Rep ublican is seeking re-election as Douglas County clerk. He has been in office for four years. Hs is unopposed on the party ballot. No Democrats have filed. NAVY BILL SIGNED WASHINGTON I - President ( this week i Eisenhower's signature rounded out the Navy's authority Base Issues Frid Is one which has been brewing for several years. Although rfluroida tion will not be directly approved or turned down by the popular vote, its fate is expected to be con siderably dependent on the result of the vote. It will serve as a rec ommendation to the City Council. After the vote, the council will take action on it. The Oregon Water Corp. has agreed to absorb the cost of fluor idating the city's water only after a popular vote and passage of city ordinance. VIRGINIA GRANT i..T ... GLADYS LAST Arthritis Remedy Maker Bitten By Ingredient BALTIMORE Wl An elderly Chinese who set out to make an arthritis remedy of seven rattle snakes and a quantity of gin is re covering from snakebite. Kom Sing, 74. told physicians at Johns Hopkins Hospital he planned to put the big diamondbacks be lieved shipped from Texas into jars, fill the jars with gin and leave the reptiles submerged for a year. Then, he said, he would drink the liquid in the hope it would relieve his arthritic pains. But he was bitten while handling one of the snakes. Police and zoo snake handlers found Sing's rattlers in jars, all of which had a small quantity of alcohol in them. Three of the snakes were dead. The rest, un conscious, were taken to the zoo. Benson Orders Controls Continued On Wheat WASHINGTON (fl Secretary of Agriculture Benson Tuesday or dered the continuance of rigid fed eral production and marketing controls on the 1957 wheat crop, subject to a referendum of grow ers set for July 20. The controls, which have been in effect the last three years, must be approved by at least two thirds of the growers voting in the ref erendum. Farmers have never re jected whet quotas. The 1957 program, like that of the past two years, would limit marketings to the amount pro duced on 55 million acres. This is the amount which would be al lolcd growers for planting. IS PROMOTED Franklin D. Westley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Claude W. Westley, Rose burg, recently was promoted to specialist third class in Korea whore he is a member of the 7th Infantry Division. Specialist Westley, assigned to Company M of the division's 31st Regiment, entered the Army in Oc- tober 1954 and completed basic training at Fort Ord, Calif. He ar- rived in the Far East in March iwo. Westley is a former employ of Evans Plywood Co. MRS. COLLIS MOORE "-4 f K OLIVER L. JOHNSON 5; 1 3ERT J. LAURANCE SIG UNANDER AL M. RICHARDSON Precincts In Local Here are the precincts which will be voting on localized matters B'riday: Drain Justice of the peace: Elk- ton, North Drain, South Drain, Gun tcr, Comstock, East Yoncalla, West Yoncalla. Calapooia justice of the peace: Calapooia, Oakland No. 1, Oakland No. 2, Sutherlin No. 1, Sutherlin No. 2, Sutherlin No. 3, Fair Oaks, Fir Grove, Wilbur, Kellogg, Coles Valley. Glendale justice of the Dcace: Cow Creek, East Glendale, West Glendale. Port of Umpqua Commission: 4-H Summer School Counselor Jobs Open The U. S. Marine Corps re cruiting station in Portland, today announced plans for formation of the 6th Oregon Beaver Platoon of 100 men to be enlisted into the Marines on June 21. Oregon Beaver Platoons have been very successful in the past. Three of the five previous platoons have been honor platoons and the other two have taken runner-up honors. All have won many pla toon and individual awards for themselves. Boys from the same State, the same schools, and the same cities seem to work harder togeiher to win distinction for themselves. Enlistment details on this pla toon can be had at .the nearest Marine Corps recruiting station and interested young men are urged to make application now to assure themselves of a place with the Platoon. Worm Digger Digs Bottle Cap From Sister's Throat WORCESTER, Mass. UK Four-year-old John Lande stopped dig ging worms long enough to stick a dirty hand down his baby sis ter's throat and possibly saved her life. Mrs. Irving Lande said that while she was talking on the tele phone her 19-month old baby put a bottle cap in her mouth and it lodged in her throat. She said she tried desperately to dislodge it. The baby began turning blue and she yelled for someone to call an ambulance. At this point, little Johnny ran indoors, put his hand down his sister's throat and came out with the bottle cap. Johnny had been digging worms with his bands. '5, -!a - Jr. ib-iX,;;; ;:y 'i 5 I , v' I !;. j if I WARREN C. POWELL 3 Treasurer Candidates File Three persons, two Republicans and one Democrat, are. running for county treasurer. The Democrat, Bert Laurance, Winston farmer, has the nomina tion of his party virtually cinched, since he's the only candidate from that party. The Republicans are incumbent Oliver L. Johnson and Warren Powell. Johnson is in his fourth term of the office and is seeking re-election to a fifth term. PoweU is a Roseburg accountant, and will be attempting to take the Republi can nomination from Johnson Fri day. The term of office is four years. 4 , f WILEY W. SMITH State Treasurer Post Vote Set Sig Unander, Orogonis Republi can state treasurer for the past four years, has filed for re-elec tion, and his is the only name on the Republican ballot for nomina tion for that office Friday, r Two Democratic men, however. will have their names on the bal lot. They are Wiley W. Smith, the present Multnomah County trea surer and Al M. Richardson of Polk County. Richardson's name will remain l the ballot, although he has signified the withdrawal of his name for the nomination by the party for the stats office. , V " , LZJ Voteing Listed Gardiner, Smith River, Rccdsport No. 1, Reedsport No. 2, Rcedsport No. 3, Reedsport No. 4, Deans Creek, Winchester Bay, Loon Lake, Scottsburg, Elkton. Roseburg fluoridation and tax base: Benson, Deer Creek, Ump qua, Lane, Laureiwood, Hamilton, Woodward, Caro, Hermann, Rose burg, Miller, West Roseburg, Fair haven, Wharton, Brown, Hucrcst, North Brown, Orchard. Small Firms' Inclusion In Labor Act Advised . WASHINGTON UK A union official told a Senate Labor sub committee this week the Fair La bor Standard Act should be broad ened to include employes of small lumber and wood working firms. A.S. Hartung, president of In ternational Woodworkers of Amer ica, also said the SI an hour mini mum wage provided in the prcs ent act should be stepped up to $1.25. In asking that the law be changed to apply to firms with small labor forces, Hartung said Commerce Department figures show there are more than 11.000 logging operations in the United Slates employing 12 people or less. Such firms are now exempt. State Socialism Cets Swat From Hitchcock PORTLAND' "The danger of state socialism brought about by certain democratic policies is a real and imminent one," Phil Hitchcock told a Portland State College audience this week. Hitch cock, seeking the republican nom ination for u. S. Senator, cited an example of the Klamath Indians as "an abject and object lesson" to support his statement. "Eighty years ago the Klamath Indians were virile and resource ful people," Hitchcock said. "They were adapting themselves to the economy and society of the re gionand then came security" of fered by the white man. Rut in 30 years, Hitchcock said, "Their morale and their initiativa have so degenerated that their leaders are working out plans to free themselves from this benefi cent Drotection while they still I have something to protect." COP Candidates Believe Morse Can Be Beaten PORTLAND Wl Each of the four candidates for Republican nomination to the U. S. Senate thinks Democratic Sen. Wayne Morse can be beaten. And each of them thinks he is qualified to do it. The four spoke at a Republican meeting here Monday, each telling why he thought he had the best chance of defeating the senator. Douglas McKay said he had polled more votes than Morse in the past and that he could do it again. He promised a fighting campaign if nominated. Phil Hitchcock, a member of a Portland college staff, said that Democrats outnumber Republi cans in the state. He said that if the GOP wants to win it will have to attract the votes of Democrats and independents. Elmer Deetz, Canby dairyman, said he is familiar with farm problems which will be one of the major issues of the campaign. George Altvater, Portland engi neer, said he feels he is qualified to defeat Morse on the Hells Can yon issue. Gov. Elmo Smith, who also spoke at the meeting, said "it is extremely important for every Republican to get out and vote, and vote early." Russian Forces' Arms Cut Poses Problem In West BONN, West Germany Wl The Soviet Union's announcement of a big cut in its armed forces is cer tain to create powerful new ob stacles to West German rearma ment in the Atlantic Alliance. Diplomats in Bonn believe this to be one. of the main aims of the Kremlin's plan, to slash Soviet armed torccs by 1,200,000 men. in cluding 30,000 in East Germany. In their view, the Soviets con sider the prevention of West Ger man rearmament one of the main objectives of their foreign policy. tven oefore the Moscow an nouncement, Chancellor Ade nour's Bonn government faced strong public and political pres sure to scale down the plan to create ' a 500,000-man army in West Germany. Adenauer s commitment to build up a strong armed force to bul wark NATO's defenses in Central Europe now hangs in the balance as the Bonn Parliament considers conscription. West German mili tary planners say volunteers alone cannot provide enough manpower for such a force. Upper Klamath Basin Pact Now In 2-State Talk KLAMATH FALLS 11 The Oregon and California Klamath River commissions this week be gan a series of hearings on the pro posed intorstate compact on the use of the waters of the Upper Klamath Basin. The session will be followed bv hearings at Yreka Tuesday, Weavervllle Wednesday, and Eu- rexa i riaay. The hearings are the first step In gaining final approval of the compact draft, the subject of negotiations for several years. After the hearings, it must be approved by both the Oregon and California legislatures, Congress, and the rresiuent. The compacts set up a system of priorities for use of the waters of the Upper Klamath Basin, ex clusive of those used by the Klamath Reclamation District. It provides guarantees for suffi cient water to irrigate 300,000' acres of off-project land in the I basin, which includes parts ot Klamath County, Oregon, and i Siskiyou and Modoc counties, California. Butte Vallev. and the Olahoma and Red Rock districts, as well as the Upper Klamath Basin and its California extension, the Tule lake Basin, are included In the compact definition of the basin. Land Bank Loans At Highest Total Since Inception SPOKANE Wl The Federal Land Bank of Spokane said this week its outstanding loans to Northwest farmers now total more than 114 million dollars, the highest volume since the bank opened in 1917. Fred A. Knutscn, the bank pres ident, said, however, that the farmers' mortgage debt is still relatively low when compared to the value of farms. "In 1935, when the bank's prev ious loan volume peak wes reach ed, the total farm mortgage debt in the Northwest states was equal to 25 per cent of the value of farm land and buildings," he said. "The mortgage debt now is only 10 per cent of the value," The Spokane bank extends long term credit to farmers and ranch ers in Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington to buy land, fi nance livestock and machinery purchases and for repairs. The loans are made and serviced by 65 farmer-owned national farm loan associations which own the bank. SELECTED Selected at the Naval Training Center, San Diego, Calif., as ap prentice petty officer second class was Wilson L. Cottrell, son nf Mr. and Mrs. Ward Uottrcll of 2801 N. Stephens St., and husband of the former Miss Doris I. Swarlz of 938 W. Nebo St., all of Roseburg. The Apprentice Petty Officers, scheduled to graduate May 5, are chosen from the ranks of the sea man recruits to assist the Com pany Commanders. The selection is made on the basis of aptitude and leadership qualities of each Individual. Wed., May 16, 1956 Tht Ex-Governor Talmadge Best Known s Strong Advocate Of Supremacy For Whites By TOM CHASE ATLANTA UK Herman Tal madge, former governor of Geor gia and now candidate for Sen. George's seat in the U. S. Sen ate, is probably best known across the nation as an advocate of "white supremacy." He makes no bones about this and in his announcement for the Senate pledged that if elected he would fight for the "survival of Georgia and the South" on the national level just as he fought on the local level during six years as governor. Talmadge says flatly that Ne groes and whites will never go to the same schools in Georgia as long as be has anything to say about it. The state will resist the U.S. Supreme Court decision outlawing segregation in the nation's public schools "even if we stand alone," says this square-jawed, cigar smoking man with the falling fore lock of coal black hair. Now, at 42, Talmadge feels that if elected to the Senate he will be in a position to fight more ef fectively on the national level what he considers encroachments of states rights. His stubborness in a fight and his devotion to "white suprem acy" both were inherited from his father, the late Gov. Eugene Talmadge, as was his fondness for red suspenders while campaign ing among the "wool hat" rural regions of the state. Talmadge has proved as un yielding as his father on the ques tion of racial segregation but un like his father will not cling to a hopelessly untenable position, Western Oregon's Timber Region Needs Receive Kind Treatment From Congress By A. ROBERT SMITH conferees who handled the mat-News-Review Correspondent tcr. WASHINGTON This 84th Con- hi m ciimai thni timW r. grcss has been kind to western Oregon's timber belt In-providing funds for timber access roads and promising an expanded road build in? program for the future. thus far the lawmakers nave: 1. Doubled the amount of money lor me Bureau oi uinu Manage nr "SS .,li Ji 1.7 h A. a..imSX 3 nTm?,1iy Association oJ.fIC.Unile.i' . .ui:.a roads provisions in the new long range federal highway aid bill a move that promises the Forest Servico more funds In coming years for roads in the national for ests. -This two-pronged road building program will Help botli BUM and announced intent to increase the annual timber cut in Oregon to keep hungry'sawmills supplied and .Morse had urged the House Pub payrolls stable in the state's lead- lie Works Committee to increase JUUUMiy. t ihv nmuuiit well auuvu uiu jiguia The latest break came Friday finally approved. Ellsworth tried when a House-Senate conference on to get $25,000,000 for construction appropriations agreed to give and $10,000,000 for maintenance, BLM $2,000,000 in additional road making a total of $35,000,000 an funds which they can start spend- nually. Ellsworth pointed out that ins within a few weeks. This is the highway bill fails to divide con- addition to $2,260,000 BLM had obstruction from maintenance funds, hand for road building this year. Reason for increasing the road funds was that the O&C counties asked that more of the money from timber receipts which nor mally is turned back to the coun ties each year be invested in new roads by the government. When BLM took the idea to Capitol Hill, they found the lawmakers gener ally receptive In the Senate but not the House. But after the House killed the funds, the Senate put them back into the bill and Friday's con ference settled the dispute in fa vor of the O&C counties. Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) said he was largely responsible for pav ing the way for the favorable ac tion by getting Rep. Mike Kirwin (D-Ohio) to support the funds in conference. Kirwin is second rank ing Democrat among the five Dem ocrats and four Republican House , -,.v-, (;i .f - . t$M a i ' A J - iwnin k-mtm nmm-mt ikm- CALIFORNIA PAPER WINS PULITZER PRIZE Report er Bill Kennedy (left) and Photographer Sam Vestal look over copy of The Watsonville Registcr-Paiaronian (pro nounced Pah-ha-roaneeahn) which won the 1955 Pulitzer Prize for meritorious public service in journalism by its courageous exposure of coiruption ie public office. The two newsmen were held at gunpoint list Oct. 28 after photographing the car of Dist. Atty. Charles Moore Jr. parked in driveway of conspirator Raymond Jehl at sus picious post-midnight meeting. They were instrumental In uncovering link between the district attorney and his adviser, who was later sentenced to prison. News - Review, Rosebur. Ore. 7 I Si SB ' U Lfi nmrr t'V"--'- i.J ' HIA TtUphoto especially where he has lost pub lic support. Jn public life Talmadge can speak equally well in the digni fied tones of a governor or in the rustic vernacular of his "wool hat" followers on the farms. He calls himself a champion of the little man in the belief that "the big folks can look after themselves" and says he has 10, 000 friends in the sta.to known to him by name. ceipts for the year will run around $20 million, and tho request of the counties was that 25 per cent be invested in roads. Congress has cleared $1,260,000 just un der the 25 per cent estimate of I $5,U0U,UU0. - . vhiw tw rfiff.r. ence betweenHouse and Senate on tl,e res"1" Interior appropriation bm orsthe fl starts July 1. Both have already approv- ed a road budget of $4,460,000 for - th. .nminff nn tht htc i.nrt. Hiahwav BUI Pendi In Stnate As lor the lederal highway aid bill passed last month by the House and now before the Senate, it increased the annual access road authorizotlon for the Forest Service from $24,000,000 to $27,000.- ; O00 1 Both P.od. Harris Ellsworth and so the $27,000,000 figure must cover both. He said this means t n e amount actually available for con struction will be $20 million or less." Morse had called for a $50 mil lion annual access road program in the national forests in testi mony before the roads subcom mittee. Later he Introduced a bill with the co-sponsorship of Sen. Richard L. Nouberger and seven others to amend the highway bill so as to authorize amounts start ing at $32 million the first year, $40 million the following year and leveling off at $50 million annually thereafter for 10 years. Ncubcrgcr last week said he will sponsor an amendment when the , road bill comes before the Senate to have the Senate agree to the House-passed figure of $27 million. That's the amount generally ex pected to be approved. r ..'A L,tmr&