2 The Newi-Ryiew, Roseburg, Or. Tuoi., Aug. 21, 1956
Hawaii, Alaska
Statehood COP
Recommendation
SAN FRANCISCO Wl Members
of the Republican Plat"vra uin
mittee Tuesday recommenu.d im
mediate statehood for Alaska and
Hawaii.
The stand on Alaska carried
reservation on defense. There
were no reservations in the state
ment on Hawaii.
The tentative plank, to be pre
sented to the Republican national
convention late Tuesday, said:
"We pledge immediate statehood
for Alaska, recognizing the fact
that adequate provision for defense
requirements must be made.
"We pledge immediate atate
hood for Hawaii."
The stand was pan oi a piann
on "government operations" draft
ed by a subcommittee headed by
Rep. Frances P. Bolton (R-Ohio).
Democrats adopted a similar
plank in Chicago a week ago. It
called for immediate statehood for
both territories.
The GOP platform four years
ago favored immediate statehood
for Hawaii and "statehood for
Alaska under an equitable enabl
ing act.
BIRTHS
Fortit Glon Hotpital
FORD To Mr. and Mrs. Jim
mie Lee Ford, Riddle, Aug. 17, a
son, Darrell Lee; weight 6 pounds.
MAURER To Mr. and Mrs.
Wallace Maurer, Riddle, Aug. 17,
a son, David Wayne; weight 8
pounds 11 ounces.
LANDERS To Mr. and Mrs.
LaVerne Landers, Riddle, Aug. 19,
a son, LaVerne Paul; weight 4
pounds 6 ounces.
PETTIGREW To Mr. and Mrs.
Dorvin Pettigrew, Myrtle Creek,
Aug. 19, a daughter, Rclcnia Gail;
weight 8 pounds 7 ounces.
MILKS To Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Milks, Tiller, Aug. 18, a daughter,
Nancy Bernice; weight 5 pounds
9 ounces.
BOND To Mr. and Mrs. James
Bond, Myrtle Creek, Aug. 19, a
daughter, Roberta Jean; weight 6
pounds 2 ounces.
BIRD To Mr. and Mrs. Willet
Bird, Glendale. Aug. 19, a daugh
ter, Debra Michelle; weight 6
pounds 9 ounces.
Mercy Hotpital
BARTZ To Mr. and Mrs.
James G. Barlz, Dillard, Aug. 16,
a son, Michael James; weight 9
pounds 11 ounces.
McKENZIE To Mr. and Mrs.
Ivan W. McKenzie, Winston, Aug.
16, a daughter, Terry Belle;
weight 7 pounds 12Va ounces.
HARRIS To Mr. and Mrs. Harry
L. Harris, 2514 W. Harvard, Rose
burg, Aug. 16, a son, Charles Ed
ward; weight 8 pounds 10 vi ounces.
wftuNMi to Mr. ana Mrs.
Ned E. Wagner, Winston, Aug. 17,
a son, VcrUn Kyle; weight 6 pounds
lz ounces.
GRAWU-To Mr. and Mrs. Don
ald Grawl, Rt. 1 Box 302, Rose
burg, Aug. 17, a daughter, Renee
Adell; weight 7 pounds 2 '.-4 oune-
MAIN To Mr. and Mrs. Samp
son Main, Myrtle Creek, Aug. 18, a
daughter, Brenda Rae; weight 6
pounds 2 ounces.
Dulles' English Critic
Praises Him For Meet
LONDON, m The Liberal
Manchester Guardian, frequently
critical of Secretary of State
Dulles, praised him Tuesday for
"great service" to the world in
the Suez crisis.
The newspaper said the Dulles
plan for solving the dispute with
Egypt was "admirably con
ceived." "In pulling it before the con
ference, Mr. Dulles made I
speech of tact and moderation
which was firm hut courteous to
Egypt," the Guardian said. "He
has done great service to the West
ern powers and to the world
in tho past three weeks."
Parking Space
FOR RENT By Month
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Utt,
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in Stock
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FULLER PAINTS
Wo Give S&H Green
Stomps
TO BE REPUTABLE
ROSEBURG FUNERAL HOME
FUNERALS Phone ORchord 3-4455 f i '
Oak and Kane St. Roseburg, Oregon CSwi iw
Adequate Free Parking ' L L. POWERS
Church
Activities
Women's Fellowship
Has Noon Meeting
Christian Women's Fellowship of
the Sutherlin Christian Church met
Thursday in the social rooms for a
noon potluck dinner and business
meeting, with Mrs. Kattie Graham
and Mrs. Blanch Hecathorn as
hostesses to the eight ladies pres
ent.
The devotions "What can I do to
help," was given by Mrs. Dorothy
Warren. Several matters of busi
ness were brought before the mem
bers and discussed. After the meet
ing, the ladies quilted and worked
on baby layettes.
SERVICES TO RESUME
Service! will resume Sunday,
Aug. 26, at The Apostolic Faith
Church in Roseburg, according to
word received here from the Rev.
E. K. Pallett, pastor of the local
church.
The Rev. Mr, Pallett is now in
Portland attending a camp meet
ing at The Apostolic Faith Tab
ernacle there.
Circuit Court
Complaint
State Industrial Accident Com
mission vs. Glen Bernard Kittel
man. Plaintiff asks $35.27 alleged
ly due on contributions to work
men's Compensation Act.
Oregon Bar Names Four
To Board Of Governors
PORTLAND Wl Oregon attor
ney have elected four new mem
bers of the Oregon State Bar
board of governors, results of a
mail ballot showed Monday.
John H. Holloway, secretary,
said the ballot count showed these
winning candidates in the four
Congressional districts:
George L. Hibbard, Oregon City:
Carl G. Helm Jr., La Grande;
Hugh L. Biggs, Portland, and
Andrew J. Newhouse, Coos Bay.
Members re-elected William H.
Morrison. Portland, to a two-vear
term as the State Bar delegate to
the house of delegates of the
American Bar Assn.
The new board members were
chosen to succeed four whose
three-year terms expire this year.
They are George A. Rhoten,
Salem; Martin P. Gallagher,
Ontario; Moe M. Tonkon, Port
land, and Edward A. Butler, of
Eugene.
The successors will take office
at the state bar convention next
month
In Gearhart.
Nationalists, Peronists
Clash In Street Meet
BUENOS AIRES Ifl The right-
wuig catholic Nationalist party
bid at a mass meeting last night
for support from the followers of
deposed dictator Juan Pcron.
Later a group of the National
ists scuffled on a downtown street
with a small number of suDDortcrs
of Provisional President Pedro
Aramburu. Police broke up the
street fighting. No injuries were
reported.
Some supporters of Aramburu's
present provisional government
call t lie catholic nationalists "Naz
is" and "Fascists" because Ar
gentina's extreme right wing was
openly pro-Axis during World War
II. The Aramburu supporters say
the Nationalists are soliciting
the support of Peron's mass of
followers in order to set up a to
talitarian state of their own.
Chamber Postpones Meet
Until Wednesday Night
The Roseburg Chambet of Com
merce meeting, scheduled for to
night has been postponed until
Wednesday at noon in the Hotel
Umpqua. r
The meeting originally planned
conflicted with broadcast of the
American Legion Junior regional
baseball game at Yakima.
Meanwhile, Secretary - Manager
Harold Hickerson said he had been
flooded with requests to ask local
merchants to send telegrams of
gion team.
VA EMPLOYES PICNIC
Last Sunday, employes of
the
Veterans Adminislralinn Hospita
met for a picnic in "The Grove"
of Ihe hospital grounds. The VA
Employes Assn. sponsored the pic
nic and furnished part of the re
freshments. Those attending participated in
soft ball, horse shoe, and tennis
games during the annual function.
The next event being planned by
the association Is the annual chil
dren's Christmas party.
uses
Canyonville Couple Weekends
In Eugene Wifh Son, Family
By VIRGINIA PROCTOR
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Lathrop
sDcnt the weekend in Eugene as
sisting their son, Loran Lathrop,
and nis tamuy move into their
new home on Bailey hill Road
there. The Loran Lathrops recent
ly moved to Eugene where he is
employed by the Hamilton Elec
tric Co. Also assisting with the
moving were Bob and Lois Loper
of Riddle.
Mr. and Mrs. David Hardicoff
and family have moved Into the S.
J. Pritchctt house in Canyonville.
To California
Mrs. Leota Sanders left early
this week for a snort trip to cal
Lebanese Smash
Narcotics Ring
ROME in Lebanese custom
officers working with U.S. nar
cotics agents have smashed a big
ring which smuggled dope into the
United States and fostered heroin
addiction in Lebanon, it was dis
closed here luesday.
Charles Siragusa, U.S. Bureau
of Narcotics district commission
er for Europe and the Middle
East, said the ring was smashed
with seizure of a heroin laboratory
in Beirut.
The raiders seized 12 kilograms
(26.4 pounds) of pure heroin. Sira
gusa declined to value the seizure.
Adultcrcd and sold to U.S. addicts
at retail prices, the Beirut seizure
would have been worth more than
3V4 million dollars.
33 PG ONE two Israeli soldiers 4
AMMAN. Jordan tfli A mili
tary spokesman said two Israeli
soldiers were killed Tuesday in an
hour's clash inside Jordan, the
second along the frontier in four
days.
The spokesman said three Jor
danian national guardsmen were
wounded when a 30-man Israeli
force attacked with a mortar and
automatic weapons at a village
near Jenin, in southwest Jordan.
The spokesman reported the
Israelis left one body 400 yards
inside Jordan and it was being
guarded until United Nations
truce observers reached the
scene.
Princess Margaret Rose
Has 26th Birthday Today
LONDON Wl Princess Mar
garet, the world's No. 1 royal spin
ster, turned 26 today amid the
usual press speculation over her
plans for the future.
Her official birthday portraits
showed the princess looking al
most somber, in contrast to her
smiling pictures of a year ago.
"Isn't it odd," asked the Daily
Mirror, "that a young girl should
choose a gay picture one year and
, a sad one the next?
"Has anything happened since
last vcar to explain the change?"
It is now almost 10 months since
the Queen's pretty sister decided
againset marrying Group C a p t.
Peter Townsend, a divorced Royal
Air Force hero, because of her ob
ligations to the monarchy and the
established Church of England.
The church frowns on remarriage
of divorced persons.
Nationally-Prominent
COP Women To Speak
Republican women in Douglas
County have been invited to hear
a nationally-prominent GOP worker
who will visit North Bend Monday.
The speaker is Mrs. Mary Clas
bcy of Missoula, Mont., assistant
to Chairman Bertha Adklns of Hie
women's division of tho Republi
can National Committee. She will
appear at a 1 p.m. luncheon in the
Coos Bay Hotel. Her subject Is
"practical campaign organiza
tion." GOP Central Committee Vice
Chairman Mrs. Arthur Marsh
says thoso planning to attend the
session should call GOP headquar
ters in Roseburg by Wednesday
evening. That telephone number is
OR 3-8201.
'Mr. Integrity' Label
Applied To Two Of COP
SAN FRANCISCO im The
label "Mr. Integrity" was applied
to two prominent Republicans on
the National Convention floor
Monday. One of them came .from
Douglas McKay of Oregon in an
introductory speech.
Sen. Thomas Kilchcl of Cali
fornia referred to Sen. William
Knowland. California's senior sen
ator, as "Mr. Integrity" in making
the introduction of Knowland.
McKay followed Knowland to the
stand. Introducing Gov. Langlie of
Washington, he applied the same
title of praise to him.
The double identification passed
without apparent recognition from
many of those listening.
Nine wood lead pencils are sold
in the United States for every one
of all other types of writing in.
strumcnt.
fornia with her son, John Sanders,
and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Allen oi Sol
vang, Calif., were guests last week
at the A. I. Cunis home. The Al
iens own a plumbing shop in Sol
vang and were interested in the
Lustis similar business m Canyon
ville. They were here to help the
Custis' sort through the charred
remains of the warehouse which
burned a week ago.
Mrs. Phillip Claxton and Britt
and Mrs. Sydney Hemphill and
Sydney and Yvonne spent two
days last week in Eugene filling a
medical appointment there as well
as doing some pre-school shopping.
They were overnight guests of
friends during their stay there.
Mr. and Mrs. Wade Worthington
Jr. are home for a two weeks'
vacation before registering with
the fall term at California Agri
cultural College in Davis, Calif.
Judy and Bobby Weick of Ox
nard, Calif., spent a week's vaca
tion recently with their aunt, Mrs.
H. J. Bauer, at her Gazley home.
Charles Hamlin and Tex Ritter
flew the former's Swift plane to
Medford last Sunday.
Mrs. Darrell Brown and Mrs.
LeRoy Soeteber accompanied Miss
Sandy Brown home to Centralia,
Wash., Inst week and spent a few
days visiting friends and relatives
there before returning home.
Vital Statistics
Marriage Licenses
GURNEY - CANNON Gordon
Frances Gurncy, Drain, and Fan
nie May Cannon, Oakland.
ARRANTS - MASON Jack Ar
rants, and Ruth E. Mason, both
ot Myrtle crocK.
Divorce Suits Filed
HILL Betty vs. Richard Hill
Married Aug. 28, 1948, at Metaline
Falls, Wash. Curel and inhuman
treatment charged. Plaintiff asks
custody of one child, $50 monthly
support, trailer house, furniture
and equipment, attorney's fees and
suit money.
VALDEZ Roland vs. Eleanor
Valdez. Married at Roseburg Nov.
15, 1952. Cruel and inhuman treat
ment charged. Plaintiff asks that
defendant be awarded restoration
of former name, Eleanor Bracken.
Decrea
TUEL Alice from Ernest Tuel.
Plaintiff awarded real property in
Sutherlin on which Bide-A-Wec
Cafe is located, household furnish
ings an'd custody of three minor
children. Defendant awarded auto
mobile.
Brothers Die As Auto
Collides With Truck
CORVALLIS W) A motorist
lost control on a mountain high
way curve Monday, and two
brothers died in the resulting
crash. A sheriff's deputy said the
automobile collided with an on
coming logging truck about 20
miles southwest of here on the
Alsea Highway.
Richard Nolan, 22. and his
brother, Tony, 16, both of Mon
mouth, were killed outright. Both
were in the automobile.
Deputy Aaron Dcaring said the
westbound car hit the truck on a
downgrade curve, knocking the
rear trailer wheels out from under
the load of logs. The car spun
wildly into a bank and the
younger Nolan was thrown out.
Richard was trapped in the wreck
age. The truck driver. Gene Martin,
28, Lebanon, escaped injury.
Albert A. Lindquist
Awarded Certificate
Albert A. LindquLst, an instruc
tor at Roseburg High School, was
one of 67 high school and college
physics teachers recently awarded
a certificate of completion from the
Institute of Physics held at the
University of Wyoming.
During the five-week institute,
classes in physics were conducted
and lectures were given by a num
ber of eminent physicists.
Marsh W. White, professor of
physics at Pennsylvania State Uni
versity, was Institute director.
BIKE STOLEN
Ricky Arthur Reed, Rt. 1 Box 5,
Roseburg, reportedly lost his bi
cycle for the second time Monday.
He told city police someone re
moved it from the Roseburg Mun
icipal Swimming Pool between the
hours at noon and 1:15 p.m. Reed
said it was a black and white Eng
lish model. He said it was the sec
ond time the bike had been taken.
THEFT REPORTED
Larry Orville Burge, Box 4195,
SW DePnest St.. Roseburg. told
city police Monday that a wom
an's wedding ring valued at $79.50
was removed from his car Sunday
in Portland. He said the vehicle
was parked in front of the Plaza
Hotel. He said the ring was re
moved from the car's glove de
partment. EXHIBITS
VISIT
EVERY
ONE
Fun For
Everyone
n
HAVE f UM
Violent Storm
Hits So. Oregon
GRANTS PASS Wl A violent
storm swept Southern Oregon
Monday night with high winds
causing widespread damage and
lightning touching off 70 forest
fires.
Some of the fires were brought
under control quickly. About 20
smoke jumpers went out Tuesday
to reach the others. All were re
ported to be small.
Wind gusts up to TO miles an
hour uprooted trees and caused
heavy damage in some fruit
orchards. Several roofs were
ripped away in Grants Pass and
a few homes hit by falling trees.
No injuries were reported.
A light plane en route from
Kalispell, " Mont., to Sacramento
landed here safely just before the
storm struck. Aboard were Mr.
and Mrs. Charles E. Dickinson f
Sacramento, and Gene Eyre, Salt
Lake City.
Dickinson said he encountered
the storm front first at Klamath
Falls, and went as far west as
Crescent City, Calif., trying to
escape it, only to be blocked there
by fog and rain.
Seconds after they landed, and
the plane was fastened down, the
wind struck,- lifting and then flat
tening an aluminum hangar. Two
other planes inside the hangar
escaped damage.
The storm disrupted power
service as trees and falling limbs
struck the wiresBoth the Pacific
and Redwood highways into
Grants Pass were blocked by
trees at the h.eight of the storm.
The Pacific Telephone Co. re
ported 268 telephones in Grants
Pass and 207 in Rogue River out
of service Tuesday morning. The
Redwood Highway tree block also
severed a telephone caDie.
The lightning sot tires m ine
Umpqua, Rogue River and Siski
you national forests, as well as
others on state-protected lands.
Crop damage at the Ramona
Orchards on the Pacific Highway
was listed as 50 per cent of the
Hale and 30 per cent of the
Alberta peach crops o n the
ground. Eleven peach trees were
uprooted and many others split.
Fairways at the Grants Pass
Golf Club had several hazards in
the form of fallen trees.
Boy, Bitten By Dog,
Found, Receiving Shots
DALLAS. Tex. Wl King Lear,
a 6-year-old Dallas boy, is under
going the series of antirabies shots
after a frantic weeklong search.
A iio2 bit 15 persons in the small
city of Rockwall, 15 miles from
here, last Tuesday. The dog was
later found to be rabid. Witnesses
said they remembered a boy be
ing bitten when a family stopped
for some cold drinks. The family
was believed to have been travel
ing. Wire services, newspapers ana
radio stations spread the story of
the search.
Rabies treatments should be
started within 14 days after infec
tion. Without treatment, wictims
usually die in agony. By the time
symptoms appear, ll usually is wo
late,, neaith amnoritics saia.
Yesterday Mrs. Claude C. Lear
the boy's mother, heard a radio
account and read an Associated
Press story of the search.
Polite Bandit Makes
Second Visit To Hotel
SALEM Wl A polite bandit
made his second visit Monday
night to the Argo Hotel, only
three 'blocks from the police
station.
Bill Halbcrg. the night clerk.
told police that the neatly dressed
young man entered tne hotel and
removed about $25 from the till
while holding the clerk at gun
point. The same bandit, Halberg
reported, robbed him of $77 and
two cartons of cigarettes early
last Saturday.
Each time Halberg was bound
with adhesive tape before the
intruder departed. Monday night,
Halberg told police, the robber
accosted him in the lobby and
said: "It's too bad I have to do
this again. I'm sorry."
IN LINE I
NEW YORK 11 Tony (Tex)
Gonzalez may be in line for a
Madison Square Garden main
event as the result of his decision
triumph over Italy's Fernando
Spallotta.
COMMUNITY SERVANT
Your pharmacist spends long years of study in preparing for
the practice of his profession. He is a master of the science
of drugs and medicines. Maintained in his prescription de
partment is a treasure house of health-inducing agents which
are held in readiness for you. When needed, they are avail
able at a moment's notice. Your pharmacist, like your phy
sician, is a dependable community servant
I r . I m.
Kooen memgun
New Construction
Head For PT&T
ROBERT MERRIGAN
. . . named to post
New construction superintendent
for the Pacific telephone and lei
enraoh Co. in the southern Ore
gon area is Robert L. Merrigan of
Eugene. He replaces tne i a t e
George A. Amstein.
Quartered in Lane County. Mer
rigan is responsinie lor came ana
wire construction and splicing in
six counties: Douglas, Lane, Linn,
Josephine, Jackson and Klamath.
He has worked for the telephone
company since 1937. The Eugene
man is married ana nas iour cnu
dren. One son works for the tele
phone company in Bend.
Republicans Awaiting
Arrival Of Eisenhower
(Continued From Page One)
smiled and waved to a crowd of
about 150 which watched him
leave the White House. From the
onlookers came such shouts as,
"Here we go, Ike!"
Here, the Republican National
Committee invited Californians to
turn out and greet the President
and made public the route to be
taken by his motorcade from the
airport to his hotel.
Nixon's strategists said they
had completed a check of delega
tions which indicated that, even if
Eisenhower should say that some
others are likewise acceptable to
him, the vice president would win
rcnomination hands down.
One by one the men named as
possibilities by Stassen took them
selves out of the picture. Gov.
Theodore R. McKeldin of Mary
land said he won't let his name
be presented to the convention.
While Gov. Goodwin J. Knight
of California has not categorically
eliminated himself, hen. William
F. Knowland, the Senate's minor
ity leader, predicted California
will place its 70 votes squarely
behind Nixon at a caucus today.
Several others,' Including Gov.
Christian A. Herter of Massachu
setts, said their names won't be
placed in nomination. Originally
Stassen picked Herter as hi top
prospect, but Herter was selected
to put Nixon's name in nomina
tion tomorrow. Later Stassen nam
ed others he said had more politi
cal pulling power than Nixon.
Stassen, on leave as Eisenhow
er's disarmament assistant, contin
ued to insist he had a 50-50 chance
to replace Nixon. He said dele
gates were hearing from the home
folks.
Petition To Probate Will
Of Julia Rockhill Filed
A petition to probate the will of
the late Julia L. Rockhill and to
name an executor of the estate
has been filed in circuit court by
Daniel R. Dimick of Roseburg.
In the petition, Dimick states he
was named executor in the will.
He asks that R. D. Bridges, Bon
nie Dougherty and Betty Ecker be
named appraisers of the estate.
J. T. PIEHL
Chiropractic Physician
PACIFIC BUILDING
OR 2-1380
H - r -i
, 1 j
Hospital News
Douglas Community Hospital
Admitted
Surgery: Herbert Hobson, Rose
burg. .
Medical: Lucille Dow, Winston;
Mrs. Jessie Martin, Sutherlin; Wil
liam McClure, Myrtle Creek; Os
car Means, Roseburg, Mrs. Del
bert Ferren, Glide.
Discharged
Mrs. Frans McKnight, M r s.
James Easterly, .Mrs. Glenn Sief
ker, Melvin Williams, Richard
Mask, Roseburg.
Mtrcy Hospital
Admitted
Medical: Mrs. John Murphy,
Gene Goin, Sutherlin; Mrs. Clyde
Franklin, Winston; Mrs. Robert C.
White, Mrs. Robert D. Anderson,
Wanda King, Roseburg.
Surgery: Mrs. Eugene Carr,
Ronald Alien Shelton, Roseburg;
Leo L. Mustin, Sutherlin.
Discharged
Dennis Ross, Ray Deadmond,
Gordon Singleton, Mrs. Harry Har
ris, Roseburg; B. A. Naas, Myrtle
Creek.
Langlie Confused Facts,
Falsehoods, Says Adlai
(Continued From Page One)
gan of Philadelphia, his campaign
director. It is expected that public
relations will be headed up by
Clayton Fritchey, former Cleve
land and New Orleans newspaper
executive and now deputy Dem
ocratic national chairman.
Stevenson said it would be at
least a week before he moves on
to Washington.
Anticipating reporters' ques
tions about Langlie's keynote
speech, Stevenson had written out
in longhand this comment:.
"The Republican keynote was
that 'all is well and God is on
our side.' It was another example
of the administration's smug, self
righteous complacency.
"I have no expectations of an
honest appraisal of the dangers
abroad and the failures at home
from any o f f i c i a 1 Republican
spokesman at least before the
election.
'Nor is this speech the first
time Gov. Langlie has shameless
ly confused fact and falsehood
for political ends. In 1952 he said
I had run up a large deficit in
Illinois. The fact is that I left the
state with a large treasury
balance after doubling school aid
and other programs and without
raising general revenue taxes.
I recall no apology from the
gentleman and Monday night's
performance did not enhance mv
respect for his accuracy."
Stevenson has decided to pin
his hopes for the presidency pri
marily on dawn to midnight auto
mobile tours reaching into most
of the towns and villages of doubt
ful states.
Miss Doris Nimmo New
CBA Dean, Instructor
A dean of girls at Canyonville
Bible Academy has heen selected
according to Robert Shaffer, school
secretary.
Miss Doris Nimmo of Memphis,
Tenn., has been hired for that po
sition and will teach English as
well, Shaffer said.
She is a graduate of Central Bi
ble Institute at Springfield, Mo.,
and Memphis State College and
served as director of Christian ed
ucation at the Memphis Assembly
of God Church.
ALL THE WAY SAN DIEGO TO SEATTLE
Li ; - Portland"" -j
L SACRAMENTO 3
L ' SAN FRANCISCO 1
L LOS ANGELES 1
L - SAN DIEGO ,. "1
San Diego Service
k Hostess Aboard
Restful Music
FOR RESERVATION) OR
CO
0N
Republicans Hold Out
Hope For Cut In Taxes
t Continued From Page One)
to "maintain and improve Amer
ica's air, sea and land power.
Release of the full platform
text minus the preamble which
Platform Committee Chairman
Prescott Bush, senator from Con
necticut, is holding up until he
reads it at the convention also
revealed the GOP position on
government integrity, national
resources and atomic energy.
Planks on foreign policy, land,
agriculture and civil rights were
previously released.
The civil rights plank achieved
a compromise that left both North
and South not completely satisfied
but confident they had a party
declaration they "can live with."
On this point, the platform prom
ised continued federal, state and
local efforts to end racial discrim
ination. The GOP platform draft praised
fiscal policies of President Eisen
hower's administration and said
it had reversed a tide of inflation
which, "under five -Democrat
administrations, had. cut the value
of the dollar in half, and so had
robbed the wage earner and mil
lions of thrifty citizens who had
savings, pensions and insurance."
The GOP platform promised
new and tougher anti-trust laws
to curb business mergers "which
have significant or potential
monopolistic connotations."
The national defense plank
seemed aimed at Democratic
charges that the Eisenhower Ad
ministration has let the armed
forces deteriorate in the interest
of less government spending.
The Republican platform draft
said the nation has the "strongest
striking force in the world," in
the air, on sea, and on land and
added:
"We will maintain and improve
the effective strength and state of
readiness of all these armed
forces."
On other points the Republican
platform drafts released Tuesday
had this to say:
National resources Pledged a
continued "partnership" of feder
al, state and local governments
and private enterprise to promote
water and power development.
"In such partnership," it said,
"we are leading the way with
great federal developments such
as the Upper Colorado project and
with partnership projects of great
importance, some of which have
been shelved by the Democratic
80th Congress."
Government integrity Said the
GOP has established a "clean,
honorable and increasingly effi
cient" government. It pledged
vigilance against corruption and
waste and elimination of govern
ment competition with private
enterprise.
"We condemn illegal lobbying,"
this plank said, "for any cause
and improper use of money in
political activities, including the
use of funds collected by compul
sion for political purposes con
trary to the personal desires of
the individual."
Atomic Promised to continue
the administration's program of
sharing the atom with allies
abroad and private enterprise at
home "so as to fortify the security
of the free nations and to further
the prosperity and progress of all
free people everywhere.'
Equal rights Pledged to submit
a Constitutional amendment to
provide equal rights for men and
women. This usually relates to
equal pay for equal work regard
less of sex.
Effective Aug. 10
-j- Free Refreshments
Rest Room Aboard
3-3266
Snack Shack
1022 N. E. Stephens
Roseburg, Oregon