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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1956)
4 The News-Review, Roseburg Or. Sot., Oct. 13, 1956 CHARLES V. STANTON, Editor and Manager ADDYE WRIGHT, Attt. But. Mgr. CEORCB CASTILLO, Asst. Editor Mtmber of the Asiociattd Press, Or.gon Ntwtpspsr Publiihtri Association, thi Audit Bureau of Circulation! tnuiM tr WOt-HOLIOAt CO. INC., lllicil il Vi'l. Cticifl, limit Ih rruciui, lu AiiiHi, mini, Nllul, Hum Published Daily Except Sunday by tho News-Review Company, Inc. SUlscmPTIOH UTES-H Snin-lr Miil Pir Vr, tll.Mi in nutli. M M, m ml, i! 15. OulliH Criltt ( Ulil ff till, HIM; In Mil, tl.Hi UlM lUli tills ' tp Ktwi l,r Ciriiir-r nr, l!.M (n MiikiI, lift lln l ) , Hi !, St. 21. laUrM n utitf elm sutur Mi T, nil. it Ui ml illici it nutlaif, I'll" mill ui If MinN I, feter Action REASONABLE SPEEDS V By Charles V. Stanton ". 'The Rnseburfr "city council's proposal to raise speed limits on Harvard Avenue is to be commended, in my opinion.- Some people perhaps believe that automobiles should lie compelled to fro slower, rather than faster, but it is my opinion that many of our speed zones are Reared too low and are adriinpr to traffic problems and hazards. .' Harvard Avenue has had a maximum 25-mile speed limit, . For much of .the distance that limit, I believe, is f.if t An Int., TUa n.ui.n rrn rli.l.fA.. unload ya 1aata an flirp 1AI LUU HJV 1IC aYCiaiJC UI1VCI, Ullicnn I"- iM-vpo hi. . telued'to the speedometer, will be breezing alonjr at 30 ori 85 miles per hour and thus be subicct to arrest and penalty. The driver who obeys the law will become a traffic hazard, as faster drivers slide around. .TV-After .passing Fairhaven and the entrance to the Vet erans Administration reservation, westbound traffic, in my opinion, can move safely at 35 or 40 miles per hour without causinpr or encountering hazards, whereas slower movement actually is no safer and causes bottlenecks. WASHINGTON - (NEA) Be hind the latest Federal Bureau of investigation crime statistics for the six months ending last June 30 are a number of conclusions, alarming even to police officials accustomed to dealing with these thinss. These iindings are not cov ered in the published crime report. Total crime increased in all nine geographic divisions of the U.S. The highest of these increases was 24.7 per cent in the Pacific coast stalls. The lowest increase was in the Middle Atlantic states, up 3 5 per cent over the first six months of 1955. New England has traditionally had the lowest crime rates in the United States. But in the first half of this year the northeastern states showed a surprising 17.3 per cent increase. For the United Statei as a whole, the major crime rate was 14 per cent higher than for the same pe riod last year and nearly 22 per Resident Claims Ceddes' Attitude On Tax Changed An article in The News-Review last week quoted Mr. Paul Geddes as viewing with alarm the tax situ ation coming up in our stale legis lature next session, lho.se of Many of our zoned areas, I believe, could be similarly eased, thus contributing to a belter and safer flow of traf-tie-'r "-' ' ' ' v ; Conditions Determine Safe Speed Too many people associate speed with danger, not tak ing into consideration the improvement in recent yearn in motor cars and their braking systems, better road surfac es, etc., all of which make for safer driving conditions. While I haven't made a check of accident reports, it would be-my "horseback" guess that more accidents in and near the city happen to cars travelling tinder the speed limit than to those moving at a reasonable speed. I do not condone excessive speed and "excessive speed" can be 10 miles an hour if surrounding conditions are such that a car should be moving at less speed. Safe speed depends entirely upon surrounding condit ions and the condition of the equipment. The condition of the driver also must enter into the equation. The good driver automatically and subconsciously ad justs his speed to the weather, road surface, visibility, vol ume of traffic and other factors. Traffic in and near cities, .because of congestion, naturally must move slower than on ;the open highway. But urban traffic could move faster than it does, in many cases, if it were not for obsolete and unnecessary speed limits and speed traps. Nor would rnis ;ing speed limits increase danger, in many instances. The ;Harvard Avenue situation is one very good example. I The Oregon State Highway Commission likewise made a good decision, I believe, in fixing a 70-mile-an-hour speed limit on the new Baldock Freeway between Salem and Portland. I doubt very much if motorists exceeding that speed will he taken into custody, as long as they are not driving recklessly. But the 70-mile-an-hour limit is high enough to facilitate traffic flow and at the same time give measure of control over the "squirrel" driver. Limits Should Be Reasonable Mstorists are far more apt to conform and to cooper ate when speed limits are reasonable in comparison with driving conditions. ' I believe a blanket sp"ced limit is foolish, particularly when it is too low. , California, for example, posts a maximum speed limit of 55 miles per hour, everywhere in the state. But anyone travelling at 55 miles per hour on one of California's free ways would be booted around like a Rugby football. If your car won't do 80 mph you've got no business on a Cali fornia freeway, and even then you'd better stay in the slow lane. Of what use is a blanket speed law which everyone ig nores? The State of Washington has maintained a Rtrong en forcement program based on maximum speed limits blan keting the state. Considerable publicity has been given the campaign and resultant accident reduction. Yet Oregon, with its Basic Rule and posted speed zones, has as favor able a record for traffic safety as has Washington with its impositions on motorists and its expensive enforcement system. It is my opinion that safety is promoted and driver co operation best secured when regulations over motor vehi Cles fire reasonable rather than overly restrictive. When regulations are unreasonable, violations increase. Viola tions lead to accidents. cent above the five-year average. BASED ON the half-year reports. FBI officials now fear that the Unit ed States will have a record of over 2,500.000 major crimes in 1956. Major crimes are listed as murder, negligent manslaughter, rape, rob bery, aggravated assault, burglary, larceny and auto theft. Looking for interpretations. causes and possible remedies for the growing U.a. crime wave, po lice come up with no very con vincing answers. The record increase on the Pa cific coast is attributed to two factors. One is that the population of thii area is increasing more rapidly. A new population, unsettled in a community, always breeds crime. The second factor, attributable only to California, is a recent state supreme court ruling which ex cludes evidence offered in crimin al trials, if it has been secured with taint. Los Angeles police of ficials declare that criminals who know that conviction will be diffi cult take chances that they would not risk otherwise. EVERY CLASSIFICATION of major crime showed an increase on the Pacific Coast. The range was from a low of 11 per cent increase in robberies to a 40 per cent increase in auto thefts. Only two of the 48 states had decreases in their total crimes. Wyoming showed a drop of nearly 11 per cent and New Hampshire six per cent. No explanations are offered. Six major crimes are committed in cities for every one crime in rural areas. But for the first half of this year the rural crime in crease rate was slightly higher than for urban areas. The explanation given is that who heard Mr. Gcddcs' speak at there is less policing in the rural Fullerton School PTA just a year ago (not an election year) were a little startled to find his views on taxes had changed entirely in a year's time. Last year he spoke for almost an hour against a sales tax, giving a real political talk after having been asked to speak on an entirely different subject. This year he jumped the fence. Mr. Geddes need not worry about a balanced budget in the stale, according to the top slate finance aihninistrators. We will have sur plus funds of $30,000,000 at the end of next June 30 and around S8,000,000 was carried over from the last biennium. A substantial part of the surplus accumulated up to this time involves surtax col lections on incomes imposed by the 1955 legislature of which Mr. Geddes was a member. Let us vote for men who will follow through in Salem as they have pledged before election, not those who will change their opin ions at a moment's notice. Mrs. Charles Long Route 3, Rosehurg, Ore. areas ana mere are fewer com munity facilities to offer whole some recreation and diversion for criminally inclined youth. More automobiles and better roads on which to make getaways arc also believed to be a factor. There is no statistical' breakdown, however, to show how many of the rural crimes are committed by citv criminals. THE BIGGER the city, the high er its crime rate, as a general rule. FBI reports from 482 cities of over 25,000 population showed that only 101 were able to report any decrease. The decrease in crime in every case reflected either an increase in the police force or an increase in community action to prevent crime, or both. The community-action programs include the opening of more playgrounds in congested areas or boys' clubs to keep young sters off the street. Juvenile crime figures are in cluded in the FBI crime totals but are not reported separately, which is a major deficiency of this series of semi-annual crime reports. Former Glendale Teacher Visits Friends In Area ' By MRS. GERALD B. FOX Miss Ada Porlcr, former Glen dale teacher, arrived Saturday to visit with the Henry La 1'rath family. She left about the middle of the week. A weekend guest at the La Prath home was their daughter, Mrs. Eleanor Box of Portland. Word has been received here that Mrs. Lulu Sherriff, who re tired last spring after teaching in biendaic ror several years, is tak ing classes at the college in Mon mouth this year. Enters Hospital Lester (Jack) Kilmer of Glen- dale entered the Forest Glen Hos pital in Canyonville Tuesday with a serious heart condition, it is reported. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gossett mov ed last weekend into a trailer which they have parked on tho fcslej property beside the old CAA airfield east of (Herniate. O. N. r.dwards of Glendale. who has been hospitalized at the For est Glen Hospital in Canyonville suffering from a heart atlack. was t transferred Tuesday to a ltoseburg : IN THE DAY'S NEWS By FRANK JENKINS hospital. Mrs. been staying go to the home of a sister in Win ston to be nearer her husband. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Moagg of Baldwin Park, Calif., returned home this week after spending nearly three weeks visiting with her brother, Jim Croff and family near Azalea. Bill and Judy La Prath spent a long weekend recently visiting with his brother. Jack La Prath, and family in Turlock, Calif. Mrs. Nelle Hicker of Grants Pass, a former Glendale resident, visited" Sunday with the D. R. Dcnsley family in Glendale. Mrs. Ruby Gilbre.ith returned home this week after spending two and a half weeks with her son. Milliard Gilhreaih, and h i s wife, in Seattle. She had the priv ilege of helping to care for her new granddaughter, Carole Ann, who was born there Sept. 26. Nolan Tanner, a 1956 Glendale High School graduate, has trans ferred to a Portland business school, having decided -to get ex tra business training before begin ning work at one of the stale colleges. Jim and Dons Johns spent a Kdwards, who has I week hunting in Eastern Oregon canyonville will but had no luck. (Continued From Page One) lerday. He was fit to he lied, and he needed somebody to unload on. He had been talking politics with weekend a couple ot women friends and in I in i-uhim- ot me session he re marked that although he had come near voting for Mr. Stevenson four ber clubs lo encourage more won en lo seek public office. I think it's splendid idea. Do you ask W HY? An appropriate flippant answer -,"r "g" he couldn't see him now would be that the men have made'."'"" 1 telescope because Aillai is 1 mess of it and women couldn't ,JP,"K 'he drum for issues he do any worse. Bui it goes deeper "",'sn 1 "elievo in. than that. "Why," one n( his women friends The big issues in American pol- said, "he's just doing that lo gel llics are coming to bo bread and elected. He's BKING SMART " butter issues such as how shall ; The other agreed we get MOrle. Hill Ol'R DOLLAR! they weren't iusl arguing he Fire Causes Hole In Roof On Sindt Home In Melrose By NETTIE WOODRUFF , John Burkhart and Charles A fire on the roof of the Sindt Brown left Tuesday for Ardmoic, house was discovered Saturday i Okla., to meet his daughter, Mrs. morning by passersby and soon put i Beverly Halford, and bring her to out, leaving a hole in the tool the family home here, near the fireplace chimney. Mr. I and Mrs. Hnrrv Peach, who rent B9 D,,r the house, wore not at home at! Boo Myers and Jerry Wickman the time. Mr. Peach returned j Wl'nl hunting Sunday morning for home Tursdav from the V. A. Hos-I deer, which jumped into th pital in Portland where he under-1 near the Paul Abeel farm and went surgery on his lip during the , 'tented the fender of the former's III KMp 181 Wt'flL. WVCIS Mlll-U IIIC Editorial Comment From The Oregon Press SO ROUND, SO FIRM, SO STATISTICAL Albany Democrat-Herald We have to stop smoking again. We stopped first in 1953. That was when the first American Can cer society report came out. But it was inconclusive and we started ' again after three days of deep thinking about the joys of smok ing. We quit again in the spring of 1955. That was when the cancer so ciety published its half-way report. The researchers were half way through, had spent half their mon ey, and were half way convincing. We quit for six days. Our wife made us start again. She couldn't stand the smokeless grouch. Now the full report is being writ ten after four years of study and the expenditure of half a million dollars. It's a laugh, if- anything dealing with deadly diseases can be. The cancer society has spent all this time and all this money only to learn that heart disease, not can cer disease, is the major result of smoking. The Heart Fund should have put up the money. In any case, we're through aft er just one more fag because we want to live long enough to enjoy all those other deteriorating habits. Impatient Customer Calls Wrong Move SPOKANE, Wash. I - The scene was peaceful. A man sat under the white apron in the barber's chair, his head nodding to the monotonous snip-snip of the scissors. The action and dialogue, accord ing to police, went about like this. Enter impatient customer, iden tified as Settle Pearson, 32: Impatient customer: "I want a haircut and shave." Barber: "I'm sorry. You'll have to wait. I don't have any empty chairs." The impatient customer grabs a dozing patron by collar and pulls him from the chair. Impatient customer: "Well, you have an empty chair now." The apron falls off formerly doz ing patron, revealing off-duty po liceman Leroy G. Gumming Jr., complete with uniform, revolver and handcuffs. Patron turned policeman: "All right, buddy. What's the big idea?" There is a scuffle and the im patient customer runs from the shop, but is apprehended by po liceman after a short chase. Final scene: Impatient custom er booked at police station on dis orderly conduct charge and, as the curtain falls, is taken to a cell with the aid of three officers. FLIER SAFE Anti-Red Law Convictions Up In High Court WASHINGTON t The Su preme Court begins hearing argu ments Monday in new attacks on the Smith Act, the government's chief legal weapon against Com munism. Appeals by 21 persons convicted in various parts of the country are pending before the high tri bunal. Two of the appeals attack the act's membership clause. This provides that membership in the Communist Party, by a person knowing it to be a . subversive group is illegal. Claude M. Lightfoot, Chicago Negro and ' a Communist -'arty worker for some 20 years, was the first person convicted :der the "informed membership' sec tion. Also convicted under that section was Junius I. S:ales, Communist Party leader in the Carolinas and Tennessee. Both have appealed. Lightfoot faces five years' imprisonment and Scales six years. Attorneys for Lightfoot and Scales contend in advance briefs ; that the section is unconstitutional on its face and "represents the first congressional attempt . to ap ply the abhorrent doctrine of guilt by association." But. say government lawyers, "the crime punished (by the sec tion) is not mere 'association.' " 'The crime consists in the individual's personal participation in a combination aimed at mrcelul revolution, with knowledge of this . end and intent to reach it," gov ernment attorneys declare. "The liability is personal, not vicarious. 1 It is for conduct, not mere status." California's 14 First Up First on the high court's argu ment schedule is an appeal by 14 California Communist leaders who were convicted of conspiring to advocate violent overthrow of the government, in violation of another section of the Smith Act. i This group, headed bv William i Schneiderman, San Francisco, was sentenced in federal court in ; Los Angeles to five years in prison ' and fines of $10,000 each. Schnei derman, onetime California Com munist Party chairman, was said '. by the FBI to be the party's acting i national chief when he was ar rested in 1951. I The Laliformans contended. among other things, that the trial court's refusal to rule on the issue ; of whether there was a "clear and present danger" to the govern ment because of the group s activities resulted in an "unenn-' stitutional application" of the Smith Act. Government lawyers assert the challenges which the 14 make "are all without merit, and there is no reason to overturn the ver dicts against them." j SALEM, Ore. UPi A Portland, Ore., flier reported overdue be tween Billings, Mont., and North east Oregon landed safely Thurs day night at Baker. Ore., the state Board of Aeronautics report-1 erj friaay. . Florida Couple Visits In Oakland By EDITH DUNN Mr. and Mrs. Carol Palmer of Clearwater, Fla., are spending sev eral weeks visiting Palmer s sister Mrs. Ruth Shaw. They will spend the coming weekend with M r t. Shaw's son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hough of Klam ath Falls. Kenneth Williams. Oakland High school orinciDal. attended a con-1 fcrence of principals in Salem last Monday and Tuesday. Ntw Arrivals . , New arrivals in Oakland include the following: a daughter Wenday Sue, born Oct. 7 in a Kosenurs Hospital to Mr. and Mrs Wendell Sisson, nee Robeana Bailey. A son, Gregory Dee, was born to Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Martin Oct. 5 in a Roseburg hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Dodge are the new parents of a son, Rex Nel son, born Sept. 25 at Cottage Grove Hospital. A daughter. Crystal Faye, i s born Sept. 27, to Mr. and Mrs. Mur ray Hollister in a Roseburg hospi RUBIROSA TO MARRY PARIS Wi Dominican play-bov-diplomat Porfirio Rubirosa said Friday he will marry 19-year-old French actress Odile Ro- '";he four-times married Rubi rosa said the date for the mar riage has not been set but it prob ably will take place in Pans in This will be the first marriage for the blonde actress. Vital Statistics Marriage Licenses WILLS-BURH1S Robert Earl Wills. Roseburg, and Mary Kath rvn Burris. Tenmile. Divorce Dismissal C1IILDEHS Vclda L. vs. Rob ert L. Childers. Divorce Decree WEDELL Naomi May from Albert W. Wedell. Ask us for ihe . ADVANCE SHOPPING LIST Order now--pick up your merenjnaut any omj OCTOBER IS thru 20 U . 3 inrough Saturday v7 aT- 1 -X I sW L FULLERTON REXALL DRUGS 635 S. E. Jackson instead of just getting more dollars wiien it comes lo monev. women are realists. They have to' he. Leav ing out the fabulous characters in our modern life Mich as enter tainers who get as much as $10,000 lor a single appearance at a Las snv.v incy nr.i.ir, r.n u. That's why he was fit to he lied. 150 pound deer on Ml, McKinney. Melose residents hunting in Eastern Oregon last week in cluded R. D. Manning and Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Sanders. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Young, left Sunday for Sacramento, Calif., lo visit their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Young, and their i new baby son. They will be gone about ten days and will go on to ll'laremont to attend Mrs. J. E. 1 slill think the ladies were just arguing. I m reasonably sure that if their the Sea of Japan." children had exhibited to them an U. S. Demands Payment For Plane Shot Down WASHINGTON Lfi The United Slates Friday demanded payment by Russia of SI.3.S5.6j0 as dam ayes for the destruction of a Navy patrol plane, in September, 1954, the killing of an American air man, and injuries to survivors. A note presented to the Foreign j Vaunt's brother's weddinc. IS.' !" .MuLT f'.'ff ch!!, 1'V !' Rcwnt visitors for . week at (he ?," ..'",',il..Lrc?;!Ed Gross home were Mrs. Cross's ..m,iiY u.i ill.- UI J.IHU ..u ui hr.,,..ln.,u, ,J ,., ,. ,j Vegas night club women are int nimnk r u. ....,... -i ... . to bo tho keepers o( the family i ethical thinking involved in the n .l n i i j purse. K they are to got a reason- argument that the end in view jus. I Bertha Rebekah Lodge Si' ilt'tfI"iSivT ii, ,h , THINKS tines whatever means are taken to1 Mectl In Canvonvilla ?u"K..V.iVVANr ,h!:y mUsl '""H'iAlN THE END both would have " "yonville i i I V 1 nrcn 'hoeked -and if the children that the family income will "go had been below teen age some "Tv"" '. a i 1 1- , i ' a ,! 'linking would have ensued. We need more of lhat kind of Mothers are like that. That is munag.mew in government. I why. over the centuries, thev h.ve1,,... .,7 ,.i ' Thr. .r. 7TTr.. ".'h!.h"0' Vlri:l ": l'-Mon. who , . , ... !, Him me maintainors oi me nd women just as there are men! world's most admirable ethical and men. standards Bertha Kebrknh Lodge mot Tues day owning at the lOOF Hall in Canyonville with Mrs Hav Rife, nohlo grand, and Mrs. It. K. Paris, recently i moved here from Colorado, was a guest of the hxliie. Rolreshments I Schrader. .. An mhm vniino- man of m ...... i iu' i. . woie served at the conclusion of yun. man Of my ac- Anyway. I think wa need more the evonmc. K. ir. n. mi. .,) 1 women candidates (or public office. : Mrs. H. B. Green quainlance came in to see me yes- "Lr r;.li "- Allen Beck and family. o( , line oaiiiiuu, i, ii. Guests last week in the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Niokolaus in cluded his brother, G. W. Nioko laus. of Richland, Wash., who stayed several days, and J. J. Fink and Mr. and Mrs. Willis l.ightle from Seattle. Fink, who is an uncle of Niokolaus, and the Ughtles were en route to North Carolina with their trailer house for a visit. Mrs. Carl l.anquul of Bakers field is spending somt time here with her sons, Ralph and Bill and their families She is former Melrose resident. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Conn attend ed business Thursday in Egene. Psychologist Says You Can't Reform Spouse EUGENE iifi The wife who sets out to "reform" her husband after marriage is taking a chance on a marital break-up. psycholo gist David S. Brody told a group of public health nurses Friday. Ann a nusnana is taxing tne same .'hance if he decides to iron out the kinks in his wife s per sonality. Brody said. "If you want to predict failure in a marriage, you'll find it in one in which one spouse plans to make the other in his own image," Brody said. Brody, associate professor of psychology at Oregon College of Education, was the principal speaker at a day-long meeting of the public health nursing section of the Oregon state Nurses Assn. The meeting followed a conven tion of the full association in Eugene. Rrody said the rules for har mony between husbands and wives also hold true in other so cial situations. "The individual approaches his optimum when there is a mini mum of domination by others," he said. Huge Damage Suit Filed For Sportsman s (.rash LOS ANGELES L ' A 2L. mil-' lion dollar suit has been filed against the estate of wealthy sportsman Joel W. Thorne. whose light plane crashed into a North Hollywood apartment house last year, killing him and eight others. The suit was filed by Michael Preston, .it, a night club operator, whose wife Shirley. 25, a profes sional singer, and 7-week-old daughter Sherrvll wer killed in the crash Oct. 17, 1955. The firms whose ads you see below recognize that even olong with ob servance of the. Sabbath, there is a community need for the commercial services they offer. . . . ot it's very best! DIAL OR 3-3291 FOR ORDERS TO CO OPEN 4 PM-1AM SUNDAYS 4 PM-12 ORIENTAL CAFE 1tl I. I. STEPHENS "ft pa eti 11 its In Chine Fond" "THE STORE OF THE THOUSAND BARGAINS" Roseburg Surplus Sales 629 S.E. Cass Ph OR 2-1512 USE OUR LAY-A-WAY PLAN NO CARRYING CHARGE - RENTALS Do It Yourself and SAVE! k Paint Sprayers k Concrete Mixers k Lawn Mowers k Ford Tractors k Power Rollers k Lawn Aerators LANSING-OLIVER 847 S. Stephens, OR 3-6636 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK SUNDAY HOURS: 10 au6pm OPEN SUNDAY 9 am-3:30 pm SYLVAN I A TV NORGE APPLIANCES GENERAL PAINT SOUTH STEPHENS HARDWARE SUNDAY HOURS: 10 A.M.-6 P.M. 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