The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, April 13, 1957, Page 2, Image 2

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    4
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I Th Naws-Raritw, Rosaburtj, Of Sat., April 13, 1917
Eastland Holds
Information Links
Norman With Reds
WASHINGTON
Sen. East-
y, he cannot de-
jbcommi tee pub-
land (D-Miss)
vulee whv his suhcom
licly linked Canadian diplomat E.
H. Norman with communist rath
er than handling the matter quietly
through deplomatic channels.
II uuiu.
nut, ne aaaeo, nn smiu - -: r -- ""h- ,' ,h. :
ternal Security Subcommittee fol- had resided in R"urg for the
lowed the course it did for "a past years, served as a deacon ,
sound reason." He said there were of the church
i.i.,iv. ihirh h could not Surviving, besides his wile Edna :
discuw oubtolv Eastland I told Sia'are: two Jons. Larry Lavern El-
!&al?Frid VwVvir th C I licit and Darrell Lynn; one daugh-
id. "has 1 i ve'rv ftni ' and efficient ! ter. Linda Kay; mother. Mrs. W.
loJernment" a7d has been ' wal-IJ. Grace) West. all of Roseburg;
in nrotectrng hJrself agauut two sisters. Mr,. Lester (Doro-
iommuni!m .Why) Gibson of Fall Creek. Ore..!
Can7di.n government ha. id Mrs. Roy (Ruth) Jackson of j
.,rniC h. .nhnmmit. Bendigo. Australia.
r'.'. ..hi. i..i.
monr linking Norman with com- Tuesday at 2 pm. in the Chapel of
muniam ,n RSM wlln ,h Rev- Vernon
Norman committed suicide In , Klemin of the Roseburg Assembly
Cairo April 4 ahortly after the sub- of God Church officiating Inter
committee record was made pub-ment will follow at the Civil Bend
lie. He was Canadian ambassador . Cemetery.
to Egypt
The Canadian government said
the subcommittee had revived oldi1' niuivisu
charges on which Canada had 1
cleared Norman after thorough Jl .OnSpiraCy
investigation in 1951.
In Ottawa yesterday, Canadian
Foreign Secretary Lester Pearson
U-ritarv lister Pearson
said Norman had associated open
ly during his university days with
persons believed to be Commu
nists. But Pearson said this was known
to the Canadian government when
Norman was employed by the for
eign office and that there never
was any doubt about Norman's
loyalty or integrity.
Eastland said the subcom
tee'a information about Norman
was not confined to his student
days. He told the Senate "the cold
facts are that from 1951 until this
lima his name has continued to I v"y major city in the coun
crop up in investigations we have try during the past three years,
conducted." j Murphy said the Dallas opera-
am not going to ear any
thing about a man who has passed
on." the senator added. "The rec
ord speaks for itself."
Typhoid Booster Clinic
At Elkton Set April 16
Elkton Grade School will hold a
typhoid booster clinic April 16.
It will be necessary for any child
taking the booster shots to have
an authorization slip signed by his
parents. These slips can be ob
tained at either the grade school
or high school.
Anyone wishing to start the se
ies can get the first shot at this
clime, out must make arrange'
menta for the other two shots else.
where. This progrsm It sponsored
oj ine county Heaitn Dept.
Arthur Millar Mutt
Stand Trial May 13
WASHINGTON IM Playwright
Arthur Miller, hishand nf film
atar Marilyn Monroe, must stand
trial May 13 on contempt of Con-
grest charges.
Federal District Judge Chsrles
F. McLaughlin refused yesterday
to dismiss and indictment stem
ming from the author'a refusal
!f1.. 10 ive information to
the House Committee on Un-American
Activities.
Burtons Dinner
When you visit the all-ntw BURTON'S DINNER HOUSE you'd find on
atmosphere thot'l wonderfully dust free and rtfroshing . . . it's thot
woy all yeor-round, cool In the summer with the CARRIER WEATHER
MAKER, warm In the winter with dependable gal heat. Enjoy the graatsxt
comfort with CARRIER, the tint noma In AIR CONDITIONING.
You will
1.' Y t
CARRIER
UNITED STATES CAPITOL
THE PENTAGON
UNITED NATIONS SECRETARIAL
BUILDING
You owe it to yourself to find out about CARRIER
CALL or SEE
Bergeron's
John Elliott, 52,
Dies In Hospital
John Goodenough Elliott of
-ft.llrSilil
of 52 in a local hospital.
He wai i born July 7, 1904. t Mm-
"wrHYw?
the Roieburg Veterans Admmis- "r.'?r.T"y funeral serv
tration Hospital and a charter i rl.h J,'
member of the Roseburs; Aisem-i. Aiv",tu' p""" f Sl
, , . . I i hi:... I
Funeral services will be held
C!u4 lmAllmA
in rum IV in 7
I
9
DALLAS I A federal grand
jury Friday indicted five persons
on conspiracy charges in connec
tion with what the FBI called the
operation of a far-flung "stag
party" film ring operating
throughout the nation.
W. B. (Bill) Murphy, head of
the Dallas office of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, said
Dallas had been the headquarters
for production and processing of
obscene motion picture film. He
said copies of the films filtered
tion was production and process
ing of the film which waa then
sold on a wholesale basis to
dealers."
"We identified many of the
stars' from photos in the sheriff's
and police department's identifi
cation files," Murphy said.
Indicted on charges of conspir
ing to place lewd film in inter
stale commerce were Wyman llu
lan Parr, 36. proprietor of a cam
era shop here; Robert George
Bly, 4t, identified as a former
vaudeville comedian and partlime
photographer: Jesse S. Ilamman
Jr., 38. and his wife, Catherine,
32, of Dallas; and Sam Gold, 41,
a novelty aaleaman from St.
Louis, Mo.
The indictments resulted from
raids msde March 1 on a cottage
at Lake Dallas, north of here, bv
FBI agents and police. Movie pro
cessing equipment and 37 master
negative reels of motion picture
mm were seised.
NIGHT CLUB BURNS
THE DALLES ii Damage
was estimated at $20,000 in a fire
which swept through the interior
of the Langdon night club here
early Friday. '
Fire Chief Charles Roght Jr.,
who made the damage estimate,
said the blaze apparently was'l0
started by a kitchen appliance, las
BERGERON'S
REFRIGERATION
AND
also find CARRIER yaar-round comfort at
HUI BARBER SHOP
THE ROSE ROOM
THE FLAMINGO ROOM
UMPQUA PLYWOOD .
DIANA-CRAIG'S
ROSEBURG TONSORIAL PARLOR
MEDICAL-DENTAL CLINIC
And Many of Roseburg'i Finest Homes
has air conditioned famous
throughout th world:
lfljf Q-Preeyf go-
Funeral Rites Set
The body of Lulu Belle Brewer,
12, Koieburg, who died Thursday
in a local hospital, will be shipped
Monday to Milloa-Freewater for
funeral services.
Ch.pd M Ros'e.Vo"
, Smd evenu)
. u wj ukM Ml
The body will lie in state at the
from now to
. Then, Mon-
r CCHliri. 111V Wl ll.O
Roues is in charge of arrange-
u
M Brewer was born reO 12
'n Jvirwm, nan., ana came
to Oregon 2S years ago She was
married to John C. Brewer in
Kansas July 4, 193. He died in
1935 She had resided in Kusaa.
Washington and Oregon all her
life and had lived in Roseburg for
thi ipM U "
ber of the Seventh-day Adventist
Church ol Winston
Surviving are five daughters,
Mrs. Zelma Uickerson, Roseburg;
Mrs. Mary Paulson. Ashland, Mra.
Viola Gouge of Milton-Freewater,
Mrs. Mabel Johnson and Mrs. Vera
Slone, both of Walla Walla; three
sons, Marshall of Milton-Freewater.
John M Enumclaw, Wash., and
Ralph of Glendale, Aril.; 2 grand
children; and 44 great-grandchildren.
Scout Executive
Will Attend
Idaho Session
Douulas Fir District Scout Ex
ecutive William 0. Scarth of Rose
burg will join eight other Scout
executives from the Oregon Trail
Council Sunday at the Region 11
Scout Executives Training Con
ference in Lewiston, Idaho.
The conference starta Sunday
and continues through Friday. AU
professional scouters in region 11,
which includes Oregon, Washing
ton, Idaho, Montana and Alaska,
will be at the meeting. The event
will consist mainly of live ten
hour clinics and a number of four
hour sessions.
Subiects to be discussed art:
training icouting personnel, dev
eloping a producing district organ
ization, council office organisation
and developing a strong finance
program.
Special speakers will Include
Delmer Wilson, national director
of the division personnel; Elmarr
Bakken, national director ot rural
scouting, ND Walter Whidden, as
sistant national program director.
Small Tornado Roars
Across Eastern Oregon
HEPPNER, Ore. ufl A small
tornado roared across farmlands
west of this little Eastern Oregon
town Friday, but no damage was
reported.
The same area also had a se
vere hailstorm, with some of the
stones described as big as golf
balls. Wheal in the district was
not high enough to be damaged
by tne nan.
The tornado, the first observed
in the area in over 50 years,
aroused the concern of school of
ficials at Lexington, nine miles
Student were sent
the basement of the building
a precaution.
House
buildings
MERCHANDISE MART
MARSHALL FIELD & CO.
OREGON STATE CAPITOL
BUILDING
REFRIGERATION AND
AIR CONDITIONING
Legislature's No. 1 Problem
Still Far From Being Solved
r PAUL W. HARVIV JR.
SALEM uri The Oregon Legis-
still is a long way from being
solved.
Next Monday is the target date
that the governor and legislative
leaders fixed for the House Taxa
tion Committee to have its income
tax legislation completed.
The committee might start to
work on it Monday, but there's
no telling when it might be com
pleted. The committee will have many
different proposals to change the
income tax rates. The final bill,
it appears now, will raise the
same amount of taxes that now
are being raised.
The joint Ways and Means Com
mittee isn't close to completing
the appropriation bills.
Sen. Alfred H. Corbett (D),
Suez Clearance .
Cost Less Than
Was Estimated
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. utl
The U.N. says its Suez Canal
clearance mission has accom
plished the task for less than 11
million dollars about one quarter
of earlier unofficial estimates of
the cost.
The U.N.'s 14th and final week
ly progress report on the operat
ion said the 103-mile waterway is
"clear for the passage of vessels
up to a drought of 33 feet."
It said the operation would be
finished this weekend when U.N.
salvage crews remove from Port
Said harbor a bucket dredger
last of more than 40 obstructions
that clogged the channel.
WASHINGTON in The United
States, Britain and France were
reported today to be studying the
possibility of persuading Egypt to
revise its proposed Suez Canal op
erating plan along lines indicated
by Egyptian President Nasser.
Diplomatic officials saw no
chance of getting any substantial
concessions in Nasser's basic can
al policy. But some thought modi
fications might be obtained which
would make his proposal more pal
atabel to the Western powers.
Nasser up to now has been in
sistent on operating the canal on
nis own icrms, wnn cgypi col
lecting aU ship tolls.
Dayton Nawspapcrs
Affsctad By Strike
DAYTON. Ohio I Dayton
faced another day without news
papers Saturday as mechanical
workers continued to honor a pick
et line set up by 25 striking jani
tors and maids of a Teamsters
local.
The Morning Journal Herald
failed to publish for the second
day and the afternoon Daily News
did not publish its Saturday edi
tions. Management of the two papers
said some mechanical unions re
fused "to honor their work con
tracts with the newspapers, de
spite orders from their interna
tional headquarters to do so and
warning that failure to do so
would be a breach of thai eon
tract." Re -
fV'.-JW.-.l.- 7-
r
tjrtvn't Dinner Hum It nmaUftlr rtmf!lW with new fvmitli
Jftfju, new 4crttft ! w ftituftf ntm. Tefsl Mtmf pCffy
it new 10 portont.
ENJOY THESE OTHER NEW FEATURES:
Wft fcacttf fvifJ dinner music, to)itin, Uft tWs for ffnihM c
ftift. iaj pxirty rm, Corrtor Air Cdtfiinf 4 lr
fMrtittf r fMk ffti9 Burt' mrl BlMlijr rr mm
Remember BURTON'S For Fine Foods
RE OPENING SUNDAY at 12 NOON
Portland, says that the budget
I will total 255 million dollars, plus
any amounts tbat the Legislature
might approve for the basic school
I fund increase and for building! in
distressed districts.
This would indicate a budget
total of 270 millions, or 10 millions
more than recommended by for
mer Gov. Elmo Smith.
The Smith budget, however,
didn't contain anything for a basic
school fund increase or for dis
tressed districts.
While the governor and leading
lawmakers say publicly that the
session should end by May 4,
there is little chance.
A huge amount of legislation,
including most of the governor's
recommendations, has received no
action in either house.
The session has to run only until
May 10 to become the longest one
in history. That would be the 117th
day. The longest so far was the
116-day session of 1951.
Here is the way the major legis
lation is shaping up:
Basic school fund increase No
action, but it looks as if it might
amount to about onlv one-fourth
as much as the 39-million-dollar
increase recommended by Gov. '
Holmes. -
Key district plan to redistribute
the basic school fund Passed by
the Senate. Opponents of the plan
will speak up at a House Educa
tion Committee hearing Monday
night.
Malnutrition Blamed
For Death Of Girl
LOS ANGELES 11 Funeral
services have been held for Caren
(Sande) Crabbe. 20-year-old daugh
ter of actor Buster Crabbe. She
weighed only 60 pounds when she
died, apparently of malnutrition.
More than 100 persons, including
members of her family and school
friends, attended the rites yester
day at forest Lawn Memorial
Park.
Before the funeral, Crabbe, one
time swimming star, told an in
terviewer that his daughter's eat
ing habits were "horribly distort
ed" and that she "was obsessed
with the idea she was over-weight.
The girl's physician said he had
been treating her for an emotion
al disturbance characterized by an
inability to eat. She died in her
sleep Wednesday at the home of
her grandparents.
Exact cause of death tenta
tively listed as malnutrition will
not be known until final results
of an autopsy.
POP.TLANDER KILLED
BRUNSWICK, Me. li Naval
Airman James Leonard Waggon
er, 33, of Portland, Ore.,, and five
others were killed Friday when a
Navy antisubmarine patrol bomb
er crashed on a take-off here.
His survivors Include the wid
ow. Violet, of Bath, Me., three
children, and his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Waggoner, Portland.
SENTENCED FOR ROBBERY
PORTLAND .fl Ross Neal
Porter, 33, West Linn, Friday was
sentenced to 10 years in a federal
orison for the Jan. 11 robberv of
the Sherwood, Ore., branch of the
U.S. National Bank.
BURTON'S
3 Miles South
Opening Sunday, April
TTT-ii . -
r r: - I
Si? V"''l.
School building aid Suit ia com
mittee. School district reorganization
Passed by the House, now ia the
Senate Education Committee.
Teacher minimum salary in
creaseIn the House Education
Committee after Senate approval.
Interim committee on govern
ment reorganization Passed by
the House, now in Senate com
mittee. Creating lieutenant governor
Passed by the House, now ia Sen
ate Committee.
Abolishing Board of Control,
Fair Board, Unemployment Com
pensation Commission and Liquor
Commission No action. The Sen
ate will vote Monday on the Un
employment Commission bill.
Building program This 20 mil
lion dollar program hasn't been
considered yet.
Unemployment compensation
benefits increase No action. The
Senate Labor and Industries Com
mittee still it working on it.
Industrial acciejent benefits in
crease No action. In House La
bor and Industries Committee.
Creating state development de
partment Approved by joint
Ways and Means Committee.
Relative responsibility law The
Senate voted last week to reduce
the required payments under this
law, and it is in tne House.
Capital punishment repeal
Passed by the House, now in Sen
ate State and Federal Affairs
Committee.
Legislation to give the public
utility commissioner authority
over railroad minimum freight
rates and reduction of rail pas
senger service No action. Still in
Senate Commerce and Utilities
Committee.
Election reform bill No action.
Bonds to construct Coast High
way Approved by Senate High
way Committee. Senate will vote
on It next week.
Suburban problems S e n a t a
voted to permit reduced city tax
rates in annexed areas. House
voted for county horn rule. House
killed bill to create county service
districts, but it ia being recon
sidered. Requiring governor to suspend
indicted officials The House
voted for it. and now it's in the
Senate Multnomah County dele
gation. Eden Undergoes
Surgery Today
BOSTON, i Sir Anthony
Eden was operated on Saturday
at New England Baptist Hospital!
for complications resulting from
an artificial bile duct. A bulletin
issued after the surgery said there
was no malignancy and that he
"withstood the operative pro
cedure well."
The bulletin was signed by Drs.
Richard B. Cattell, who performed
the surgery. Sir. Horace Evans.
Eden's personsl physician, and
John W. Norcross of the Lahey
Clinic staff.
The doctors said it was not
necessary to insert a new tube!
and that there was no inflamma
tion of the colon.
The doctors said they found an ,
obstruction which had bce caus-.
ing frequent attacks of fever in I
the right hepatic duct and that
I the constricted area was dilated. '
DINNER
( Roaoburi en lutinoss Rout
Serving Dinners Continuously to 8 P.M
OPEN WEEKDAYS 4:30 P.M. to 9 P.M.
Closed Mondays
Complete Dinners, Plate Dinners
and Children's Plates
No alcoholic beverages served.
SPECIALIZING IN: .
Roast Prime Ribs
Steaks
Chicken
Special Salads
1!
Iw'fl SfMkfeies, mm lanclin t
4mnn far Mitr fas mm
tie eAtr.
Phone OR 3-8122
Court Battla Looms Ovtr
Thompson's Appointment
( Continued From Page One)
was free to name either a Demo
crat or Republican. The Republi
can central committee of the r coun
i i ..AAmmnHH Donald San
ders deptuty district attorney and .
Stults' choice as successor.
Richmond, in bis blast at
Holmes, brought up Thompson s
role in the Democratic "Pset. i
Oregon in which Holmes unseated j
Elmo Smith. .,,..'
Growled Richmond about Uie ap
pointment. ". . . solely
for a poutical debt owed by Holmes
to Thompson for managing
Holmes' campaign in this county. :
He went on to say that he had
learned Thursday that a Democrat ;
was to be named and that Thomp-1
son was in a leading position to
get the nod because of his rela-
tionship with Holmes.
v "I have no objection whatsoever '
-nor has anyone I have talked to !
as to Avery's professional quail-1
fications. He is a good friend of I
mine." Richmond pointed out.
Thompson had little to say about
his appointment. "Stults. I con-;
sider, has been a good district at-i
torney and I shall carry on the
job to the best of my ability. I
Asked if he was aware of the:
impending hassle over his appoint
ment, he said he was, but inferred
that it would be Salem's problem.
Informed that the action was to
be brought against him, Thomp-1
son merely replied, "I'll take that j
up when I get the papers."
Richmond, when Stults resigned,
threw down the gauntlet. "We will
insist that a Republican be appoint
ed," he declared.
His counterpart in the Democrat
Central Committee yesterday was
admittedly evasive about the com
mittee's role in obtaining the job
for a party faithful. A. C. Roll,
also a Roseburg attorney, said
Thompson had been recommended
by the central committee. "Along
with others," he revealed upon
questioning. He declined to say
how many others or who they were.
"Of course we're pleased by the
governor's action." he said. About
the writ: "I have no ideas on the
subject. I haven't checked the
statute and don't know a thing
about it."
Filing of the writ of quo war
ranto, according to local lawyers,
will put the burden of proof upon
the defendant. In other words,
Thompson will have to defend his
right to hold the office.
Other aspects of the impending
legal jousting do not appear so
clear. For instance, the district at
torney ordinarily would prosecute
the case. However, Thompson, as
district attorney, will be the de
fendant. The case will start in circuit
court here, most lawyers agree.
They also are of the opinion that
it will "automatically" go to
the supreme court. Apparently,
they base this belief upon the as
sumption that the losing side will
appeal immediately.
Canadian Parliament
Dissolvad; Vota Set
OTTAWA UT Gov. Gen. Vin
cent Massey dissolved Parliament
last night and called for election
of a new house of Commons June
10.
The outcome will determine
whether the Liberal party headed
by Prime Minister Louis St. Lau
rent will continue to govern Can
ada or will be replaced by the
main oppoiition party, the Pro
gressive Conservatives, headed by
John Diefenbaker. will take over. I
HOUSE
99
14, at 12
Abo other
Russia Eulogizes
Roosevelt, Hits At
Truman Doctrine
MOSCOW I The Literary
Gazette described former Prem.
dent Truman Saturday as a "Mis
souri Babbitt." Its pet was the
fact the Truman Doctrine was in
augurated 10 years ago.
Truman "probably was one of
the least talented" of all U. S.
presidents, the Soviet newspaper
said. "This little man accidentally
became the uncrowned king of the
capitalist world and he apparent
ly never recovered from the shock
of that moment. It cost him his
equilibrium for the rest of his
life ''
The attack on Truman came as
the .Moscow radio eulogized Presi
dent Franklin D. Roosevelt. The
broadcast charged Roosevelt's
successors engineered an about
face in American relations with
the Soviet Union.
The Literary Gazette argued
that Truman's claim be is a Jef.
fersonian Democrat ia "absolute
ly incorrect," adding:
"Jefferson supported peace,
trade and friendship without for
eign alliances and, if anything,
Truman turned these principles
upside down."
The paper said Truman would
go down in history not because
he had been "the official head of
the United States," but because
he broke from Roosevelt's policy
of Soviet-American cooperation
and threw down the glove to the
Socialist (Communist) countries
of Europe and Asia.
Matovich Guilty
Of Fire Deaths
MOSCOW, Idaho W A former
journalism student, who was once
assigned to write a story on a dor
mitory fire in which three died,
was convicted of second degree
murder last night for setting the
fatal blaze.
A District Court jury of nine
men and three women recommend
ed psychiatric treatment for Paul
D Matovich, 21. The Kellogg.
Idaho, youth, who once ran for
president of the freshman class at
the University of Idaho, had been
charged with first degree murder
and arson in the deaths of his fel
low students.
The state had asked the death
penalty for Matovich, claiming he
had knowingly and willingly set a
fire at Gault Hall early on the
morning of Oct. IS after an eve
ning of brer drinking and then had
gone to his room in a nearby dor
mitory and watched the blaze.
The defense claimed Matovich
was insane.
Two Men Handed Fines
On Drunkenness Charges
Two Cresent City. Calif, men
were handed S20 fines in district
court Friday after pleading guilty
to being drunk on a public high
way. The fines were assessed by
Judge Warren A. Woodruff to Har
lan Marion Hale and Chester
Virgil Morgan, both 53 years of
age. ,
BILL APPROVED
SAI.EM (1 A proposed con
stitutional amendment to have
state representatives serve four
year terms was approved Friday
by the Senate Elections Commit
tee They now serve two-year terms,
hut senators serve four -ears.
Noon
tint foods.
AUTHORIZED
1410 S. I. Sftphant St.
DEALER
Phone OR 2-2324
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