I
2 The Newt-Review, Roieburg,
Wheat Growers
Vote June 20
On Quotas Issue
Wheat growers will vote June
20 from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. in the
Douglas County Court House,
Room 214, in the national referen
dum to decide on continuance of
wheat marketing quotas.
"The soil bank program has
caused a slight change in the eli
gibility rule for voting," explained
J. F. Bonebral.c, chairman of the
county Agricultural Stabilization
and Conservation Committee. All
farmers whose wheat cultivation,
plus any wheat acreage held back
under the acreage reserve pro
gram totals more than 15 acres,
will be eligible. In previous rcfer
endums, voting wax limited to
growers who would have over 15
acres of wheat for harvest.
Two-thirds of the eligible voters
must approve quotas in order to
put them into effect on the 1958
wheat crop.
If mint as are anDroved. farmers
who exceed the allotment will be
subject to a penalty of 45 per cent
of the parity price on their excess
wheat, and the support price for
the 1958 wheat crop will be avail
able to farmers who comply with
their wheat allotments at a nation
al average of $1.78 per bushel,
which represents 75 per cent of
parity.
If more than one-third of the
wheat growers, voting disapprove,
quotas will not be in effect. How
ever, allotments will remain in ef
fect, and farmers who comply with
their wheat allotments will be el
igible for support of 50 per cent of
parity, as directed ay law.
Noted Rodeo Clown
Has Varied Career
(Continued from page one)
regular performer failed to show
up during a show.
Slim worked with the great
clown and bullfighter, Holmcr Hol
comb, for a year as second clown.
When Holcomb was hurt in 1946,
Pickens took over at rodeos for
the rest of the year and by year's
end was well established in his own
right.
In 1950, Pickens got a crack at
motion pictures when a Hollywood
director spotted him. He passed a
screen test and a brand new ca
reer was undertaken that lasted
six years.
During his motion picture career
he has appeared in over 40 pic
tures, including cowboy side-kick
roles with Rex Allen at Republic
Studios.
His latest picture releases in
clude "Cowdog," and the "Great
Locomotive Chase," for Walt Dis
ney, "Stranger at My Door,"
"When Gangland Strikes."
He has regularly appeared on
television including such shows as
"Stories of the Centuries," "Cir
rus Boy," "Frontier Doctor,"
"Lassie," "Buffalo Bill Jr.," "Ann
ie Oakley," "Lone Ranger,"
"Furv," "Cheyenne," and others.
Pickens' home is in Northridge
in the San Fernando Valley in
California. He lives there with his
wife, Maggi, and three children and
a stableful of horses, headed by
Dear Jolui, Slim's picture-horse
and comedy pal at rodeos.
Soldier Tells About
Scattering Shell Casings
(Continued from page one)
Mrs. Naka Sakai, 46, in tha back.
She died almost instantly.
Girard has repeatedly denied he
scattered any empty shells in the
area.
A Japanese district court at
tache said the Nickel statement,
if it docs exist, would not in it
self be cause for any Japanese
charges against Nickel.
"Even if the contents of such a
statement are v e r 1 f i c d," this
source said, "it would not tend to
incriminate Nickel because it is
not proof that Nickel knew of Gi
rard's intention to fire shots."
A Japanese scrap collector at
the range said Thursday it was
"usual" for American soldiers to
toss used cartridge cases to the
waiting collectors.
The Army said Nickel has been
restricted to his ramp at his own
request to avoid reporters. His
mother said he had written her:
"Now I am an associate to the
fact and am facing a court
martial." A. N. Orcutt, Retired
Attorney, Dies At 79 -
(Continued from page one)
the completion of SO years as a
member of the Oregon bar.
He was a past member of the
Oregon State Bar's board of gov
ernors, a member of the Arlington
Club of Portland and the Elks
Lodge and Shrine Club in Rose
burg. Even after his retirement, Or
cult worked on occasion as circuit
judge pro tern in the state.
.Survivors are two daughters,
Mrs. O. R. Fisher of Seattle and
Mrs. Charles W. Fox of Portland;
a sister, Mrs. B. W. Cooley of
Portland; three grandchildren; and
five great-grandchildren.
Funeral services aro schediflod
Friday at 2 p in. in Rivervicw
Chapel in Portland.
Man Fatally Wounded
In Grants Past Quarrel
CHANTS PASS 11 A 43-vear-old
man was wounded fataiiv
Wednesday night after a quarrel
at rental cabins in lirants Pass.
Wyatt Ramsey Swisher died sev
eral hours after the shooting.
William Lewis Chapin. 81, was
Jailed on a charge of second de
gree murder.
Oran Chaslain. assistant police
chief at Grants Pass, said Chapin
was standing otrr the body, a
small-caliber revolver in hand,
when police arrived at the scene
after being called by the owner
of the place.
Chaslain said the shooting cli
maxed I long-standing dispute be
tween the men over Swisher's
drinking. Both men lived at the
cabins.
Ore. Thur., June 13, 1957
Senator Morse
Attacks Foreign
Aid Spending Bill
By ERNEST B. VACCARO
WASHINGTON I Sen. Worse
'(D-Ore) said Thursday "a sense
i less waste of millions" on foreign
'aid has contributed to "a rising
tide of anti-Americanism through
out the world."
Morse joined Sen. Long (D-La)
;in an attempt to cut 390 million
dollars from the $3,637,000,000 for
ieign aid bill over the opposition
of both party leaders.
In the Senate's second day of
debate, Morse described a com
mittee - recommended cut of 227
million dollars in administration
requests as "but a spit in the
i ocean of foreign aid waste."
I Morse said the administration
is seeking to "perpetrate a gigan
tic hoax on the Senate and the
people of the United States" by
its proposals lor long-range, Ilex
ible spending authority.
I And, he said, the administration
I is hiding from the people under
i the label of "top secret" the full
story on its use of the funds.
I "They are to be spent to supply
I arms and ammunition to nations
i from one end of the globe to an
other," Morse said. "They will be
used to build up armed forces of
both democratic nations and to
talitarian nations."
He said Congress "should insist
on a greater degree of public dis
closure of the facts concerning the
places where the money is spent
and the purpose for which it is to
be spent.
Democratic Leader Lyndon B.
Johnson of Texas told his col
leagues he hopes for final action
on the bill by Saturday night.
Johnson said earlier he thought
it would be "dangerous" to make
any "meat axe cuts" in the au
thorization bill since a subsequent
appropriations bill providing the
money to finance the program
will be "revised downward." Re
publican Leader Knowland of Cal
ifornia took a similar position.
Sen. Long, leading the effort to
cut 390 million dollars from the
bill's total, filed a written report
arguing that those opposing cuts
"are too willing to tolerate wide
spread waste and inefficiency."
Railroad Rates
Reduction Given
For Fresh Meats
CHICAGO The Transcon
tinental Traffic Bureau Thursday
approved railroad rate reductions,
varying from 7 to 22 per cent, on
fresh meats shipped from India
napolis, Chicago and other mid
west points to the Pacific coast
area.
The executive committee of the
bureau also approved slight re
ductions in packing house products
shipped westbound but refused a
proposal, submitted by livestock
interests and Pacific Coast meat
packers, on livestock shipped in
me same direction.
Charles Hennings, a staff mem
ber of the bureau, said the new
rates were based on a minimum
weight of 30,000 pounds. Old rail
road traffic rates still apply on a
minimum weight of 21,000 pounds,
he added.
"The adjustment on fresh meats
and packing house products was
necessary to meet motor carrier
competition," said Hennings.
Subject lo 5 per cent tariff
rates, Hennings said 100 pounds
of fresh meat shipped from Chi
cago to the Pacific Coast would
now cost $2.69. The old rate was
$3.30 per 100 pounds. This amounts
to an 18 per cent reduction.
A one hundred pounds of fresh
meat, shipped from Kansas City
to San Francisco and the north
Pacific Coast, would be rated at
$2.39, compared to a previous
$3 13 charge, Hennings reported.
Hennings said present rates on
parking house products at a min
imum weight of 30.000 pounds
would be reduced on the same
basis as fresh meats except where
rates are presently lower.
Fire Levels Building;
Cause Not Determined
Fire this morning destroyed a
one-story combined shop and liv
ing quarters at 1383 SE Douglas
Ave.
The building, owned by L. F.
Thome, was occupied by Ed Bach-
leitner, according to the llosehurg
Rural Fire Dept. which answered
the call. A city fire engine an
swered the cali but returned to
the station when the rural de
partment took over.
The department reported that
no cause tor the hl.-ue has wen
determined and that no estimate
on the loss has been made. Neither
the building or the contents were
insured.
Urgent Plea Continues
For Information On Cat
No word has yet been received
on whether the Glendsle cat which
bit a small girl there showed indi
cations of rabies.
The doctor who ministered to
15-month old Kathy Owens has
again issued a plea that the owner
of the rat call VF.tnon 2Bli with
information on whether the cat
was ill. The child was bitten by
the cat Sunday and was killed by
her father. Andrew Owens, before
it could he determined If it was
carrying rabies.
BODY RECOVERED
SI1AMOK1N, Pa. if A in year
old miner buried tinder 50 tons of
shale fur 36 hours in a coal mine
cave in was found dead last nicht.
Il.'pe had waned for Frank Puf
nock as the searchers, working in
shifts, were hampered hv sliding
rock and walls of the shaft that
had to lie shored.
O'CONNOR WEDS
I NFW YORK .fiRasil O'Connor.
65, head of the National Founda
tion for Infantile Paralvsia. was
t married Wednesday to Miss Karel
Rnyall. 43
they sail today on a European
' honeymoon.
Unusual Books Discovered
During Wilbur Remodeling
By MRS. LEWIS BINTLIFF
A large number of unusual books
were removed from the attic of the
Wilbur school recently, prior to re
modeling of the building.
Many of them were very old,
among them congressional records
dating back to the early 1800's.
There were also a number of Ore
gon histories and old German Bi
bles. The books were the property
of the old Umpqua Academy, and
the more valuable one have been
stored at the courthouse until they
can be placed in a museum or suit
able place. Others, including many
old classics and fiction books, are
being stored at the Wilbur Church.
Vacation In Washington
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sands are
home after a ten day trip to Wash
ington. They visited their son,
Dick, at Portland and the Allen
Christie's at Bellevue, Wash., then
drove back by way of the coast,
visiting a number of points of in
terest and staying over in Long
Beach.
Gayle Thompson and Fay Mer
ritt from Coos Bay were weekend
Detroit Girl Found
Murdered At Dump;
Father Embittered
DETROIT 11 Six-year-old
Mary de Caussin was found slain
Thursday in a dump two miles
from her home in Ecorse Town
ship in Detroit's downriver area.
The girl's head was almost sev
ered and her hands were tied be
hind her back. The body was un
clothed. A resident of the neighborhood,
Paul Panter, found the body when
he went to the dump to throw out
a basket of rubbish.
The finding of the body ended
an ifarniifht cnni-h nirlnH hv near
ly 1,000 volunteers. The girl had i
been missing from her home since
5:30 p.m. Wednesday.
Police said the girl apparently
was killed at the scene.
Mary was the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Edmund de Caussin Jr.
The child's mother, Gcrvaisc, 30,
reported her missing after she
failed to return home.
The father said bitterly, before
the body was found, "assuming
the wbrst has happened, I
wouldn't blame the man as much
as the society t which produces
such men. It's a society that al
lows sex magazines on news
stands for kids to read; a society
that measures Hollywood stars by
their bosoms, and a society where
the telling of dirty stories and the
use of foul language is common
place.
"These things produce sex per
verts out of people who have the
slightest abnormal tendencies.
They are encouraged by every
thing around them.
"Until the day society changes
Its fundamental moral principles
and re-asserts a helicf In God, we
will have sex perverts."
Mao Concedes
800,000 Persons
Were Liquidated
NEW YORK 11 The New York
Times said today that Mao Tie
tung has admitted 800,000 persons
were "liquidated" by Chinese
Communist security forces be
tween October 1949 and the begin
ning of 1954.
A Times dispatch from Warsaw
said Bed China's top leader dis
closed that figure in his much
discussed speech to party leaders
in Peiping last February.
The text of Mao's speech has
not been published, but a condens
ed version has been circulated
among Polish Communists and
parts of it previously have been
reported by Western correspond
ents in Warsaw.
The latter included Mao's new
Marxist theory that contradictions
exist, not only in the ranks of the
masses but also between the mass
es and the party. This represented
a departure from Soviet doctrine
which long has held that conflicts
between the rulers and the ruled
existed only under capitalism and
vanished in a Communist society.
Doctor Says Eisenhower
Completely Recovered
WASHINGTON i President
Eisenhower's doctor Thursday
pronounced him "completely re
covered" from his stomach upset.
The physician, Maj. Gen. How
ard Snyiier, reported the Presi
dent "almost" recovered on Tues
day and again Wednesday.
James C. llagerty, presidential
press secretary, told newsmen he
had talked to Snyder Thursday
morning and "he says I can now
take the word 'almost' out. He
says the President has completely
recovered from his stomach up
set." Nazarene Bible School
Featured For Sunday
The Church of the Nazarene va
cation Bible school demonstration
program will be presented Sunday
at 9:4.V
Special features of the program
will be the rhythm band, made up
of beginner and primary boys and
girls, and music and scripture
memoriiations. The public is in
vited to the climax presentation of
the Bible school session.
TO PREPARE CONCESSION
Roseburg Lions Club members
win meet at t:. tonight at the
Fairgrounds grandstand to pre-1
i pare their food concessions for the
annual Pounlas Countv Rodeo
I June 22-23. iuuh lunch will be Glide; Juanita Robinson, Suther- trick's Cathedral Saturday at 10
I served. Im; Mrs. Arthur Williams. Camas . a m. for bandleader Jimmy Dor-1
I The Lions and Lady Lions will Valley; Ward Pyle. Oakland; Mrs. isey. who died Wednesday of lung
hold joint installation at a dinner Kenneth Bathke. Mrs. Austin Spen- cancer. ;
! meeting Monday at 7 30 in the leer, Mrs. Robert Tjomsland.j The public will be permuted to'
' Hotel I'mpqua Cn'ld Room, an ; James .MuVray. Sandra livens, view IVrsey's bod at a funeral
nounced retiring President A. C.:Mike Schlick. Dennis Ovens, Mrs home from 2 pm today to mid
U.Mike) MClain. 1 Ronald Herman, Roseburg. night.
' i
guests at the home of their aunt,
Mrs. Ed Blondell.
Norma Ruth Pennington spent
two days in Portland last week
receiving medical treatment.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Baird,
former Wilbur residents, nave writ
ten friends here of the birth of
their first great-grandchild. A son
was born recently to their grand
son, Jim Adair.
Ricky and Gary Brown of Quail
Lane spent the weekend with their
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. R. E.
Brown, while their parents were
in Grants Pass on business.
Mr. and Mrs. William Tate and
son, Dick, of Milwaukie, were re
cent visitors at the W, E. Thomp
son home.
California Visitors
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lehman of
Eureka, Calif., have been visiting
with her mother, Mrs. D. P. Mc
Kay at Wilbur, and other relatives
in this area.
Corrin Blondell, who was one of
this year's graduates of Roseburg
High, has accepted employment in
Coos Bay.
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Grubbe
drove to Portland recently to visit
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Hedman,
and attend the wedding of her
nephew, Dr. Richard Stonebrink.
Marjorie Carroll has joined her
husband, Pvt. Lawrence W. Car
roll in Anchorage. Alaska, where
he is stationed with the Army.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Irish of Port
land spent the weekend at the
home of her uncle and aunt, Mr.
and Mrs. I. ins Emmons on Coles
Valley Road.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harvey and
daughter, Kathy, and Shirley
Harvey drove to Vancouver,
Wash., last week. Roy attended
the reunion of the class of 1947 of
the Ogden Meadows High School
at the Union Hall. The school build
ing was burned down a number of
years ago.
Peggy Hopkins Joyce,
Glamor Girl Of 1920s,
Dies Of Throat Cancer
NEW YORK If Peggy Hopkins!
Joyce, glamor girl of the 1920s A busy round oi activities oe
'i,t .,,-.,, i ,,.,,,- i.,.,i,t can Thursday for the queen.
her fame and fortune, died last . starting with the annual wheel
night of throat cancer. She was . chair parade at the Veterans Hos
about 64 ! P"a' Thursday morning.
Miss Joyce entered Memorial i A number of bands and maich
rniir fnr Cmror ami Aiiipri ui. i ing units paraded in various sec-
cases June 1 and fell into a coma !
few days ago. At her bedside
was her sixth husband Andrew C.
Meyer, retired banker of New
York and Woodbury, Conn.
Born near Norfolk, Va., as Mar
garet Upton, Miss Joyce was first
married at the age of 16, and
soon after shone on Broadway as
a blonde beauty in the "Ziegfeld
Follies" and Earl Carroll's Van
ities." Wide publicity attended her
marriages and subsequent di
vorces, especially when she broke
up with her third husband Stanley
Joyce of Chicago, a multimillion
aire lumberman. Details of her
rlivm-rp suit aL'.iinst Jnvee His.
I closed that, during their marriage,
he had given her jewelry valued
at Sl.4O0.000, a Florida home with
a marble swimming pool, and a
villa on the French Riviera.
During the course of journalist
ic ventures she wrote a novel,
and an autobiography, covered the
Ruth Snyder-Henry Judd Gray
murder trial as a reporter and
conducted a newspaper column
Miss Joyce penned: "The modern
woman is a domestic pet which
can be nourished with checks,
which can be tamed with jewels,
and of which one can be rid of
with alimony."
Bessie Maddox
Passes Today
Bessie Florence Maddox. K4 of
Myrtle Creek, died early today at
me nomc oi ner son, uarreu bow-
man. of Mvrtle Creek, after a short
illness. I by the National Railway Media-
She was horn in Mvrtle Creek U'on Board after negotiations be
October 3. 18!2, and lived there all I 'ween the railroads and the Order
her life. She was married to Rob-1 of Railway Conductors and Brake-
ert I. Maddox, July 3, 1919. in
Eugene.
Survivors, besides her husband,
include three sons. Darrell Bow -
man and Warren Maddox, both of
Myrtle Creek, and Robert Maddox
of Redding. Calif.; two brothers,
Claude McCarty and Joseph Dyer,
both of Myrtle Creek, and one sis
ter, Mrs. Homer (Capitola) Ab
bott of Myrtle Crek.
Funeral services w ill be held Sun
day at 2 p.m. in the Christian
Church at Myrtle Creek with Rev
Earl Sample 'officiating. Interment
will follow in the lOOF Cemetery
in Myrtle Creek.
Cam Mortuary is in charge of
arrangements.
Hospital News
Mercy Hospital
Admitted
Mtdical: .Mis. Merle l.ilicnthul,
John Radcr, Winston; Mrs. Gerald
lleidriek. Winchester: Mrs Wil
liam Francis. Sutherlin: (ieorge,
McDowell, Mrs. Larry Pickarski,
Roseburg.
Surgtry: F.dward Brown, Oak
land: Billy Staines, Jackie Fran
co, Roseburg.
Discharged
Mrs. l.eamon Dean, Winston.
Douglas Community Hospital
. Admitted
Madical: Mrs. K. 1. Patterson.
Winston: Mrs. Robert I'uckctt,
Mrs. Thomas Thompson. Rose
burg. Surgery: Mrs. Ralph Baker, Win
ston: Mrs. Wallace Rondeau. Suth
erlin; Mrs. Jack Pedman, Cottage
It rove :
Mrs. C-crald Whitson. t.ar-
ry Murphy.
Muriel Altman, Rose-
burg.
Discharged
Mrs. Richard Patton and babyJ
Michael William; Krvin Hernces.
Brewster's Trial
Recesses While
Kennedy Honored
WASHINGTON Ml The con
tempt of Congress trial of team
ster leader Frank W. Brewster
was in recess Thursday while the
government's only witness was
receiving an honorary degree.
Robert F. Kennedy, chief coun
sel of the Senate rackets investi
gating committee, was receiving
the degree from Assumption Col
lege in Worcester, Mass.
The trial, which started Wed
nesday, will be resumed Friday.
U. S. Dist. Judge John J. Sirica
is hearing the case without a jury.
Brewster, chairman of the 11
state Western Conference of
Teamsters, is accused of unlaw
fully refusing to produce union
records and to answer questions
before the Senate Investigations
Subcommittee last January.
Kennedy was counsel of that
subcommittee and now is chief
lawyer of the special Senate com
mittee which took over an investi
gation of labor-management rack
eteering from the subcommittee.
Kennedy, on the witness stand
briefly late Wednesday, said that
before calling Brewster the sub
committee had information which
he said indicated that (1) some
reports Brewster filed with the
Labor Department "were not ac
curate" and (2) there had been
: r t i- - t u-l
misappropriation ui iuiius ui me
Western Conference and its sub
sidiary, Joint Council 28 of Se
attle. Principal issue in the trial is
whether the subcommittee had au
thority to inquire into internal af
fairs of labor unions.
Rose Festival
Gets Under Way;
Queen Selected
PORTLAND u The annual
Portland Rose Festival was un
der way Thursday, following se
lection of a queen for the event.
The new queen is 18-year-old
Alice Eastman, a brunette senior
at Lincoln High School here. She
was selected before a crowd of
16.000 in Multnomah Stadium
Wednesday nigh .
tns of the city Thursday. Anion
them were Bremerton and Giants
Pass high school bands, an Army
band from Ft. Lewis and the
Knights of Pythias girls' band
from Roseburg.
Night entertainment shows will
be held at the stadium Thursday
and Friday nights. Air safety of
ficials forced the festival to drop
one planned entertainment fea
ture. That was the planned per
formance of a young aerialist
while dangling from a helicopter.
The officials said it was too dan
gerous to have a helicopter hov
ering over the stadium. They also
moved the precision flying exhi
bition of the Navy's Blue Angels
from Swan Island near downtown
Portland, to the airport.
Nine Navy ships were sched
uled to tie up at the harbor wall
here to remain for the rest of
the festival.
The junior rose parade is sched
uled Friday and the main floral
parade on Saturday.
Miss Eastman, an honor stu
dent, said she plans to use her
Rose Festival scholarship to at
tend Willamette University at Sa
lem. Railroads Settle
Wage Dispute
CHICAGO i.fi Major railroads
and the 20,000-member Conductors
Union last night settled an eight-
month wage dispute with a three-
j year contract calling for pay hikes
. '
I The agreement was announced
men
A mediation board member,
Levcrctt Edwards, said provisions
! of the new contract follow a "pat
tern of those accepted by unions
representing about 94 per cent of
all railroad employes.
Under the terms of the new con
tract, road conductors will receive
an immediate raise of 12' a cents
an hour. This boost is retroactive
to Nov. 1, 1956. the end of the last
contract period.
An additional 7 cents hourly will
I be made effective Nov. I, 1957.
I and another 7-cent raise will go into j
effect Nov. 1, 1958. The new con-
tract also contains an escalator!
clause inai provides ior cosi oi 1
living adjustments. !
Road passenger conductors av- i
eraged S6j9 monthly under t h e
previous contract. Koad freight
conductors earned an average of
$647.
Mayflower II Completes
Historic Ocean Voyage
PLYMOUTH. Mass. i.fi May
flower II, replica of the original
Pilgrim ship, ended her long voy
age from Plymouth, England,
Thursday.
She entered the harbor shortly
after 11 a.m., towed by a Coast
Guard craft and surrounded by a
big fleet of yachts and other small
craft.
Church bells pealed a welcome
as the 92-foot bark appeared
; around Gurnet light, marking the
i harbor entrance.
Mayflower's arrival marked the
end of a 5,000 mile, .54 day vovage
e . .u u... . f .u.
?''. '". ' TV v
'
MASS FOR DORSE Y
NEW YORK A Requiem
i Mass will be offered at St. Pi
WINNER. John Diefen
baker, 61, Prince Albert,
Sask., lowyer and leader of
Canada's Conservative party,
is shown in Regino June 10
after House of Commons elec
tion resultsshowfid his party
will form the ne-xt govern
ment in Canada. Diefenbaker
is expected to replace Louis
Laurent as Prime Minis
(AP Wirephoto)
NEA T.l.photo
MUST RESIGN Canada's
Prime Minister Louis Saint
Laurent (above) must now
resign to allow the forma
mation of a new coalition
government. His Liberal
Party lost control of the
Government for the first
time in 22 years in a stun
ning election upset.
Boxed
Handkerchiefs
98c
Haines
Tee Shirts
98c
BILLFOLDS
98c to 2.98
" - -
Father's Day Cards
HOME
SHRUBS
Va OFP
FEED YOUR LAWN
NULIFE
ORCANIC FERTILIZER
BEDDING PLANTS
Store Hours
Doily
9 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Sunday
9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Plenty of Free
Parking
Idaho Power Tax Writeoff
Issue Argued By Senators
WASHINGTON LB Sen. Ke -
fauver (D-Tenn) said Thursday
there is "a serious question" as
to whether the Idaho Power Co.
obtained special tax benefits
through misrepresentation, but
Sen. Wiley (R-Wis) challenged
him to find "anything crooked;"
Kefauver is chairman and Wiley
a member of a Senate Judiciary
subcommittee on monopoly mat
ters which questioned Thomas E.
Roach, Idaho Power Co. presi
dent, about tax write-off certifi
cates the firm obtained in con
nection with two dams it -is build
ing in the Hells Canyon area.
Kefauver said inconsistencies in
the record of the case raise a
question as to "whether the tax
certificates were obtained by mis
representations." Kefauver said Idah Power told
the Federal Power Commission it
had "faint hope" for a tax write
off and would build with its own
money three dams which would
flood the site of a proposed fed
eral Hells Canyon dam in the
Snake River. The company then
got a write-off, Kefauver added.
Wiley said Idaho Power appar
ently "changed its mind" and
then sought and obtained a write
off. "Is there anything crooked in
that?" Wiley asked. "Just what
Bourges-Maunoury
French Premier
PARIS I A resigned, reluc
tant National Assembly early to
day confirmed Maurice Bourges
Maunoury as France's 22nd post
war premier by a majority of less
than 50 votes. The action ended a
three-week Cabinet crisis.
Both the prcballot debate and
the 210-194 vote itself reflected the
Assembly's lack of enthusiasm.
Seventy-three deputies abstained.
Bourges-Maunourv fell 58 votes
short of an absolute majority of
"M""u! " "V"V -ul I Associated "ess announced its
only a majority of those voting , wiMin2ness to a t ,c award
was needed to install him. .Subsequently the union offered to
Bourgcs - Maunourys program seie at sj 24 weckv.
on which he took office virtually
duplicates that of his predecessor, . w
Socialist Guy Mollet. The newWewsman Worthy
Cabinet chief, who was Moiiet's ! Again Refused Passport
defense minister, promised t h e j
Assembly continued vigorous mili- WASHINGTON ii The State
ta-y action against the Algerian Department's Passport Division
I rebels, limited political reforms in has tentatively refused, after a
the rebellious North African terri- j hearing, to renew the passport of
tory. new fixes and fewer imports ; newsman William Worthv.
to rebuild France's almost - gonei The decision, still subject to fi
stock of foreign exchange. . nal approval, can be appealed
! first to a special State Dcpart-
CONFIDENCE SEEN ment board and then to the courts
NEW YORK I Meade Alcorn, j if the application is rejected each
Republican national chairman, j time.
says the stock market reaction to I Worthv, employed by the Balti
j P r e s i d e n t Eisenhower's upset j more Afro-American, defied the
stomach was indicative of the pco-IState Department's ban on travel
pie's confidence in the Presdcnfs to Red China last December. His
1 policies. ' passport expired last March 4.
Remember!
SUNDAY JUNE 16th
Remember your favorite "Man Around the House"
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selection of useful handy household gifts. Also fine
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CHARCOAL GRILL
With Hood and Motor
Other Barbecue Grills .
Barbecue accessories . . . Forks, Hamburger Grills, Hot
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Elec. Charcoal Lighter
CLIFFCHAR CHARCOAL
BRIQUETS
NO SMOKE NO SPARKS
10 LBS. 1.39 20 LBS. 2.39 40 LBS. 4.49
and GARDEN NEEDS
Plastic Lawn Soakers a . 79c
50 ft. Plastic Hose
3-yr. SswoifflitO) 1.98
Wading Pools -
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Good Selectiom
Also GERANIUMS and BEGONIAS
S&H GREEN STAMPS
Across the Parking area from Nielsen's Market
PARK -MS HOP
SOUTH STEPHENS ST
iare we fishing for here?
Kefauver Questioned Roach
closely about Idaho Power's con
struction plans, noting that to
qualify for the tax write-off both
Brownlee and Oxbow dams must
be completed by Dec. 31, 1951.
Brownlee is about half completed.
Roach said the FPC license cov
ering the company's dams speci
fies that Oxbow must be com
pleted by 1961, but that the com
pany can complete it next year.
Roach said he decided to havt
Oxbow built in 1958 soon after
April 1, 1957, -when the Supreme
Court upheld the legality of the
company's FPC license.
Roach insisted his decision to
build Oxbow in 1958 was made
before the tax write-off certifi
cates were issued.
Asked whether Oxbow would
cost more than had been esti
mated as a result of a "rush-up"
construction schedule, Roach said
it "may not cost a cent more."
Idaho Power never has underes
timated construction costs, he de
clared. AP, Telegraphers
Dispute Continues
NEW YORK I The Com
mercial Telegraphers Union be
gan Thursday counting votes by
traffic employes of the Associated
Press who were asked by a ne
gotiating committee to authorize
a strike in a wage dispute.
The contract expired at mid
night Monday but was twice ex
tended until midnight Thursday.
CTU members operate and main
tain teletype and Wirephoto
equipment in the offices of The
Associated Press throughout the
country. Approximately 650 em
ployes are involved.
The union rejected an advisory
arbitration award of $4.35 weekly
plus a deferred group insurance
benefit of 27 cents weeklv. The
- day is
IAD'S day!
29.88
from 4.88
5.95
Big Boy
- 2.98! 2,9.95:
2'.00;
59"
'Ddzej
Dial OR 3-8423
9