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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1957)
U. of C. Library Eugene, Oregon Comp CmiDDDitoir CoDDed Don Stroke flssye jm? M- s. ,. j. BEFORE THE CROWDS stort coming, roustabouts at the Fairgrounds assemble the carni-. val rides and concession booths. The fairgrounds were busy Tuesday as the carnival, the rodeo, exhibitors and judges moved in and began getting the place ready for the opening Thursday. (Paul Jenkins) I County Fair Opening Set Eisenhower Proposes 2-Year Nuclear Test Suspension Program WASHINGTON I President Eisenhower Wednesday proposed a two-year suspension of nuclear test, provided Russia agrees to an eventual permanent halt in production of atomic weapons ma terials. PARIS I The Western Al lies Wednesday decided to propose a Mo-year suspension of nuclear tests as part of an overall dis armament plan. This was the , key point of a new plan which Britain, France, Canada and the United States cir culated to their NATO allies here Wednesday. . ... , .i. The other members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization will report their views on it to a spe cial session of the NATO council next Monday. In London, meanwhile, the So viet Union accused the West of blocking agreement on nuclear disarmament by advancing "arti ficial" preconditions. Soviet delegate Valerian Zorin made a blistering attack on the West before the United Nations disarmament subcommittee meet ing in London. The four Western powers in Paris will present to Zorin in Lon don a proposal calling for sus pension of nuclear tests beginning in November, 1958. It would continue for 12 months and then, if all powers concerned found it satisfactory, would be ex tended for another 12 months. PURSE LOST Loss of her purse containing $18 was reported to Roseburg police Tuesdav bv Mrs. Phyllis Zuber. She said she had left the purse on a bank counter "and had later discovered her loss while shopping. II was gone when "she returned, she stated. The purse also con tained her driver's license and bank book, Mrs. Zuber said. In The Day's News By FRANK JENKINS Three years ago the post office department began keeping care- lul satety recoras on iwu giuupn of trucks - one group of 3500 1 painted red, white and blue and another 3500 painted olive drab. What the postal people wanted to know was whether the brilliantly painted ones had fewer accidents than the drably painted ones that were harder to see. That turned out to be the case. The drably painted (presumably harder to sec) group had 849 ac cidents in the test period. The red, white and blue trucks had only 622 accidents. 227 less than the trucks with duller colors. The automobUe industry has been working along somewhat the ! same lines, but has been more I interested in what it calls "re flectorized" paint that is, a type of paint that will make a car eas ily visible at night while still re taining its beauty and durability in the sunlight. j Several manufacturers are con sidering making this "reflector-1 ized" paint optional equipment on (Continued on Page 4 Col. 6) The Weather Fir tonight and Thursday, es.jentne J those cases which pt for patches of early morning i would Lu,ufr.. ?"y kind of "cUon fog or low clouds. Possible Isolated i unler " Ml !e tas' Program afternoon or evening thunder I opted early this year. That pro- thow.n ever the southern maun. taint. Little temperature change, Highest temp, last 24 hours Lowest temp, last 24 hours Highest temp, any August Lowest temp, any August Prtcip. last 24 hours Prtcip. from August 1 Precip. from Sept. 1 Defic. from Sept. 1 Sunset tonight, 7:07 p.m. IS . 4 . 1M ... 3 , .... 0 .30 30.05 . .2? Sunrise tomorrow, 5:2 Fire - Weather hish hazard in interior and central Oregon. a.m. Continued southwest , .noaerate i but increasing daneer alonE coast and in interior northwest Oregon. . X,: Event Biggest For Fair goers The gates at the Douglas Coun ty Fairgrounds open Thursday morning at 9 on the biggest fair in the county's history. The annual Douglas County Fair will offer more of everything to every taste displayed by fairgoers. For entertainment Thursday, the Davis Shows carnival goes into action when the gates open. Meanwhile, clowns will rollick up and down the midway between hourly free shows. At night, the preliminaries start in the annual talent show sponsor ed by the Douglas County Fair Board and Ricketts' Music Store. It is the first of nightly shows. Actually, Thursday is only the preliminary to action which snow balls through the weekend. Also on tap for the following three days of the fair are such major events as the fifth' annual sheepdog trials and Oregon State Square Dance Festival dances, a free Saturday barbecue and two sessions of the first Rodeo Cow boys' Assn.-approved rodeo in the fair's history. For more information on the cream of all Douglas County Fairs, see today's second section which is devoted entirely to the event. Drunk Driving Arrests Leads To More Troubles Troubles started piling up for Paul Louis Peterson, 21, when he ran into a rock wall with a car Monday night. The man, who gave his address as 673 NE Channon St., was charg ed with drunk driving. This netted him a $100 fine and five-day jail sentence handed out in Roseburg municipal court. However, instead of being lodged in the city jail, Peterson was trans ferred to the county lockup on a charge of parole violation, lie had been sentenced to three years in the Oregon State penitentiary for grand larceny. Peterson was arrested bv Rose burg police shortly after a reserve officer reported seeing a car driv en by Peterson traveling in a reck less manner and then hearing a crash. The car had struck a rock wall at 1413 SE Kane St., officers found, with about $100 damage to .. .. . lne vehicle. SPEAKER TO SPEAK ASTORIA i Speaker of the House Pat Dooley will be one of the speaker's at Sunday's formal dedication of the Fort Stevens State Park, west of Warrenton. The park was opened two years ago. Eisenhower Says Russia Bidding For Power In Syria By MARVIN L. ARROWSMITH WASHINGTON tfl President Eisenhower said Wednesday the ultimate aim of the pro-Communist bid for power in Syria is So viet control of the country. He told a news conference, however, the United States gov ernment actually does not know how far the process has gone. And he added this is not at pres- Kram. speuco oui in a congres ional resolution, provides fur U. S. economic aid and use of Amer ican armed force if needed and invited, to head off Red aggres- sion in the Middle East. I they finally get hold of the situa- Eisenhower's evaluation was thejtion then the people find that their first high-level American summa- country is being run from some- tion of the Syrian crisis since it where else. began developing 10 days ago. Several times Eisenhower de Althouch he did not say speci-1 clined to equate Syrian rule at fically that he holds Moscow en-'the moment with rule by inlcrna tirely responsible for what hasitional or Soviet controlled happened, Eisenhower left no j communism. Once he told a aues- doubt that he blames the Soviet government. The pattern of what is happen-1 ling in Syria, he said, is an oldihower hopes or thinks the situa ' ,vd' c sir". State Hospital Escape Foiled SALEM, OR An overloaded food elevator and a law-abiding patient combined Tuesday night to stop the break of four maximum security prisoners from the Ore gon State Hospital here. The break started shortly be fore patients in the maximum sec urity ward on the hospital's third floor were to be locked up for the night. One guard was overpowered as he worked in a linen closet, and two others were grabbed as they walked down a hallway. All were locked in a cell. Dr. Dean Brooks, the hospital superintendent, said the four in mates were armed with a ham mer and two screwdrivers, but did not injure the guards. With keys obtained from the guards, the four inmates then went to a food elevator on the floor and unlocked its door. They started downward, appar ently toward the hospital base ment, where the windows have no Dars. But the elevator, loaded far be yond its capacity, stalled between floors. The men were trapped. Meanwhile, back on the third floor, another patient who had seen the guards subdued, smashed the glass on a fire alarm box to summon help. - Guards who ran to answer the fire alarm worked 25 minutes be fore they could get the elevator started. The trapped inmates of fered no resistance when freed and were locked up in their cells. Dr. Brooks said the elevator offered the men their only chance of escape from the third floor, where the windows are barred and the doors to stairways can he opened only from outside the ward. Brooks said the men apparently had hoped to reacFi the basement ol the building, where escape would have been relatively easy. The hospital has no wall or fence. O&C Timber Tract Sold At Appraisal Tuesday A small tract of green timber containing an estimated 158,000 board feet was purchased at the appraised value of $2,263.20 at a Bureau of Land Management sale here Tuesday. The tract, purchased by James Watson, is along the Susan Creek tributary to the North Umpqua River. On Sept. 6. the BLM will sell four tracts of timber containing some 9,014,000 board feet at the I Knights of Pythias Hall here. one with the Soviets. First they ofter economic and military aid, he continued: then they penetrate the receiving country with their agents, and they find stooges to take over the country for them. How far this process has gone in Syria, Eisenhower said he does not know. Asked specifically whether he considers this a deliberate Soviet effort to take over the strategical ly located Middle Eastern coun try. Eisenhower replied: He thinks that is the ultimate aim of what is happening. The aim is kept under cover, of course, as the situation develops. They the Soviet Communists appeal to the spirit of nationalism. When tinner that one should always give ms enemy a line of retreat if pos- sible. This implied that Eison- Established 1873 36 Paget $215,906,500 AEC Appropriations Bill WASHINGTON, I The House Appropriations Committee Wed nesday slashed $215,906,500 from the Atomic Energy Commission's request for $2,485,625,000 for op erating expenses and construction for the current nscal year. Much of the building program was authorized only Tuesday in a 352 million dollar AEC construc tion bill. Some of the cash goes into a new program of govern ment-built power reactors opposed by the administration. The reduction of almost 9 per cent did not affect the AEC's raw materials, special nuclear mater ials. weapons and community op orations programs. More than half of the cut was in the nature of a bookkeeping transaction. If the House sustains the com mittee's recommendations during consideration of the AEC money bill later in the day, it will boost beyond $5,400,000,000 the total of House-voted cuts in regular ap propriation bills this year. ' These cuts were imposed on total ad ministration requests for about 72 President Willing To Sign Compromise Civil Rights Bill WASHINGTON, Mt President Eisehnower said Wednesday he is willing to accept a compromise civil rights bill which includes ef fective enforcement of voting rights. Eisenhower told his news con ference he expects Republican House leaders to offer a com promise proposal Wednesday or Thursday. Eisenhower did not spell out the terms of this proposal. But he said it would represent a posi tion between the one he took orig inally and the Senate's version of the civil rights bill. The Senate stripped from a measure recommended by the ad ministration and passed by the House a section under which the attorney general would have been empowered to seek federal court orders to enforce eivu rights in general. In response to a question, Eis enhower said he is not now advo cating that any portion of that section be put back into the bill. The bill has been stalemated in the House, with rival. Republi can and Democratic groups play ing a waiting game. Both groups maintain they want some kind of civil rights legislation, but they disagree on what form it should take. Eisenhower's comment indicat ed that some GOP move at ending the deadlock is planned shortly Roseburg School Board Meeting Is Rescheduled The Roseburg school board's meeting originally scheduled Thursday night to open bids on a sewer line nas Dcen moved up lo Thursday afternoon because of other commitments of board mem bers in the evening. The meeting will be held at 2 p.m. at Central Junior High school, rncy will open bids for ex tension of a sewer on Northeast Diamond Lake Boulevard. Supt, M. C. Deller said the special meet' ing would last about 30 minutes. EIGHT MINERS KILLED CALTANISSETTA, Italy I Eight miners were killed and 11 injured in an explosion yesterday deep in the Trahbie-Tallarita sul phur mine here. Six of the injured were in critical condition and not expected to survive. tion is not beyond recall from the American point of view. Eisenhower dealt also with these other matters: CIVIL RIGHTS Republican congressional leaders Eisenhower said, are ready with a proposal designed to break the stalemate over civil rights legislation. Ei senhower made it clear the GOP plan has his approval, but he de clined to go into detail. CONGRESS Eisenhower said he is tremendously disappointed in the record to date of the Democratic-controlled 85th Congress. Asked whether he blames Dem ocrats or Republicans for that si tuation. Eisenhower simply re plied that to the extent members of Congress have voted against his program, they are to blame for what he considers Its disap pointing performance. Eisenhower also was asked whether he blames the situation on the constitutional ban against a third presidential term. He re plied he feels that was not the decisive factor. As for whether he regrets having run for a second term, the answer on that is no, the President said. ROSEBURG, OREGON WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1957 Slashed From billion 'dollars in new appropria tions in 16 bills. The Senate has passed 13 of the bills, involving requests for about 64 billion dollars, and has imposed cuts totaling three bill ion. The House committee made rel atively small reductions in the AEC request for new funds for physical research, reactor devel opment, biology and medicine pro grams and program direction and administration. The biggest cut, 157 million dol lars, was effected by reducing from six to three months the pro financing period for facility oper ating contracts. In past years the committee has permitted the AEC to finance these operations six months into the next fiscal year. Wednesday it said the ad vance financing should be held to three months. Another cut of 27 million dol lars was made in the industry co operative program for which the commission had requested 30 mill ion dollars. The committee said projects in the third round of this program have not been specifical ly authorized. It emphasized that it favors the program and is will ing to approve appropriations as soon as plans are more definite. The committee refused 1V4 mill ion dollars requested for the pow er Reactor Development Lo. pro ject near Detroit. It approved 3 million as request ed for planning and engineering work on a natural uranium, gas cooled power reactor in Idaho. similar to the British plant at Cat der Hall. It cut from 3 million to 2 million the authorization bill': allotment for advance planning for a large scale reactor lor the pro duction of special nuclear mater ials at Hanlord, Wash. Also approved was 4 million dol lars for premininary work on a Plutonium recycling reactor at Hanford. The committee put its okay on the program of AEC aid to co operatives and other public power groups in obtaining atomic power. While the committee rejected the proposal for 1V millions for the Power Reactor Development Co. project, it approved the use of the same amount by the AEC for fast breeder reactor research work in its own facilities in con nection with the Michigan opera tion. For plant acquisition and equip ment, the committee approved $103,162,500, a cut of $11,462,500 which it said would not interfere with progress. It approved use of available funds for transfer of the commis sion's headquarters irom Washing ton to its new offices in German town, Md. In consideration of the authori zation bill, the big fight was over the power reactors. Glide Lumber In Bankruptcy Glide Lumber Co. took the first steps toward filing for voluntary bankruptcy this week, according to James Evans, manager. The company has asked Eugene attor neys Luvaas and Cobb to preparo the action. "If the mill can be disposed of at near its worth, creditors will not be hurt," Evans said. The company does not have enough li quid assets to cover its obligations, he reported. The company has been losing money lor several months, accord ing to Evans. Last week the com pany agreed to pay a 5 cent per hour Increase to union workers. Evans said the move was taken to prevent the closure of opera tions and to assure that the com pany would be able to load and ship lumber already produced, Douglas Veneer Co. Bids Appraised Price Douglas Veneer Co. of Roseburg hid the appraised price lo win a tract of 4,400,000 hoard feet of Umpqua National Forest timber Tuesday in a sale at the Roseburg supervisor's office. The company paid $114,970 for the tract 48 miles northeast of Roseburg. It contains 2,950,000 board feet of Douglas fir appraised at $21.30, 1,300,000 board feet of sugar pine appraised at $31.20 and 150.000 hoard feet of western hem lock and other species appraised at $8.30. The timber is included in 123 acres. ' The next Umpqua National For est sale is scheduled Aug. 26. Pet Skunk Stolen Here, Reports Indignant Owner "The animal is black with white stripes." This is the description given by I Roseburg policeman ol a stolen pet further identified as a skunk. The owner, Art I)e Ross, 1919 NE Diamond Lake Blvd., said the ani mal was taken from his front yard either Monday night or Tuesdav morning. It had tj be stolen, he claimed, because the stake to which it was tied had been pulled from the ground. The skunk was too small to do this, De Ross said. Beauchamp's Death Declared Suicide; Motive Mystery LONDON A coroner de cided Wednesday that Sir Winston Churchill's son-in-law, Antony Beauchamp, killed himself with sleeping tablets. After a 19-minute inquest into tlie death of the 39-year-old so ciety photographer early Sunday, the motive still was a mystery. Some friends had hinted he was despondent over finances. After hearing the brief evidence. Coroner W. Bcntley Purchase said: "He died from barbiturate poi soning and I think he killed him self. I shall return a verdict oi suicide." Missing from the tiny court room was the woman Beauchamp telephoned a few minutes before his death, beautiful Lady Jane Vane-Tempest-Stcwart, 24-year -old sister of the Marquess of Lon donderry. A friend of Lady Jane told re porters she had asked him to at tend the inquest and tell her about the proceedings. Missing also was Beauchamp's wife, Sarah Churchill, actress daughter of Britain's World War 11 premier. Beauchamp married Miss Chur chill in 1949, four years after her first marriage to comedian Vic Oliver ended iij divorce. Beau champ and his wife had been liv ing apart for the last three years. Sarah, who has been staying re cently with her father at his country house, came to her sis. ter's London home Tuesday night. She was reported to be deeply shocked by Beauchamp's death. Rainfall Lack Causes Cutback In Stream Flow No rain was recorded at any of 16 precipitation recording stations for 27 of the 31 days in July, ac cording to the latest report from the Douglas County Water Resourc es Survey. Only in mid-month for three days was any precipitation recorded. Then on July 21, the only record was a irace at Kosenurg. The biggest precipitation show ing for the month was noted at the Marial station on the West fork of Cow Creek. It showed .66 of an inch, total rainfall for two days. None of the other stations showed more than .41. The lack of rainfall in July and August, of course, had its effect on the county's streams. Last week at Tiller, the South Umpqua had drop ped to a reading of 73 cubic feet a second. At Winston, the reading this week was 114 cubic feet a sec ond. It was a drop of 23 cubic feet a second from the previous week. On the North Umpqua at Brown's Bridge, the last reading was 1,030 feet a second, a drop in a week of more than 300 cubic feet per sec ond. Woman Investigates Theft, Finds Culprits A bit of investigation around her neighborhood solved the bur glary of her house, Mrs.- John R. Staley, Glengary Road, Rt. 1 Box 785, told sheriff's deputies Tues day. Mrs. Staley reported that her house had been entered by some one who stood on, a tricycle and climbed through a kitchen window. Taken were a kitchen knife and miscellaneous items of food. Lat er, Mrs. Staley called the sheriff's office and said three hoys had ad mitted entering her house. T Mr., HOSPITALIZED were four persons involved in a two-cor collision Tuesday evening one-half mile north of Glendole Junction on Highway 99. Tho driver of the 1953 Chrysler pictured, Roy William Koch, 53, North Bend, was taken to Forest Glen Clinic ot Canyonville suffering from shock ond multiple bruises. His wife, Gladys, 53, received a fractured leg and abrasions. Driver of the other vehicle, a 1956 Ford, was Dorothy E, Case, 48, Burlington, Wash, She suffered o fractured arm, A passenger in the Case cor, Alvina Edling, Mt. Vernon, Wash., received lacerations ond abrasions. State police said the driver of the Ford applied her brakes when a car which had just passed her suddenly slowed. Her car went onto the shoulder of the road and then swerved across the 'highway and hit the northbound Koch car. The impact turned the Ford com pletely around. (Jim Burns) 196-57 PRICE 5c Roving Pickets Keep 2 Dillard Mills Closed Roving pickets kept two mills in Dillard closed Tuesdav and one mill closed again today. Picket lines were manned Tues day morning at Round Prairie Lumber Co., which was closed by the roving pickets one day last week, and Paul B. Hult Lumber, where they returned again this morning. The pickets were not em ployes of the companies where they set up their lines, according to company sources. Henry Weber, business manager of union Local 2949. threatened Monday that small mill operators could expect to be closed down if they did not meet the union's de mand for a 5 cent per hour pay increase. The union, which repre sents workers at the companies where pickets appeared, denied be ing responsible for the roving pick ets or organizing them, according to Weber. Union Denies Although the union local claims that the pickets are acting as in dividuals, union members are ex pected to refuse to cross their lines, Weber said. The union will take disciplinary action if the rov ing pickets are disorderly or do not have a "just cause." he claimed. The roving picket strategy has been used widely in other parts of the country, according to Weber. Workers at both companies hon ored the picket lines. About 30 mill employes lost a day's work at the Round Prairie company and 110 men were out at the Hult mill. The principle of roving pickets was explained Tuesday to a meet ing of union members from the (Continued on Page 2 Col. 3) Dog Shot For 'Rabies' III With Distemper A small collie dog was shot and killed Tuesday night after police were Informed It had rabies. Later they learned the dog had been re ceiving treatment lor distemper Roseburg police reports state (hat an officer was called to 1970 W. Harvard Ave., where he found O. T. Baker with the animal cor ralled under a cardboard box. The policeman stated that Baker told him the dog had rabies and it was disposed of with a bullet. According to the report, the of ficer then contacted the dog's own er, Mrs. Molly Ellegc, 1941 W. Harvard Ave. She said her pet had been treated for distemper a week ago. the officer stated. This was confirmed by Dr. Donald E. Bailey, 248 NE Garden Valley Blvd.. who treated the dog, and by William Wheeler, 3388 W. Har vard Ave., who said he had taken it to the veterinarian. Runaway Cirls Caught, Returned To Parents . Four runaway -girls from Wins- Ion were apprehended in Canyon ville Monday night by local po lice after spending one night out in the open. Two sisters, 14 and 15, were turned over to their parents. The other two, also sisters and the same ages, were turned over to juvenile authorities because their parents could not be located as they were out searching for their daughters. The elder girl was lodged overnight in the Douglas County jail, while the other was placed in a foster home. They were returned to their parents Tuesday. a. , 3 Small Mills Agree To 2! 2 Cent Increase Three Dillard mills signed an agreement at about noon today to pay a 2V4 cent per hour raise to workers from Aug, 1 te Oct. 1, and to meet whatever pay scale the industry settles for in the meantime, according to Henry Wtber, business agent of Local 2949. .. Paul B. Hult Lumber Co., Round Prairie Lumber Co., and Mt. Bttte Lumber Co. decided te accept the new wage after a meeting with the union earlier this morning. The union mem bers are expected te ratify the agreement, union sources said. The agreement also states that the companies will pay any retro active increase that might be In cluded in an industry settlement, Weber reported. The Federal Mediation and Con ciliation Service has been called into the talks between Roseburg Lumber Co. and union Local 2949, which is on strike. A meeting is tentatively set for next Tuesday afternoon. About 1,500 workers have been Ollt since last Alnnrlav niffht ot- the struck plant and Douglas .Ve neer i-o., a auDsiaiary wnicn tne company closed and has been un able to re-open because of pickets. "This meeting was called at the request of the union," an official nf the mprlinllnn Gai-vina q1 In. day. The agency has been in con tact with both union and manage ment since me siruce Began. Com missioner LeRoy Smith of the Portland nffire will ho iho folAral concilliator at the meeting. Union representatives met this morning with the management of Paul R Hull I nmhor r Ml Bettee Lumber Co., and Round Prairie Lumber Co. Proposals for a settlement were offered at the mcctintf. . hut nn Hefinlln ncfrpo. ment was reached, sources report- ea. ine managers ot tne com panies plan to meet again Uiis aft ernoon. In talks with Rosehtire T.nmhAi Co., the union plans to complain of certain pressure for increased production and work standards and the use of efficiency experts ana quaniy controls, according to Henry Weber, union business agent. The union Hid nnt hrintr nn thpea issues in previous negotiations with the company, reported Eugene Card, one of the members of the company negotiation team. Grass And Brush Fires Burn Over Big Area Tuesday Big grass and brush fires at opposite ends of the county whip ped over 450 acres Tuesday be fore they were controlled by Douglas Forest Protective Assn. crews and other fire fighters. The biggest was at Hardscrab ble Creek five miles west of Drain on Highway 38. It covered some 250 acres before it was controlled after four hours of fighting. The uri-A crew at tne Elk Creek station stopped it with the aid of a crew of men who had been burn ing under a permit. The fire es caped while land was being burned under the permit. The name of the permittee was not imme diately known. 1 lie fire was lined today and was being mopped up by DFPA crews. It had burned over grass, brush and some slash. No tim ber was threatened. At about the same time, another fire kept three fire fighting de partments busy at the south city limits of Myrtle Creek along High way 99. It was estimated about 200 acres were burned over before crews from the DFPA, Myrtle Creek Fire Department and the Tri -City Fire Department brought the fire under Control late Tuesday afternoon. Only grass and brush was burn ed, but the fire raced through a prune orcnara witnoul setting the trees afire. Bruce Ferguson of the DFPA said he thought the fire had start ed in the prune orchard possibly Dy youngsters wno were Known to be picking blackberries in the area. Ho told correspondent Ruth M, Evans the fire could have been serious had there been a high wind. Midget Racer Driver, 14, Banned From City Streets The 14-year-old driver of a home made midget racing car was warn ed by Roseburg police Tuesday that he could not drive It on city streets or alloys. The warning came after a wom an complained that boys were dis turbing the quiet of the neighbor hood with the racer. The drivei, Gary L. Person, 1662 SE Jackson St., said he and his dad had just huilt the car and he was trying it out. Levity Fact Rant By L F. Reizenstein Oregon hotels, lamenting a heavy slump in business this year, point an explanatory ringer at motels, trailer houses, and freeways. They urge greater promotional efforts, which, however would n't hurt said competitors a bit d long at the fish are biting. i