The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, October 15, 1957, Page 9, Image 9

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    Anti-Communiits Win
Rule Of San Marino
SAN MARINO iiP Anti-Communists
took over the government
of the tiny republic of San Ma
rino for the first time in 12 years
Monday.
An enthusiastic crowd of 4.000
San Marinese almost mobbed
members of the new "white" re
gime as they arrived in San Ma-j
rino village from the abandoned
steel factory that had been their
headquarters during almost two
weeks of political dispute.
Chester Bowles Tells His
Fellow Democrats To Purify
Party Before '60 Elections
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Umpquo, Oregon
MADISON, Wis. I Chester
Bowles, former ambassador to
India, told his fellow Democrats
Saturday that "we must purify
our party" before the 1960 elec
tion if it means losing the
membership of segregationists.
In an address prepared for the
Wisconsin Democratic State Con
vention, where he was the main
speaker, Bowles said he hopes
anyone who believes in segrega
tion "will not be a Democrat in
1960."
Bowles, governor of Connecticut
in 1949-50, declared:
Facing Alignment
"We are facing, I believe, a
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dramatic realignment of political
forces in this country. When that I
realignment is ended, 1 ferverent
ly hope that the many wonderful
liberal-minded Southern Demo
crats will be on our side. 1 hope
that our party can and will give
them the opportunity, the hope
and courage they need to break
away from practices they surely
find repugnant.
"But if we must lose some of
them as the price of losing those
who instigate and enforce the re
pugnant views of racism that vio
late the most basic concept of
liberal democracy, then we must
pay this price." Bowles accused
the Republican Party leadership
of a "basic lack of respect and
understanding for people."
GOP Can't Solv. Problem
Bowles said Republicans cannot
solve the problem of peace be
cause their leaders, "who have
never really understood the peo
ple of Wisconsin or California,
New York, or Connecticut and
who so casually dismissed the
Russians as backward, can hard
ly be expected to understand the
people of Italy, Scandinavia, In
dia or Japan."
Saying that Republicans are
equally incapable of conducting
an abundance-for-all program,
Bowles added:
"To the Republican leaders our
enormous industrial production is
a source of great pride as it is
to all of us. But equal productiv
ity on the farms of America
strikes Ihem as a grave embar
rassment. "We Democrats say that more
food and fibre is no more a sin
than more steel or electric power."
Nine Fliers Bail Out;
Unmanned Plane Lands
BUTI.ER, Mo. ( Nine fliers
from Forbes Air Force Base at
Topcka, Kan., bailed out of their
C47 transport into the darkness
last night and the plane made a
pretty good landing by itself.
No one was hurt.
Capt. E. P. Zeidler, co-pilot, said
he didn't know what caused t h e
plane's two engines to quit. The
air base said it was almost home
from a routine four-hour training
liignt.
The C47 came down amid the
baled hay in a meadow near the
Missouri-Kansas line about 14
miles northwest of Butler. It drop
ped one engine and one wing came
partly unstuck but members of the
crew said repairs will be com
paratively simple.
The fliers landed on nearby
farms.
Bar Committees
Include Several
Douglas Lawyers
Several Douglas County lawyers
have been appointed to commit
tees of the Oregon State Bar for
1957-58. (icorge reuner ot Kose
burg is the bar president.
Robert G. Davis was named to,
the committees on procedure and
practice, and the state bar build-1
ing. Also on two committees isj
Dudley C. Walton legal ethics
and lawyer referral service.
01 her appointments:
Gordon G. Carlson, continuing
legal education; Bert Burgoyne,
district attorneys; Eldon F. Caley,
judicial administration; Charles S.
Woodrich, juvenile law; Daniel K.
Dimick, lawyer placement; James
G. Richmond, minimum fee sched
ule; Paul E. Geddes, necrology;
Carl M. Felker and J. V. Long,
probate law and procedure; Don
ald A. Dole, taxation; A. C. Roll,
workmen's compensation; James
M. McGinty, legal assistance to
servicemen; and George Luoma,
public service and information.
Richmond will head a four-man
grievance committee for Douglas
County. Other members are Carl
son, John H, Horn and Donald S.
Kelley.
Geddes and Luoma are on the
trial committee for; the Fourth dis
trict, encompassing the same
counties as in the Fourth Congres
sional District.
Edward M. Murphy retains his
position on the Board of Bar Exam
iners. His term expires next year.
Law Barrier On Cancer Aid
Launches Long Revision Job
On Old Insurance Policies
FREMONT SCION DIES
NEW YORK UFI Navy Capt.
'John Charles Fremont, 77, veter
an of three wars and grandson of
i Gen. John C. Fremont, 19th cen
tury military hero and explorer.
:died Sunday. He was the son of
Rear Aum. John C. rremont, one
time naval attache in Paris and
St. Petersburg, Russia.
Journalism Students
Receive Expert Advice
EUGENE I Some 800 high
school journalism students were
told here Saturday that if they
go into newspaper work they will
find that the quality looked for by
prospective employers is a back
ground of wide general knowledge.
J. Richard Elmers, chief of
Bureau at Portland for the Asso
ciated Press, said at the annual
Oregon High School Press Con
ference at the University of Ore
gon that there is both glamor and
satisfaction to be found in the
newsgathering field, coming from
the day-to day variety of events.
Malcolm Bauer, associate editor
of lhe Oregonian, told the stu
dents that freedom of the press
must be maintained. When free
dom is denied, it is the public
wnicn is excluded, ne said.
Weather Aids Duck
Hunters To Bag Limits
KLAMATH FALLS Ml Duck
hunters bagged their limits in the
Tulelake area as .the waterfowl
season opened Saturday.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service said hunting in the area
was excellent.
There are an estimated 4'4
million ducks in the Tulelake
region, as well as 180,000 geese,
the service said.
The weather gave the hunters
an assist Sunday, the service
said, as rain squalls forced flights
of ducks and geese low over the
marshy areas.
NEW YORK I The woman,
recently widowed, was a victim of
cancer. Her husband had carried
adequate life insurance.
Yet she couldn't afford an oper
ation because her husband's insur
ance policy contained an iron-clad
provision she was to get a fixed
monthly income from his insur
ance. Faced with such t hardship
case, it is no comfort to the in
surance company to point out it
is bound under law to observe the
contract entered into with the policyholder.
What can the insurance company
do about this situation?
Northwestern Mutual Life Insur
ance Co.. Milwaukee. Wis., be
lieves it has one answer it is ex-
mining every policy 10 years old
or older to find those which may
be in drastic need of revision. To
such a policyholder goes a person
al letter, telling him of the situa
tion and inviting him to look over
his policy.
Task Takes 3 Years
T. J. Otjen, assistant Northwest
ern secretary, says It involves
checking the record cards of more
than three million policies, a task
expected to take three years, and
writing thousands of personal let
ters. Northwestern Mutual, sixth larg
est U.S. life insurance company
with, assets of 3li billion dollars,
launched the program as part of
its observance of its 100th birth
day. To a large extent, the company
is looking to policies with restric
tive payment terms which have re
mained unchanged for at least 10
years. In many cases, policyhold
ers are being asked if they don't
want to make provision for cash
withdrawal or some, other allow
ance for adjustments, in view of
rapidly changing economic condi
tions. The company can do nothing for
the widow whose husband left her
with obsolete insurance income. It
can, however, prevent repetitions
by alerting other families to out
moded policies before the policy
holder dies.
Tuti. Oct. 15, 1957 The Ntwi-Rtview, Roitburg, Ore. 9
NO POLIO DEATHS
NEW YORK The City
Health Department says polio hns
not claimed a single life in New
York thus far this year.
The department credits the Salk
vaccine for the record develop
ment. Last year in the city, seven
deaths were blamed on polio. Over
the previous seven years the aver
age was 30 deaths.
RULING ON LOANS
SALEM 11 Persons borrow
ing from small loan companies
must be given progressively lower
interest rates on loans granted
after the first one, Atty. Gen.
Robert Y. Thornton ruled t h i
week.
The opinion forbids treating a
second loan separately in comput
ing interest.
(
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FROM NINE TO FIVE
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Please slow, down Mr. Wump. You're using too many commas
and nor enough rest periods.
Newspaper Price Hike
Needed, Expert Say
BOSTON uFi An Indiana Uni
versity expert on newspaper fi
nance says the answer to in
creased newspaper production
costs must be increases in the
price of newspapers and in their
advertising rates.
Associate Prof. Poynter Mc
Evoy also said in an interview
Sunday night that labor-saving
mechanical devices have been
over-rated as 1 way to cut news
paper costs.
McEvoy said newspapers are
taking in about a third of the 10
billion dollars spent annually on
advertising in all mediums, in
spite of the emergence of tele
vision as a consumer of advertis
ing dollars.
Screen Performer
Answer to Previous. Puixl
ACEOSS
1 Screen
performer,
Foster
T She acts on
the stiver
13 Armed forces
14 "Lily maid
of Astolat"
15 Darling
16 Landed
proprietors
17 Abstract being 2 1Joined
iii .'.- 7 22 Shops
J0Eat(Fr.) 23 colorless
21 Ineffectual 24Sonof Seth
23 Hammerhead (Bib)
25 Famous
9 Amperes (ab.)
4 Clamp
fi Requires
6 Respect
7 Vendor
8 School group
9 Measure of
Thailand
10 "Emerald Isle"
11 Finishes
12 Bird's home
IB Fourth
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28 Russian
community
27 Musical
quality
91 Against
32 Poems
33 Plunder
94 Plant part
35 Anglo-Saxon
slave
35 River In
Switierland
39 Sea eagle
40 Deviate
43 Priority
(prefix)
44 Solid
47 Medieval
short Ule
50 Heavy
52 Standards
of perfection
54 Overthrow
55 Masculine
appellation
56 Hardens
57 Dinner course
DOWN
1 Matron
2 Preja
29 Gaseous 44 Lease , U,-.-,
element 45 Comfort !" -
Arabian caliph 30 Royal Italian 47 Den, as ot
family name an animal
SO Emissaries 49 Toward the 1
37 Scottish alder sheltered side '.
tree 49 Small Island
98 Live 51 River In 1
41 Utopian Scotland
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28 Smell 43 In addition (ab.)
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BALf-ONy SEATS ATTME RE-RUN
CINEMA ARE ONLY TWO BITS TMEN
KL TAKE YOU MOMEL FOR COCOA AND
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