The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, May 21, 1958, Page 2, Image 2

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    1 The Newt-Review. KoMura, Ore. We May 21, 19J8
MacLaren Superintendent
Tells Of Training Program
By DARRELL MADOOX
News-Review Stiff Writer
A mot E. Reed, tunerintendent o(
the MacLaren School for Boyi, I introduced Tom recruiter, region
told the Kiwania Club Tuesday ! al representative for the MacLar
that the school attempts to give i en School. r'emister, who has just
every boy an opportunity to sue
ceea.
The superintendent explained the
functions, workings and goals of
the school at a noon luncheon in
the Umpqua Hotel. The speaker is
also member of the slat Ju
venile Protection Committee, Cov-
rrnor's Committee on Children and
Youth and a director of the Nation- Kiwania Uuo. Peterson is serving
al Conference of Training Schools ! as treasurer in the absence of Ed
end Juvenile Agencies. i ward Young.
Reed traced the history leading .
up to the establishment of such
schools as MacLaren. He told the
Kiwanians that the average age of
boys admitted to the school is 15.
"A child should be assigned to a
facility outside the community only
when local resources have been
exhausted," he ssid.
Will Be R.turnine
The superintendent went on
The superujienaem went "
say that tne community snouiu i
remember that the child will be
returning to the community and
the institution should be seen as a
part of the community.
"There is no one reason for de
linquency, but there are three
broad areas," he said. Reed ex-
K lamed these as being the boy
imself and his own biological
functions, the family and the com
munity. Many families love their
boys but may not be able to pro
vide the supervision required.
A school such as MacLaren 1
hard to administer because the
child is unwillingly admitted and
he cannot be locked up in cells.
Reed said. The school has a num
ber of programs under way and
being developed. He listed the pro
grams as being religious, recrea
tion, education and work.
Ne One Shot Approach
A drum and bugle corps Is being
formed, he said. "There la no one-
Kim Tells Ramfis
Goodbye Aboard
His Private Car
HOLLYWOOD I Psrling was
such sweet sorrow for Kim Novak
and free-spending Lt. Gen. Rafael
Trujillo Jr.
The 24-year-old blonde actress
and the handsome son of the Do
minican Republic strongman spent
half an hour Tuesday night saying
goodby aboard his private railroad
car.
Trujillo said he plans to return
for Kim in July when he finishes
his studies at the Army Command
School in Kansas.
And Kim winked and nodded
when a reporter asked whether she
will he waiting.
"I'm very fond of Ramfis (Tru
jillo's nickname),' Kim said.
Is the fondness actually love?
"You know 1 can't talk of any
thing like that now." Kim said.
"He's still married."
Trujillo, 29, whose wife and six
children are in the Dominican Re
public, says a Mexican divorce
will be final in July. Then he will
return to Hollywood before lesving
for his homeland on the family
yacht.
Will it be a honeymoon trip?
"You never can tell," he aaid.
Beach Marker
To Honor West
By THI ASSOCIATED PRESS
A marVer calling attention to
one-time liov. Oswald West's prea
ervation of the Oregon beaches for
public use will be dedicated bun
day on Neahkahnie Mountain near
Nehalem Hay.
West, who was 8.1 years old
Tuesday, will he unable to attend.
His nephew. Willis West of Port
land, will renresent him.
The marker to be dedicated has
a bronte tablet on which la in
scribed these words:
"If sight of sand and sky and
sea has given respite from your
daily cares, then pause to thank
Oswald West, former governor of
Oregon (1911-1915). By his fore
sight, nearly 400 miles of the
ocean shore was set aside for
public use from the Columbia
River on the north to the Califor
nia border on the south. This
marker is erected and dedicated
by the grateful citiiens of Oregon
to commemorate this outstanding
achievement in the conservation
of natural resources."
Accused Branch Bank
Robber Found Cuilty
PORTLAND i A IJ S. District Rev. Edward Hummon of Seattle.
?".M , ury "'V mghl f.nv,rt- second vice president; Dr. Walter
ed William John Paul. 44. of rob-1 Krk of Portland, secretary; H. A.
bing the Tigard Branch of the f irst Halverson Jr. of Longview, Wash.,
National Bank of Portland last treasurer- and the Rev A 1
eurnmrr. Mendenhall of Vancouver'. Wash.,
The jury deliberated onlv a few I statistician
hoiira. li. S. District Judge Glia l New ministers ordained Tuesdsy
Solomon said he ill sentence Paul were Richard E. Magnuson. Se
. . lettle. a one-time University of
laul was arrested on the East : Washington awimming atar.' and
Coast earlier this year. I Arthur E. Osmundson, Kelso
A second person still is sought In Wssh
connection with the holdup, lie isi
Jack Damian Welp, 19. Portland In-' in VAX -A A. f. I.J
dieted earlier on a bank robbery I Killed As Crowded
charge ; India Train Jumps Track
The bank was held tin last Julv
hv two gunmen who escaped with
s'.B.a.
Sputnik Carrier Rocket
Now Leading Satellite
LONDON (J Mnienw ra.l.n In.
day said the earner rocket ofjH",rrn Railway. The official re-fipu-iik
III Is now lesding the ar- f"? "'d "" roaches derailed
tifical satellite by two tenths of an
orbit as they whirl around trie
earth.
This means thst the rocket,
which had lent Initial velocity than
the Sputnik, ta spirahng in toward
the earth and will be destroyed
by ' friction with the Imospher.
wmi. mm aairun. .. ... ...... onice ruing the name Hank 4
The broadcast laid both obtects pearl's Richfield Station were Hen
eompleted their T7th circuits of ry Dee and Pearl Butler, bolh of
the earth this mnrninf . I Sutherlln.
'shot approach in working with
1 people in trouble." Reed added.
I Julian A. Helleck. Douglas Coun-
ty juvenile and attendance officer.
moved to Roseburg from Blooming
ton, III., will serve Douglas and
Coos counties.
June 24, the Princeton Theolog
ical Seminary Choir will entertain
the Kiwanians. The 21 member
choir will be on nation-wide tour.
M. C. Deller introduced and wel-
eomed Howard Peterson into the
Cannery Union
Rejects Packing
Firms Proposal
1 ASTORIA on Cannery workers
on the lower Columbia River
1 struck lust before Wednesdav
lbtn blT. .... lUved on j-L
to -- filh- ,i , at hand
Nearly a thousand
a thousand workers.
most of them women, were ex
pected to walk out when the pro
ceasing waa complete. That might
oe Wednesday at some of the 15
struck plants and later at others.
Another negotiating session was
being talked but whether settle
ment could be reached before the
walkout was uncertain.
Also uncertain waa what would
happen to boatloads now on their
way In. Salmon presumably would
go into the fresh fish market.
Workera Tuesday night turned
down a management offer that
would add 19SD cost of living
raises to the $1.54 hourly minimum
contract pay.
The United Packing House
Workers of America rejected the
management offer lesa than six
hours after the end of a 27 -day-old
ban against commercial salmon
fishing in the lower Columbia
River.
There was no immediate indi
cation that picketa would be put
around the plants.
John Janosco, an international
representative of the union, said
efforta would be made to set up
another bargaining session.
But then he added that the
rejection of the wage offer was
the automatic beginning of a
strike. Neither he nor other union
officials knew when picketing
might start.
Union sources said that if pickets
were put up. fishermen probably
would not deliver ta the 14 struck
planta here and one in Ilwaco,
Wash.
Reports circulated here that
fishermen, with heavy catches
throughout the night, might in
stead take their fish to canneries
up the coast at Aberdeen, Wash.
Psychiatrist
Cross-examined
In Murder Trial
LINCOLN, Neh. ii Dr. Ed
win Coals of Lincoln, a prosecu
t i o n psychiatrist, testified
Wednesday he found no evidence
of organic brain damage in mass
killer Charles Starkweather.
Dr. Coats underwent cross-ex-
amination by defense attorney T.
Clement Gaughan and re-direct ex
amination by chief prosecutor r,l
mer Scheele as the 2'vweek long
muroer trial nearea Ita end.
Gaughan asked how the witness
would classify a person who "ad
mits his crimes, cooperated with
the county attorney and his doc
tor, and wants to he executed so
ne can die a hero.
Dr. Coala ssid this would
fleet a "snciopathic personality
disorder." It ia not a psychosis
and would not warrant committal
to a state mental hospital he add
ed.
Dr Coat's testimony and the
likelihood of additonal redirect
testimony aialled off the final
arguments Wednesday.
Lutheran Synod
In Final Session
SALEM The Pacific Svnod
of the United Lutheran Church in
America went into the final day
of ita convention Wednesday after
accepting two new congregationa.
The congregations are in Blaine.
Wash., and Nelson, B.C., and
bring to 63 the synod's total in
the Northwest, British Columbia
and Alaska.
As it neared the end of its SDth
snnual convention, it elected the
Rev. John Cauble of Salem first
vice president.
Other n.tv 1 t... n.
BOMBAY. India 1 A crowd-
H attirwii train turn ruul ih t...k
! at high speed 400 miles north
west of Bombay early Wednesdav,
killing 20 persons and injuring 40.
ibe state owned railway an-
, nounced.
The crash occurred on the
,nJ. ' lh'm overturned
The exoresa was en muta from
Rajkot to Yiramgam.
BUSINESS NAM! TAKEN
An assumed business name fur
a Sutharl.n .-... .... .
ed. Tuesday m the county c"rk .
Congress To Open
Probe Of Latest
Aerial Collisions
WASHINGTON OP Congress,
reacting awiftly to the latest aerial
luuiBuii vi m ...tuv-.j uiaiic ana
- - - r - - uK-
two investigations Thursday into
air aafety.
Subcommittees in both the Sen
ate and House acheduled hearings
Tuesday a short time after a
Maryland National Guard jet and
a Capital Airlines plsne collided
over the Potomac River Valley
near Brunswick, Md , killing 12
persons.
Announcing hearing plans.
Chairman Mike Monroaey (D
Okla), of Senate Aviation sub
committee, said the Brunswick
crash "points up again with tragic
clarity the urgency of I single con
trol of our space."
Declaring both military and
civilian planes ahould come under
one direction, Monroney said:
"We can no longer await the
snail-pace consolidation of the
various air traffic control pat
terns. The present dangeroua situ
ation requires immediate correc
tive legislation."
Monroney said his group aiso
will investigate the April 21 colli
sion near Las Vegas, Nev., of a
military jet and a United Airliner
that killed 4 persons.
Army Abandons
Plan To Disband
Six Guard Units
MIAMI, f la. i The Army
disclosed Wednesday that plans for
disbanding six National Guard di
visions have been abandoned.
The disclosure was made by Gen.
Maxwell D. Taylor, Army chief of
Staff in an address prepared for
delivery to the Governors Confer
ence here.
The originsi play for reduction
in the aize of the ground National
Guard grew out of federal govern
ment economy measures.
In his prepared speech Wednes
day Taylor aaid many governors
have passed along their thoughts
on the proposal to Secretary of
Defense Neil McElrny and Secre
tary of the Army Wilber Brucker.
run K.l.xad
Then Taylor added:
"Thia morning Secretary Bruck
er and I are happy to announce
that there has been a relaxation
of the original guidance upon which
our plans thus far have been based.
The Army haa been authorized to
develop a plan looking toward the
retention of the present 37 divi
sions in the reserve forces struc
ture, that is 27 National Guard di
visions and 10 USAR divisions, pro
vided that this troop structure is
maintained with no increase of cost
or personnel beyond currently pro
grammed levels.
In Washington earlier Chairman
Carl Vinson (D-Ga) of the House
Armed Services Committee said he
had information that the House Ap
propriations Committee would ap
prove money enough to keep
(tuard and Reserve forces at full
strength.
This would amount to a con
gressional attempt to reverse the
administration's decision to reduce
approved strength of the state
troops from 400.001) to 360.000 and
the reserves from 300.000 to 270.0O0
Football Great
Held For Killing
TOKYO 11 Joseph P. Crowlev.
star Yale football back in the
early 1930s, waa held by Japanese
police today on suspicion of fatal
ly beating his brother-in-law T. A.
D. Jonea Jr.
Jones, a New Haven, Conn.,
businessman and son of a Yale
gridiron great, died here Mav t.
Funeral services will be held to
morrow at Trinity Episcopal
Church In New Haven.
Police Inspector Tsunetoshi Shi
rakawa said Crowley was arrest
ed this morning "on the suspicion
of having inflicted the injuries
which caused Jones' death "
"We have conducted a thorough
and careful investigation. . . and
from medical reports and testi
monies of all persona involved,
suspicion hsd become strongest
against Crowley," the inspector
said. He had indicated all along
ht thought the case might involve
manslaughter or assault rather
than murder.
Broken Bottle Cuts
Visiting Sailor's Foot
An 18. year-old sailor. James
Woodward, was admitted to Com
munity Hospital at 10 p.m. Tues
day for treatment of a lacerated
right foot. Woodward, son of Mr
and Mrs. James Woodward, 755 W.
Stanton, reportedly suffered the in
jury when he landed on a broken
bottle after jumping over a fence.
Another admission to Community
was Jay Crust, 61. 1209 SE Steph
ens St. He reportedly waa treated
for a smashed font suffered while
working at Paul Hult Lumber Co .
Dillard.
Man, Wile In Separate
Cars Crash At Crossroad
BRIDGETON. N J. A young
shoe clerk and his wife, eioh in
a separate csr, sped toward a
quiet country crossroads called
Harmony last night
They met in a flaming broad
skle crash that swept the two
auto against an empty house.
Police were able U pull Lester
Wright, 19, from the pyre, but he
was dead by the time they got
him to Brighetoo Hospital
His wife Vera, also 1. was
hurled from her borrowed car and
is in serious condition at the hos
pital with I possible skull frac
ture. ZOOTRAIN INSTALLED
PORTLAND The clickity
clark of the Zootrain ia neanng
A 6' ton diesel locomotive was
assembled at the new Portland
too Tuesday. Its streamlined bodv
being put on the trucks. Four cars
went on the line s tracks, ton
The train, with a capacity of
M adults or 132 children, wilt go
into operation June t
lt Bi few
CENTRAL JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL-officers tor next year
are, left to right: Sue Lindell, secretory, ond DivSd Cosh,
president, seated; Milo Yount, vice president, ond Scbra
Warford, treasurer, standing. (Paul Jenkins)
Services Held For
Sandra Bohnstehn
Sandra Bohnstehn, infant daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bohnstehn
of N.E. Post Street, Roseburg, died
May 20. She was born May 19, 1958.
Surviving besides her parents
are two brothers. Billy Ray and
Gary Lee, both of Roseburg: two
sisters, Karen Sue and Sharon Di
ane, both of Roseburg, and her
paternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Oscar Bohnstehn of Nation
al City, Calif.
Graveside funeral services were
held this morning at 11 a m. in the
Roseburg Memorial Gardens. The
Rev. Howard E. Baker of the First
Church of God officiated. The
Chapel of the Rosea was in charge
of arrangements.
STEWART HONORED
INDIANA, Pa. Ai Actor Jim
my Stewart was honored at a din
ner in his hometown here Tuesday
night for his work among Boy
Scouta.
Some 4i0 persons attended the
dinner, which was sponsored by
the friends of scouting of the Wil
liam Penn Council, Boy Scouts of
America.
Tuesday was Stewart's 50th birth
day anniversary'. His father, Alex
Stewart, observed his 861 h birth
day anniversary on Monday.
PLYMOUTH SAVES YOU MONEY ON GAS...
MOBILGAS ECONOMY RUN VICTORY PROVES IT!
Sew "Fuel-Saver" Choke that helped clinch
title is standard equipment on all Plymouth V-Ss
P-nir.J for pound, PUnutitih iturs lrs asotinc than tither of the "other
tuo" tars in tlie low-pii.0 '.'!"! This was proved bevond doubt when a
Vi'tS rhmoiilh -8 waa oftViallv declared winner of the Ion-price car
competition in the l'."8 M.'l.ilgas Kronomv Run. I'h mouth's competitors
also entered cars with b-olinlrr engines I supposedly more economical)
but V mouth beat ever) car in iLs cla V-8s and n alike!
This title-H inning Plwnouih is esactly the same BrKe.leie V-H oilh
ToKpiel'lite Automatic TrantiiiMion lhat jou ran buy right off your
Pl mouth dealer's floor.
Theae Irals proxe that esery Dv mouth ha. huiit in economy jralu'ei
not found in the "other too". Kor inlam e one of the most impoitant
TODAY'S
Thurman Arant
Dies At Pendleton
Thurman Edmund Arant. 49, for
mer resident of Roseburg. died
.May 19 in a Pendleton hospital.
He was in an automobile truck
accident Monday at 2 a.m. and
died from, results of the accident
at 10:30 p.m. He was a psychiat
ric aid of the Eastern Oregon State
Hospital.
He was born July 19. 1908 in
Roseburg. living here until 1916
when he moved to Coos Bay. He
also lived in Seattle, Wash., and
San Francisco, Calif., for a num
ber of years before moving to Pen
dleton three years ago.
He is survived by his brother,
Lloyd Arant. and his sister, Mrs.
W. F. (Irma) Wilson, both of Rose
burg. The body is being brought to
Roseburg by the Chapel of the
Hoses and funeral arrangements
will be announced later.
HEARINGS SLATED
PORTLAND to The Oregon
Legislative Interim Taxation Com
mittee will conduct hearings here
Friday and Saturday.
Sen. Walter Pearson (D-Port-land),
the chairman, said there
will be a discussion of three bills,
including one for a new trailer tax
and another for a homestead tax
deferrment for elderly persons.
BEST BUY... TOMORROW'S BEST TRADE
Riddle School
Band To Give
Concert Friday
By ERMA BEST
Riddle Grade School band will
appear m concert Friday evening.
at S in the Riddle elementary gym.
Numbers will be presented by the
beginning, intermediate, and ad
vanced groups. The publie ia in
vited
Officers Elected
Newly elected officers of the
Riddle Golden Key club are Evelyn
Powell, president; Peggy Vedder,
vice-president; Opal Wade; secretary-treasurer.
The meeting was
held at the home of Mrs. Ronald
Cam. The next meeting will be at
the home of Mrs. Vedder.
Election of officers for both the
American Legion and Auxiliary
will be held at a meeting Friday atcll yMr lt $73,900,00.000. He also
S p.m. at the Tri-City Memorial : .1 that t.m. a nrnim
Hall
The Riddle Home Extension Unit
held its final meeting until fall.
New officers were installed by Mrs.
Vera Erbe of the Tenmile unit.
Project for the day, presented
by Mrs. Carol Dawson, county
nome extension agent, waa on
formal and informal table setting
ami serving.
A S20 4-H scholarship was award-
ed Carolvn McCov bv the unit. The
Meadowlarks 4-H Club, led by Mrs.
Kooert Smith, exhibited some
samples of first year sewing at
the meeting.
Mrs. C. Pleasant ia Incoming
chairman.
Guardian Council
Of Bethel 53
To Be Installed
Installation of the new guardian
council of Job's Daughters Bethel
53 will he held at Douglas High
School Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
Preceeding the ceremony a pot
luck dinner will be served at 6:30.
Those attending are requested to
bring table service. Mrs. Miles
Feero of South DiUard will be in
stalled as new guardian, with Mrs.
lone Goodnough of Eugene grand
guardian of Oregon as
officer.
installing
At the last regular bethel meet
ing, the following officers were
elected. Stizie True, honored queen;
Virginia Mowrey, seller prin
cess; Janet Weikum, junior prin
cess; Lois Williams, guide, and
Pat Davidson, marshal! Installa
tion for these officers will be June
7.
Go to church Sunday was observ
ed at the Winston Christian Church,
attended by daughters and mem
bers of the guardian council.
.. ,
doens more
I
Federal Spending
Expected To Climb
Near $80 Billion
WASHINGTON uf Budget Di- they could be seen Mm"" de
. uanrira Slant nredicled .trv nne of the worlds Isrgest
Wednesday federal spending for
i the fiscal year ataning j hit
1959 will increase to aooui au mil
lion dollars.
Stans made the forecast after
he and President Eisenhower con
cluded their first discussion of the
budget for that fiscal year.
As for the budget for the fiscal
year starting July 1, Stans said
he
looks for a deficit ranging be -
tween eight and 10 billion dollars.
And that, he said, does not take
into account the possibility of any
tax reduction.
When Eisenhower sent that
I. , . .. , I'.n..... la.t linnirW
,j .Bj,BO ir ih. I,..
of 500 million dollars.
Tax Revenues Decline
Since then, the business reces
sion has brought a decline in tax
revenues and an increase in gov
ernment spending plans.
Onatinnrt ahnut anenriinff
the current fiscal vear. ending
1 June 30, Stans predicted it will be
oeiween ts ana 1 jvi 011110a uuuai a
with the deficit running about
three billion.
Responding to a question. Stans
said he and Eisenhower did not ; at four million dollars,
discuss the tax situation at their Fitzgerald said the fire started
White House conference. I in a drv kiln, probably from cedar
The President said in a New dust or lint coming in contact with
York speech Tuesday night that , a steam pipe,
the administration will d e ci d e I Twenty Seattle fire companies,
soon, after consultation with con- aided by engines from suburban
gresnional leaders of both parties, areas and the Coast Guard, bat
whether to advocate a tax cut. tied the blaze that started at
As for the budget for the fiscal
year starting July 1, 1960. Stans
remarked tne outlook aoesn 1 iook
very good.
"It will be in the range of 80 bil
lion dollars," Stans said. "I don't
say it is 80 billion, but it will ap
proach 80 billion."
Former Clendala Man
Succumbs In Indiana
Chester Teffley, 63. a former
Glendale resident, died suddenly
Monday evening at his home in
I Jeffersonville, Ind.
I He lived with his familv for sev
eral years in Glendale after World
War II. A building contractor dur -
ing part of his stay in Glendale,
he was active in the Glendale Vet
erans of Foreign Wars group. He
was a veteran of World War I.
He is survived by the widow,
Jean. Jeffersonville; a son. John
Teffley. Charleston, S C., and a
- daughter, Mrs. Betty Archambeau.
Bellaire. lex
Funeral services are scheduled
er Thursday at Jeffersonville.
factors in PKmoulh's smashing win is the new "rurl-Siver" Choke thst
ou get at no extra cost on all Plymouth V-Ss. This ingenious device
emplo;, a tnple-stage vac uum piston and a new thermostatic element to
reduce the amount of fuel vou use in s.arming up the engine S. it ran
save you even more on short-distance drivea-the kind most people make.
Among the many other satints Plvmouth give, you is the $1 U) vo.i
..u - c,,....,..riii ii.rsion-Aire Knle.
10 inai mucn r.iire ior 1 tie 1 r beat
. suspension
economies, loo!
So if you are dolUr-conscioua. better hu.tle over and talk term, ,nrl
trade with your Plymouth dealer, lie. teadv to give ,o a gieaTdeal!
COMPUTI THI CIRCtI OF SAFETY . . . CHECK YOUR
CAR, CHECK YOUR DRIVING, CHECK ACCIDENTS
Huge Cedar Mill
At Seattle Burns
Tuesday Evening
SEATTLE 'a A Sl.500.0uii
f.r. ih.t hurled sparks so high
fedir lumber mills in the Ballard
a,sU-ict luesasy nigm
An army of more than JO0 fire
men and volunteers battled the
raging blaie at Seattle Cedar
Lumber Manufacturing Ce. for
more than four hours. There were
no deaths or serious injuries.
I "In 47 years of fighting firet.
i this measures up to tne top six
1 ., .. ,lld chief William
Fitzgerald of the Seattle lire de
partment. Ben Ford, the firm's account
ant, estimated the damage at
more than a million and a half
dollars but said it would probably
be higher after a thorough aur
vev has been made.
jack Wilde, milL superintend
ent, said 8 million board feet of
lumber worth about one million
dollars were reduced to ashes.
The fire destroyed about aeven
million board feet of stacked, dry
cedar planks, seven dry kilns and
' a machine shop. Another several
1 million feet of timber, ready for
snipmetu, ami we k1""
; sawmill, powerhouse and planing
I mill were saved. Company offi-
; cials placed the mill's total value
9 30 a,( night in the Ballard dja-
trict industrial area. Four fire-
boats poured water onto the fire
from the Lake Washington ship
canal.
A brisk yesterly wind whipped
the flames through the main lum
beryard and within a hour cov
ered more than a city block.
Flames shot some 200 feet into
the air and the yard resembled
the inside of a volcano.
p . w; -f 11
r erer ''" M,f'"
Six Hours Last Night
1
- i LONDON 1 Peter Townsend
, had dinner at Princess Margaret's
1 place Tuesday night and stayed
six hours.
It was the third time Townsend
has visited Margaret at Clarence
House, where she lives with Queen
Mother Elizabeth, since he return
ed in March from a world tour.
He made the trip after the prin
cess dissolved, her romance with
him in October 1955 because the
Church of England opposes divorc
I ed persons remarrying.
Ibe "other No" ch.
large
svslems. And there are
)
it