4 The Newt-Xtvitw, Roieburg 0r. Wd. May 28, 1958 "You Should See It NOW in This Strong Light' -Hal Boyle- CHARLES V. STANTON, Editor and Manager ADOYI WRIGHT. Bvsmeu Mw GfORGE CASTILLO, Assistant E4w Member Associated Press, Orfa Ntii(r Publishers AiMitiM( te Audit Buree Circflttnt lpniiU4 r TltT-BOLUDf ro, IKf . ffU la Trfc, ChUrifC, Fr L AaclM. SaaltU, PsrtUaa, Bta-tr NEWS-REVIEW COMPANY. INC. il'BirBIfTION KATKt IN Oft f Mll Fr StSat; bIi 1 Mt ! Mi UlM St M. Ww rrrlr rr Yr. SISM 1a , Iim lata mm Pr atsaia, II M. Caaattr ltikir P O. I BUatfe ! S I Tr H r-r IU C- M Mftll BtlM Afalf Oauli CIl- LlailH. Mall 8aaMritlas Mail B Pala la talra4 ai I.m aiallar Mar 1. I'- Easobarg. Or-faa, aa4ar a at March t. lilt. IT'S A HEALTHY STATE By Gaorga Castillo Oregon is one of the healthiest places in the United , State. I Kvidence of that is shown in the May issue of the Ore- jtnn Health Bulletin. The most dramatic indication is the report that for the first time in history, the state failed to record a single death of a mother from causes associated! with child bearing during the first three months of the! year. j Ilr. Harold Erickson, state health officer, proudly called it "striking evidence of the quality of medical, nurs ing, hospital and public health services enjoyed by the peo ple of this state." A total 8,594 women safely delivered babies in Oregon during the three-month period. It was the achievement of perfection for the state, the latest triumph. In 1351, Oregon established the nation's all-time record low maternal mor tality rate of .134 deaths per thousand live births. This was only one of the indications of the quality of medical care. Also taking dips in the first quarter were total number of deaths, infant deaths and foetal deaths. Oregon's death rate is far below the national average for the period. In January, the national death rate was 10.6 per 1,000 population, compared to 8.7 for Oregon for the quarter. Declines Central Ills! I Bv JACK RUTLEDGE for HAL BOYLE I MEXICO CITY Those little European cars are not I hiii-tintr tHa r,f TVS. Antrim in Mexico. You see lots of European models darting in and out of the increasingly heavy traffic, but the Fords, Chevrolet and Plymouth still dominate. Thr rt ir! rions. 1 AU car import are on a quota bi. and American companies hich tin long led markft. are holding to their per centage! with government back doKari. tays no TV. ,4.1,1- amounts tn amiinH 110 Mexico , -A)V o( th( lower-priced r,ir rMr. r i - three cost almost as mucn a a small Cadillac in the I'nited Stales. The official import total actually Americana may complain of flair ii deceptive. Mexico really buyi more than 35,000 can. One newt paper recently estimated that 45.- where 00 more ,r brought in annually NU Janict. Ic. Mexicans like the flashy Ameri can car. th jaudier the better and fini, but .Mexicans ask for more. Power and driving range are lmrjortant in a country ervice station! are tomeiimes 1)0 hy individuals through special mile! apart and many major privilege! or by imuggling. highways circle 10.000 foot moun- '- tains. Also the larger car is preferred by many who like to pack a family of 10 into the machine fur a picnic or a trip, "housanris are converted into buses and taxis. Mexico is one of Detroit's better foreign customers In IMS .Mexico bought some 46.000 cars, trucks and buses. Kor economic reasons the quota has been cut sharply. This year it stands at around 35..O00 cars General Motors. Ford and Chrys ler all have large assembly plants here. They get about three fourths the quota. Studehaker. Rambler and Packard account for much of the balance. European makes trail. Fiat. As semhled here in its new plant, probably accounts for 5 per cent. Volkswagen is next. Mexican dealers beg for more cars "We could sell nine times as many as the quota allows." said a Ford representative. But the government, to save it! IT PAYS TO MTIONIZI NIWS-MVIIW 1DVIITIIMI Plagued Day And Night with Bladder Discomfort? I'rwim ritmr or drin.inff irT It jmi.e of ..! rxit ! inf adder irn tatmn. ma-inv ou tl i-aM-aa, tnt. and imeom fort a !. And if rrailaraa l:nKt, mrh tunt.nK l-n-karha. Iwaulftchc or m . ciilar arhvi nt iwinulu to OHtwrtmn, train or nnutionai U.l, are Klilmf lo your mit y-ioii t aJt-ny Iin i'lllu. I)un ( PiUi art I av far BVtif ra Hf. I Thrr uothinjji ft ret OO biaiiiir irniai-one. i-A fan jMia.reliv. inc action n nann-mc bac.aflw, htmd irnei, m.iei.ir arhf and pIn. A Womlerf .11 mii tdi'iitrti? aft ion tiini tito kidntl, trndmc to tneirm Of output nf th Ifc ntilta of tmlnv tubrt. So. fi tho am happf rit m'tliona ha 4 for oar M vw. N. large tvnrimj turn uvt money. Gi iJonn f ilii toda 1 NOTICE All Roseburg and Winston Downtown Shoe Repair Shops Will Be CLOSED Bruce Biossat Thinking It Over Copco Worker's Help At Mishap Commended If you can imagine a good-!ied i Knglish portj car orbiting the eaitii at heights up to l.loo miles, vnu have a fiood notion what the Decline in death, were Keneral amon the major '"".S'lll"" "" '" d'4pa,ch'nK causen. iney are niseasosi ot me neart, cancer, tniracran- ihis j.soo-pound spate vehicle mi immm hiim atciurniis. ,', fresh romolacencv that might conducted an official investigation charged a logging contractor for The decline in infant dpathi was not dramatic, lint it ?"V " nP' ' m " of a motor vehicle accident oa Slate Industrial Accident insurance continued conmderably below the national averajre. I lie launching three satellites. '"n'yi , ,nr ,"a' l,r . " "ng ra,sed to more than J10 50ur tones when the bow is drawn The fact is the new Soviet vein- A"lonK neipiui rev n.-nis m me tor each 5100 ol payroll. by a completely untrained hand. nil. itimaiu i mine in uiurr WOIUS. llie new rate Will V nvir inclrnment n nn riis. i master, similarly Shoe Repair Shops Will Be f CLOSED II FRIDAY & SATURDAY, V MAY 30 & 31, 1958 HOBDAY'S SHOE RENEWINC 632 S. E. Cass Ave. II NETTIE MEYER'S SHOE REPAIR 111 I I 91 S S. E. Com Ave. BRUTON'S SHOE SERVICE 412 S. E. Jackson St. HILL'S SHOE SPRVirF I 455 S. E. Jackson St. PAUL'S SHOE REPAIR jjjjj Hiwoy 42 Winston New Industrial Insurance Rates Said Confiscatory On May lath the undersigned effective July 1. the bae rale By Robart L, Diaffenbacher, D. D. (Written for XEA Service) The tone quality of a violin thrills an audience when it is played by a fine musician. But even the finest instrument produces area was total deaths of infants (under 1 vear of aire) was 203 fteci.ne OI 1 per cent n was a a., per cent ... i , . . . m o , c . - p- ,,o;- of Days Creek. . COPCO employee, be charged for new logging opera- P,eaS1ng m the hwd. of . Seventy-one per cent of the infant deaths occurred dtirmfr j "i "(ussians are prepared for uho n,(i r"',c" ")ipment from lions and those with no -experience, The lives of men can s II1R illSL imiiuii VM inc. Another bright spot on the state's records was the de cline in accident deaths. For the thre-month period, 1!)7 accident fatalities were recorded. Of these, 18H were resi dents of the state. This year's fiirure was far below the 226 deaths from accidents durinjr the first quarter of last year and the 212 " in 1950. extensive research into outer spac e. r.ong. inia mean, in.i ii ine We cannot entirelv ati(y our- The investigating olficer takes Work Hard St Sweat Blood I.og- selves hv referring' to Kussia's special recognition of the fact that gmg Co." pays a choker setter equipment as bulky and crude, it was thruuh the resourcetul util- WW a month, it will pay the state while stressing that our own highly iation of his equipment and splen- over $40 a month to insure him for miniaturized instruments represent did couperation that it was possible accidents on the job If it pays a technical achievement of a high or- to remove the victims under very faller $800 a month, the insurance diincuit conditions. , u" 1,1,11 w"" com over mo a monin. ,,r ,,nr s. ieniisis sav flatlv ii. i. .. . ,.H.i i i the opinion of many logging ii,, i nin.i ill i. nnKitieri lo make ..'..., .j .. . k. operators that such rales are con st....... ..u:i. ij f..- a l !,;. , . ,..H.,... ,..,.. lh, ,,,. ,. ..... . .H'ni'i vciiivig avvniciim avvuuniv-ii ni r-, nn.-, . i . several tests ol me at mospnere ana ror h, action of radiation which Americas spin romnared to 95 in 1957. Home accident deaths decreased from fi4 to 48 and occupational accident deaths from 22 to satellites "' ,m, , 19. The only increase was in the area of deaths in Pl)lic i,0' ".VaccomlhmJiit'in' re places (not counting motor vehicles). This figure was up ,ng thi heavy deuce into space to from 29 to 33. jsay that we are concentrating our big rocket effort on long-range mil- Falls Fatal ilary missiles. The Soviet I nion is presumed hy many experts lo be Nearly half the home accident were from falls and oc- 'rom months to perhaps two years , ..!.. .ij. ... , ., . . , ahead of us in the. long-range rock- iiiiicu inuniiy miM'iiK riuei iv irt-i iiii. in me iv v 11 n imum field rateRorv, the number of deaths due to loprtrinir operations once again the Russians have mg what up here in the State of dropped substantially. Onlv four lives were claimed. reminded us-and the world-that J'";.'" W"J' Z'1? .,,",U,CJ' The bleak part of the report deals with communicable '.T.'J1. iither P diseases. The record rose on almost every front. Report- i,,i. There was a time when in San than it Vnows what to do with I.. ( I Dick i Dickinson Deputy Sheriff Douglas County Canyonville In The Day's News (Continued from Page 1) ed cases of communicable diseases increased in most areas. J Thev are in this game to stay, Francisco, as out in the sticks, Examples are tuberculosis, up 7 per cent; whooping cough. "d obviously they know how to .atiiraiy nignt was i Binge .Mgnu . ' . . -w r 1 , . . n hv it -ol anv more. In all but the re- np from 9 to 75 cases; German measles, up S74 per cent p ,,lr leii1Ie Uunchmgs did not tail places, the doors are closed to 2,211 cases; influenza, up 176 per cent ; pneumonia, more represent a quick reassertion of at S o'clock on Friday When than double the 1957 figure. American technical and scientific comes that magic hour, the fac- Contracting of such diseases, however, does not have superiority but simply a demon- tones, the h!"'e e hMh- , . stration of our own staving power ments and the offices shut up shop much significance on a year-to-year basis. It is the long- m, j, dra7n "ui " mati-n of talent and the occupants thereof stream term trend that is important. ',nd resources. "t on the town for a bit of relaxa- All in all the health picture of the slate is one of the in this match Russia has just i Hon. brightest in the nation. It just another Indication that '",'k " 1lh' ,hi ."rL.nr;. ! "Jr-'rr.m , , , wnrlH uill Katrhini the I niteci int? pnipnaininpni spois nrt cram- Oregon IS good place In which to live. r 1 f J; . k0"" med until the wall, bulge on Kri- " that the struggle for the conquest day night. The 'eason for the I of space is inescapably bound up change in bense nights is that with the Kremlin's tireless battle when tne suburbanites get home tiscatorv; that there is just not that much profit in the business, especially considering present log prices. One wonders where the fault lies Will the state of Oregon even tually starve out the newer op erators, leaving all the logging to just those contractors lucky enough to have earned a favorable ex perience rating' Are juries too generous with the state! money on law suits' In the industry the feeling pre vails that the Oregon State In dustrial Accident Commission al ready has more money in reserve If produce pleasing ellects when they are placed in tne nanas ot t,oa. He knows how to bring the best out of people, lie can stimulate a very ordinary person to live a beautiful and productive life. In the hands of materialistic leaders and salamc beings lives can be ruined. .Men become mere producers of noise and confusion when they follow the ways of sin and 'temptation. They actually he come unattractive and frequently appear ugly. We must place our lives in the hands of the Master it our tone is to appeal to others. for the conquest of the earth. Governor's Conference May Be Invited To Oregon For War Bloodbaths 1959 Centennial Observance Getting Closer, Graham Warns Air Force Tells About Supersonic Fighter Bomber HOUSTON. Tex. (AP) The Air Furce disclosed Tuesday that its new Republic Flo.i fighter bomber is capable of flying twice the speed of sound and is armed with the new 20mm Vulcan auto matic cannon. Karlier reports that the plane was capable of twice the velocity of sound and had the new arma ment were confirmed in a news release at an Aviation Writers Assn. meeting here. Republic Aviation Corp . Farm ingdale. .NY., is building the F105 for the Tactical Air Command. the pilot of a rebel Indonesian and delivered the first production JIMMIE'S ELECTRIC MOTOR SHOP Motor Rewinding and Repair Century Motors O Cutler Hammer Controls New and Used Motor! Bought & Sold 24 Hours Service On Most Sizes 3S0 N E Garden Valley Blvd. Free Pickup & Delivery Ph. OR 3-8624 why increased rates? Can anv- one answer these questions? K V. Lincoln 345 Birch Court Roseburg. Ore. Indonesians Say Shot-Down Pilot Is An American JAKARTA (AP The Indo nesian army said Tuesday mttht SAl.KM f The 19.S9 National money to finance it. but ht said Governor Conference mav be in vited tn Oregon in connection with the state! centennial celehration, iov. Robert D. Ilolmei said Tuei riav The governor, at a pre confer ence, aummai urn lat wrck'i itov ernurv conference in Miami. Kla , auch funds might come from the centennial appropriation. Named Ta Committ The goernnr was elected to the executive committee, which plans the program for the annual con- irrences mis committee some aaid the conference' nine -mem Iter times meets with the President on eecutie committee will select state prnhletns the site next winter Holmes said he has not rt ex tended a formal mutation to the conference to hold its next meet- Holmes said he was happy that the itoernors were a Ma to influence- the Armv to change its mind -tiiillt rniliicini' (h ilromiia nt ft.. ing in Oregon because he wants itmnal Cuanl to see whether he is re elected Also, there s the matter of getting He kiiid that w s the hottest item on the conference agenda, and that the governors nnani - mouslv opposed the reduction J "The National Guard." he said, "n needed (or domestic puipoes as well as for mihtarv purposes 1 have ued it, for instance, in SAN KKAVl.SM) iAP - Wine dealing with iI.nmIs " sales increased in the L nit ad Stairs last vear while sales of Wine Sales Up In United States other alcoholic bevera-es de creased, although tne wine in crease -was held hack hv nine monopoly states. lnn W. Mel 'oil , president of the Wine Institute aaid luesdav He identilied the nmnupolv ata'es where beverage stores are state operated as Alabama. Idaho. Iowa, Montana. New limp irgini and Wyoming 'In the last ftve vears in these nine monopoly states twine) sales have decreased H!. p-r cent " Mo Coliv declared "In all other stae of the nation in this Mine period nine sales increased U ft per cent.' Board Chairman Ernest Gallo told the membership meeting that in 25 yean C alifornia wine sales have boomed from H million gal )oni annually to 2i t million gal lon! and "our opportunities are all ahead of us." He reported that the governors weie sharplv divided over piani to extend unemnliu ment rnmn.-n. sation benefits for rvrmm u in'ervene in human h. story have exhausted their benefits SAN KRANCISlO (AP -Americans are too busy watching tele vision to know that the world mav be catching fine, evangelist Billy lira ha m s "Ihe hlcHulhalhs of war are get tinn closer," lira ha in told a ca pacity audience of 16 500 at the i ow Palace this wrek He s.nd outbreaks of violence in the Middle East. North Africa, threat of mil war in France and a tit i Xmcncanism in 1 at in Amer ica are portent that "the noo-e is being drawn tighter around the American neck ' The Rihie predicts that some dav a man from outer space will arrive on this planet That man is Christ. ' Ihe H.ble telis us he will come when the world is in turmoil and alout readv to destrov itself. "We ai e mov ing v er rapidly toward the end ' Man cannot solve h.s own prob lems," he continued "God will bomber shot down by government forces is an American. The Ar my identified him as Allan Law rence Pope of Miami, Kla. The Army said Pope was one of two airmen captured after their V S. built B26 bomber was shot down in flames near Am boy May 18 while attacking Indonesian gov ernment ships. f- ,h. fiMff.-- .;a f Tn up' army spokesman. U. ol. Pirngadie. said both captured to their lawns and their gardens i and their week end accumulation i of do-it-yourself chores they're much too weary come Saturday j night to dress up and go out for a ! niiiht on the town So ... in the Big Towns . . . Saturdav night is coming to b al most luiet Night. model to the Air Eorce Tuesdav. Most Powerful Described as "the most nil one-man airplane i life There business lite They aie es power n the world." the F105 can carry the new nuclear weapons along with clusters of rockets. 4.000 pounds of conventional bombs, napalm bombs and guided and un guided missiles. The General Electric manufac- are changes a in the side of San Francisco's SIGNIFICANT chang- airmen have been hroueht to J- tured Vulcan cannon, called the karta and were held at an undis- world's fastest and most potent closed place He said Pope is .10 machine gun, can fire 6.000 rounds For example In the fir-t three-q.iariers of a centurv of its existence, the life of the citv of San Francisco cen tered aiornd the fantastically won- yeais old and has a wife and two children He said documents found on him showed that Pope formerly was a I S Air f orce lieutenant, and was now with the "Civil Air Trans port, with headquarters in Taipei. the air Formosa " t f a...,-...., i,.. f.: - .--i Opinions DiHer He said he wan'i the federal government to pav all the cost Some want the stairs Ki borrow the money to extend the benefits, and still others want the teilerai government to get out of the un employment compensation field He said he soled a.ainst a reso lution asking the federal toern men! to graduallv withdraw fiom certain federal stale ptograms this resolution was passed. He s:d he opposed the resolu tion because it was aimed at turn m the federal state vocational education program back to ui stales ' I opiosed it." he said "be cause wo need more xocational tdnra'inn Instead of lea of it " The end of Ihe world and the re turn of Christ anion it men nav come tomorrow or it may bo another thousand vears. he s;d At the end of h; sermon .VJ per sons made "decisions for Christ ' Granam said he would announce W ednesitay w he t her h.s crusade scheduled for six weeks and to end June 8, would be extended LOW BIO SUBMITTID MFPFORO r - Forest serv.ee officials repor'ed here that Nor quist Bros Constriction Co of Sweet Home was low b dder at $J4ii) for road constriction won at Crater lake National Park The firm bid tor pav.ng a psrk area aud W4Jt for re bti .td.ng a road inter ei on Ihe work is part of the 'rdeia'. government I park tmprovemer: program the Great Bav came the ships of ail nations Here thev could lit safe at anchor w hue they dis charged true cargoes they had brought and tmn. on the cargoes they were To tan away. The cargoes thev took away in those davs were basically RAW MATERIALS - hdes. .rain, tim-b-r e'e The car.oes t h v BKoli.nr BAGK were finished products That is to sav : 1 hose w ert the davs when the W.st - fitect a v'lH.ONIAL ItFPENPKNi F it sold raw ma terials at low prices and bought hacfc f n.shed products at hiiih pn.c l' seilin prices were low and its buv ;nii prices were high I"-- v.se it had to PAY THE r MUGHT BlM'H M YS. 1 k'oe davs are past. Ihe West now has a balanced e on.uv.v of its own San tr rancisco bav is now Tinned hv factories that ue the raw ma tcr.a.s of the eleven Western 'a'e and rll their protluctt in lie eleven Western states. The iv;sred millions that live around the hav provide markets for South e n Oregon and Far Northern Cal sforn.a A new eroni.mic dav is dawn-t-C in the Far Wet. of Flying Tiser fame. He said Pope admitted hav ing been paid Sin oon by Indonesian rebel leader U. Col", entje Su mual. The other captured airman was identified as an Indonesian. Jan Harry Rantung I S Embassy officials here said they knew nothing about Popt and had not been told of his capture minute The plane is powered by a Pratt and Whitney J75 engine with IS. oou pounds of thruM. Earlier, the Navy announced it would continue training its flede- hnif nilots instead nf mmo rmlnn lm instructors for primary flicht tt amine as the Air Force and the Army do Spring Home Comfort SCREEN DOORS Complete with adjustable Teniion Hingei, Latch and Pulls. Aluminum Screen Doors 9 Ai Low A! 90 And Up 29,95 WINDOW SCREENS Wood or Aluminum WHEELBARROWS GARDEN HOSE NOZZLES SPRINKLERS Andrews Sprinkler Tubes FROM 2.50 AUTOMATIC SPRINKLER SYSTEMS UP Gerretsen Building Supply Co. Oak St ot RR Tracks Ph. OR 2-2636 Road Buildings Allowed In Wildtrncss Area WASHINGTON" (AP Road building will be allowed in an area of the Warm Springs Indian Res ervation in Oreon which has been set aside as a wilderness aiea The Pepaitment of the Interior said this week that the Warm Spunks Tribal 1'ouncil had asked that inads be avowed in order to combat fires and insects damag tng trees In wilderness areas, roads and ti aiis are prohibited The Warm Springs wilderness area was .et aside shortly before World War II It covers about 105 0"0 acres near Mmint Jetlerson. The department said that roads can be approved fr such areas on '.y for forest protect ion and to meet commercial needs o( the Indiana, o ROBERTSON SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ANNOUNCES TEEN-AGE TYPING 8 WEEKS Sttlioni 1953 STARTING JULY 7, 9:00 A. M. h 12:00 P M Monday Through Friday CLASS ENROLLMENT LIMITED RESERVE YOUR TYPEWRITER NOW ROBERTSON SCHOOL OF BUSINESS 630 S. I. Jackion Str.t ORchord 3 7256