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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1958)
The Newt-Review, Roseburg, Ore. Tuei. July 1, 1958 Two Girls Run Away With Baby Brother To Prevent Parents Adopting Him Out Brewing Firm To Publicize Douglas Co. Fair The 19.'8 Douglas County Fair I w ill be among numerous events to be publicized during the summer via out-of-state highway signboards soonsored bv Blitz-Weinhard Co.. hUN VALLEY Calif. Hi "We , time for the (heft or an outboard Portland brewing firm, are taking Uaby Mike away. We: motor. And he has been in ill! The company said an estimated won't let you give him away." health lately. ! 10 million people in neighboring Two teen-age girls left this note ue shook his head sacllv.' "It !tfs and in large cities such as with their parents Sunday and clis- can-t be done," he said. "The boy ,y York, cl!,lc?g0: Angeles appeared, taking with them thelha5 E0. to go" land Dalla W1" oe told about lne 20-month-old brother they thought 'fivic events and the 1959 Oregon their parents no longer wanted. , Centennial.. Monday a patrolman found San- . . r i O J , iVt.Z'ehl ?T dra Hiliyi6Pand her sister Cicn- MrS. E. V. Bounds ZViTe cH 'witnl Xetent elT.ky.Bv.h asHteng Officer recogniied them from At Myrtle Creek nods on U S 101 at Kurcka U.S p IWI Mr,. K. V. (Pau.me, Bounds, . Boffiffi Sandrf explained to a polieewom-ldied at her home north of Myrtle ' be announced. Highways 20. 26 a " We had to leave and lake Creek ilonday afternoon. a" t B'"e a"d U.S. 99 at Long- Baby Mike with us. Mama and Mis. Bounds was born in Kan- n,oia. t ,ni h. .j Daddy were going to adopt him Ls city JU , June ; 1 1,, n'i:... ....... i ii,. inii' !,,., i- ." .... . J. i. nrr.,.. cl,..' isnasta site, in Sun Valley and found out why the parents had talked of putting the baby up for adoption. No Othtr Answer "I can't see any other answer," said Lyle Hill, 44, a carpenter. "1 can't get a job. "Counting Mikey. we have eight kids and we live in a house that was made for no more than two people." Kent on the one bedroom home is due again Thursday. The current week's rent was paid by the Bu reau of Public Assistance. But the bureau says it can't give the Hills relief payments because Mrs. Hill and the children only recently ar rived in the area from Toledo, Ohio. , "1 had to split the family up hack Ihere and farm out the kids," Mrs. Hill said. "We didn't want to do it again, and we thought we'd let just the baby go." Chlldrtn Taken Homt The three grimy, weary children went home in a police car. The girls said they had spent the night in an all-night movie and trudged through the hills, taking turns carrying their brother. "1 don't car now," Mrs. Hill declared. "We'll keep him." She told a juvenile officer: "We could moved to Myrtle Creek 117 years ago from South Dakota. She was a member ol the Myrtle uecK Christian Church, Grange and American Legion Auxiliary. In addition to her husband, Ed mund, she is survived by one son, Jerry D. Bounds of Phoenix, Ariz.; two brothers, Wallace Miles of Portland and r'rank U. Alilcs of Oakland, Calif, and two grandsons. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday in the Myrtle Creek Christian Church. Interment will be in the Myrtle Creek 100F cemetery. The Itev. Earl Sample of Eugene will officiate, (ianz Mor tuary is in charge of arrangements. Aged Sutherlin Man Djes At Local Hospital August Simonetle, 87, died in a Hoseburg hospital Saturday after noon after a lingering illness. He was born in AUgust of 1873 at Akron, Ohio. Sinionclte came to Oregon as a young man and home steaded at Vale. He moved to Suth erlin in 1930 and was never mar ried. The only known relatives is a ncice who lives in West Alice, Wis. Graveside funeral services will make out all right if my husband ; be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the and I had jobs. We're willing to work. But Hill has other strikes against him. He is on parole from San Quentin Prison, where he served Fair Oaks Cemetery. The Rev John Gintcr of the Sutherlin Meth odist Church will officiate. Stearns and Little Mortuary is in charge of arrangements. Multi-Million Dollar Bridges Dedicated Today By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Two new multi-million dollar Pacific Northwest bridges were dedicated Tuesday; one across the Columbia River between Portland and Vancouver, the other across the Spokane River in Spokane. The new interstate bridge across the Columbia was constructed parallel to the old span there. The new structure will be used while the old one is being renovated. Sometime early in 190 both spans will be in use. The old bridge will carry northbound traffic while the new one will handle only south bound traffic. State Rep. Julia Butler Hansen, chairman of the Washington Leg islative Interim Committee on Highways, was named to officially dedicate the new span. Governor Robert D. Holmes of Oregon designated Julius Jensen, Oregon state director of planning and development, to represent him. In Spokane. Gov. Roscllini said (he new Maple Street toll bridge in that city will handle an esti mated 3'i million vehicles during 1959, even though it will be the sixth bridge across the Spokane River. John Fox To File Libel Suit Against Sherman Adams WASHINGTON (AP) - Ex publisher John Fox said Monday he intends to file a libel suit against Sherman Adams, Presi dent Eisenhower's top aide, for one million dollars. Fox said he also has instructed his lawyers to sue for a million dollars apiece: Publisher Robert B. Choate of the Boston Herald and Traveler; the newspaper's lawyer, William J. Dempsey; Bernard Goldfine'i atto r n e y s, Roger Robb and Samuel Sears; and the Boston Herald-Traveler Corp. itself. Fox said before a House Com mittee he expects the suits to be filed in Washington and Boston Tuesday. He did not specify on what specific counts he would sue. Fox, a Boston lawyer-businessman, has been testifying for three days before the House investigat ing subcommittee headed by Rep. oren Harris (D-Ark). The com mittee has been looking into the relations between Adams and Goldfine. Fox pictured the demise of his own former newspaper, the Bos ton Post, as due to pressures ex ertcd from high in the adminis tration and with which Choate and Goldfine were connected. Adams has disputed various portions of Fox' testimony both in and earlier appearance before the subcommittee and in state ments issued from the White House since, Goldfine is slated to take the witness stand Wednesday. Asked before TV cameras about the grounds for the lihel suits, Fox said: "Ali the individuals and the newspaper made thorough ly seurrilious and libelous state ments about me in writing." In The Armed SERVICES Bobby F. Daggs, aviation struc tural mechanic third class, U.S.N., has departed Long Beach, Calif., aboard the -support aircraft carrier USS Princeton as a member of Helicopter Anti-Submarine Squad ron Four for a six-month tour of duty in the Far East. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Daggi of Oakland. Lucky Luciano Linked To N. Y. Crime Meeting WASHINGTON (AP) Senate rackets probers heard testimony Tuesday that mobster Charles (Lucky) Luciano, operating from Italy, may have stage-manned last November's ill-famed "crime convention" at Apalachin, N.Y. Martin F. Pera, undercover agent for the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, made the allegation in testimony before the special inves tigating committee headed by Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark). Police long have suspected that the meeting was a gathering of an American "grand council" of the Mafia, called to try to carve up peacefully rackets left un bossed by the murder last sum mer of racketeer Albert Anastia, a reputed Mafia big shot. Pera has testified he believes the gun ning of Anastasia was Mafia work. Pera said the Mafia in Italy is torn by strife in which there have been 14 murders since 1955. He said this presumably has caused repercussion in the American underworld. He told the committee he sees "great significance" in a meeting in Palermo, Italy, which he said brought together Joseph (Joey Banana) Bonanno, Carmine Ga Icnte and Sant Sorge identified by Pera as Luciano's Italian top lieutenant. Pera said Luciano, who was deported from the United States, is under such tight police surveil lance in Italy he often sends Sorge to represent him at meetings with American Mafia mobsters. The committee has described Bonanno as a Mafia mobster who was at the Apalachin meeting, but did not at once give further iden tification of Galente. Pera said the Palermo meeting was just before the gathering at Apalachin. "The sequence of events is very significant" in indi cating a relationship between the two, he said. Four men alleged to have at tended the Apalchin meeting were on hand for committee question ing about whether the meeting was linked to a national under world syndicate. Sack Look Is Out For Fall, Fashion Designers State COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Pre diction: Football coaches won't be the only ones biting their nails this fall. Fashion designers may do a bit of gnawing, too, but one thing appears certain: the sack dress won't be around. The first thing for fashion designers, anyway has come. More than 1,300 women from 17 states, wives of delegates to an in surance conference, were permit ted a peck at the fall fashion line Monday. About half of them took time to express opinions in answer lo the question: "Would you like to wear the clothes you've seen today?" There were 266 who said no. Another 253 said they liked what they saw. And 229 weren't sure: they like some, shied away from others. Claims Sack Out The women had heard Barbara Littlehale, fashion coordinator for a Columbus department store, de clare: "The sack is definitely out for fall. Chemise may have become i dirty word, but it's still with us . . . in a more wearable style. "The traDeze is still here, big ger than ever. And the new style to watch is the empire a high- waisted design with emphasis on the bosom." Just so the male will know what's still with him, the chemise is rather straight all the way down, narrow across the nips, and fuller almost baggy above the waist. The trapeze comes down from a narrow top in a kind of triangular shape, getting fuller at the waist and even more full at the hem. The empire is high-waisted, em phasizing the bust. Many women who vetoed the new fashions seemed to be thinking in terms of the feminine figure. One said: "Anyway, it's a won derful time to be pregnant." Eisenhower Administration Goes All Out In An Effort To Beat Foreign Aid Cut TEllfAS Don't risk a tire failure! 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In a signed editorial in the July issue of FBI's Law Enforcement Bulletin, Hoover expressed resent ment that "an unscrupulous few, through studied insults and calcu lated distortions, would besmirch and disgrace this world-renowned record of democratic achievement. Hoover mentioned no names. However, his editorial followed a recent TV interview in which Cleveland industrialist Cyrus S. Ea ton said that Adolf Hitler at the height of his power "never had such spv organizations as we have in this country today." Eaton described tne rui as one of a number of agencies engaged in "snooping, in informing, in creep ing up on people." After the broad cast. Hoover said Eaton's state ments about the FBI were "vi cious and completely untrue." The FBI director wrote in the bulletin that law enforcement has constantly improved in efficiency, "yet, all the time, it has remained undeviatingly loyal to the princi ples of freedom and justice." Building Permits For June Total $104,574 Here Newport People Ponder About Bear On Beach NEWPORT, Ore. (AP) Local residents had a 600-pound polar bear carcass on their beach Tues day and were wondering about its origin. The dead bear probably washed ashore sometime last weekend, along with the carcass of a cub. The tide later carried the cub back to sea, but the larger bear remained on the sand, attracting spectators. Jack Marks, director of the Portland Zoo, speculated that the bears were swept out to sea in a 1 storm, probably on an ice cake that melted when it reached ; warmer waters. The the animals i probably drowned and were car-j ried by currents to tne Oregon shore. Polar bears are native to the Bering Sea area, more than 2,000 miles from the Oregon coast. "How far south does an iceberg flow?" Marks asked when told of, the incident. "This is one for the oceanographers." Marks said he doubted that the , bears ever had been in captivity. ; The carcasses first were noticed Sunday by a small boy. He re-1 ported his discovery but no one paid any attention until Monday, when a motel owner, Mrs. Flora Lauritsen, saw the bears on the beach near her motel. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Eisenhower administration went all out Tuesday in an effort to beat a 600-million-dollar cut. in foreign aid funds. The White House said President Eisenhower is so concerned that he intends to open his news con ference Wednesday by reading a prepared statement on the mat ter. Secretary of State Dulles told a news conference the cut made by the House Appropriations Commit tee poses "a grave threat to the security of the United States." He said Eisenhower may bottonhole Congress members and appeal on nationwide radio-television for res toration of the funds to the for eign aid appropriations bill. Republican congressional lead ers, after their regular weekly Plea Of Innocence Entered To Drunk Driving Charge Edward I.ayfait McAlexander, 48, of 4208 Hooker Rd., Roseburg, pleaded innocent Monday before District Judge Warren A. Woodruff to a drunk driving charge. The court admitted him to $500 bail. He was cited about 11 p.m. Saturay night on Highway 99 near the Sutherlin cutoff by state police. A 20-year-old student, working this summer for the forest service out of the Steamboat ranger sta tion, was fined $20 and costs by Judge Woodruff for falsely repre senting his age. Juri Jalajas was cited for purchasing liquor at an establishment on 99BR last Satur day. He said he was 21. A complaint against Maurice Southwick, 30, Camas Valley ranch er, alleging malicious destruction of an animal, was dismissed by Judge Woodruff Monday for lack of evidence. William E. Mask claimed the rancher maliciously destroyed his dog on June 9 with a .22 caliber pistol. DIES OF INJURIES I.ee last car, SALEM (AP) - William Ecker, 49, Salem, injured January when struck by a died Monday at a hospital here State police said Ecker was hit by a car driven by Vernon Jesse Sumner, Portland, on Highway 99W near Corvallis. meeting with Eisenhower, quoted the Pesident as saying the cut would jeopardize U.S. foreign pol icv. Meanwhile in the House cham ber, Rep. Otto kE. Passman ( D La) opened debate on the foreign aid money bill by expressing hope House leaders and "top echelon of ficials" in the admini stration "would relent their pressure tac tics and accept an amount based on need." Passman, head of the Appro priations subcommittee which made the cut, said the United States is not in a position to "dis sipate its wealth. All the money in the bill, he said, must be bor rowed because there is no Treas ury surplus. In the meeting with GOP con gressional leaders, Eisenhower urged their support for overturn ing the House committee's action. The President's appeal was re ported at a news conference by Senate GOP leader William F. Knowland of California. Eisenhower originally asked Congress for .$3,942,000,000 in for eign aid funds for the new fiscal year starting this Tuesday. In an authorization bill, which the Pres ident signed Monday, that amount was trimmed by about 300 million dollars. Now the House Appropriations Committee, acting on separate leg islation to provide actual mutual security funds has voted to hold the amount lo $3,078,092,000. Suzanne Hammons Passes At Winston Suzanne Rachelle Hammons, 14-monlhs-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John D. Hammons of CI rams Pass, died at Winston Sunday. She was born April 5 at Grants Pass. Surviving besides her par ents are, a brother, John Michael Hammons of Grants Pass; pater nal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey D. Hammons of Grants Pass; maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard R. Hanson of Winston; maternal great-grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Ferguson of Concord, Calif. Graveside funeral services are scheduled for 2 p.m. Wednesday at Hawthorne Memorial Gardens in Grants Pass. Arrangements are in care of Long and Orr Mortuary. Sheriff Returns Woman To Face Larceny Charge Sheriff Ira C. Byrd and a deputy returned Monday night by plane from Prosser, Wash., with a 20-year-old Hoseburg woman wanted here to face a charge of larceny by embezzlement. She is Colleen Mane ruller. 1443 SE Mill St., who left the city driv ing her fiance's new car about the n...k hii,iino .-,;i. tnr time a carnival pulled nut of Rose- the month of June totaled $104,574 ! bm'8 for Kennewick, Wash., Byrd compared with $44,530 for the ... same period last year. l ie complaint was signed tiy Li- Twenty-lnree permits were issu- ". i cuuit, "mni is ed for the total valuation figure. ln "r was laK!-n o.oui June is. One new dwelling permit for theL,Bil1 was set Dista-mot Jxidtie Catholic Church rectory valued at ' a rrcn A. oodruff at $1 .000. Miss $40,500 was issued. The rest were, tl'llf"r. " sla'ed for arraignment for repairs and alterations. sometime today in May, 37 permits were Issued '""c "" "v . for a total valuation of $135,888. P''ce las weekend on a teletype nf il.i. mnnni SKSifin wnt fnr warrant issued by Douglas Conn- six new dwellings and $22,500 for ,v' "nd. wa hel1 the nearby one new commerical building Building permit valuations near ly doubled during the first six months of 1958 compared with the same period in 1957. Total valua tion was S475.9t9, compared with last year"s $245,113. clarence N. Currier, city building inspector, said. county jail in Prosser. Six Douglas Resident! ' File For Bankruptcy Six Douglas County residents filed for bankruptcy recently in U.S. District Court in Portland. Thev are: Floyd Dean Smith. 292 SE Fow ler St., Roseburg. who luted debts of $18,174.85; Rollan Mansfield Bnttan, Myrtle Creek, $6.51928; Edward Lewis Belcher, Glendale, $5,402.36; Ralph Erwin Fish, Win ston. $1,470.86; Lawrence Eldon Fowler, Canyonville, $5,576 85, and i,,rnri mr Relatives Visit Glide Residents George 622.08. T. Pollock, Riddle. $2.- By MRS. ARTHUR SELBY Mr. and Mrs. Earnest G. Henry of Glendora. Calif., were weekend guests at the home of Henry's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mis. Clarence Ware. The visitors were on a vacation trip to Port land, points in Washington and to attend the Calgary rodeo at Cal gary. Canada. Itivai Hotpitil Mary Shelton was released from Douglas Community Hospital last Friday having been confined since June 19 for treatment of injuries suffered in an auto accident when she was pinned beneath the over- Mrs. Miction takes her daughter to Roseburg to have the cid burns treated by her phvsician 1r I (. Walton nt RirlHU FIREMEN CALLED f,trmpr rociHent nf T.liHo viti'teri Roseburg rural firemen put nut a tr,n,u s'.hiv vh mn .nm. small grass fire .Monday morning panied by Mr. 'and Mrs. Medric La the area ol Calkins Road and i hnnelle ln nf Ridril. Groves Lane. r, Bonnie Sliffler and three No damage was reported in the'.h fire which took five minutes to put ,n. w-.-k-nd. She has been a resi- out. Two trucks answered the call dent of the community for 15 vears: which was received at 11:20 a m. ,mre tne dealn o( ner husband Cause is unknown. asi March. .Mrs. Sliffler wanted to be near her relatives. Lois llarvie. student at I.ewn and Clark College, hat accepted employment at Marv's Drive-in during her summer vacation .Mrs. Carl Messing and daugh ters. Mrs. M. C. Talrott and three children and Mrs. W. C. Talcott and two children, spent last week end at Yachats. We Will Be CLOSED Friday, July 4 BEAUTIFUL FUCHSIA BASKETS burg. 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