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

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    2 Tha Newi-Review, Roiaburg,
U. S. Marines Bored By Quiet
Life In Lebanon's Capital;
Mosquitoes Only Enemy
BEIRUT (AP) For the U. S. universal attraction of candy.
Marines the Lebanese situation is
"slrictly no sweat." j
By and large they are hot, bored
and puzzled.
.Most have only a vague idea
why they are here. I
I'erhaps tne nest summation oi
the Marines' attitude came from
Platoon Set. Clarence Kelly of Car
lisle, Pa. "Saipan, Iwa Jima and
Korea and now this," he observed
with the resigned shrug of a man
to whom the fates have not been
kind.
Where else are the front lines
marked with a rope across a
All over Beirut you can find peo- The men themselves admit they
pie picknicking, swimming or justjnevcr had " Sood.
sitting ana gossiping, me oniy iru
ly busy people are the marines.
Like combatwise veterans,
many of them arc working like
mad, Improving positions as if they
expected an attack almost any min
ute. Conduct Exemplary
They probably are the best be
haved Marines in history. To dale
not one has been embroiled in a
fracas with a civilian. The fact
that some units have not been paid
lately may have something to do
with this.
Wherever the Marines are, they
usually are surrounded by chil
dren, some well dressed, some
cniite ragged
For the youngsters there is tha
U. S. Warns Of Irs
'Atomic Capability'
(Continued From Page One)
anesc army anti-sniper patrols
was described by U.S. briefing
officers as an effort to improve
liaison with Lebanese army forces
in an clfort to halt sniping at
aircraft and Marine guards.
At least 16 planes have been
hit by nl!e or machine' gun fire.
No injuries have resulted. The
flight path into Beirut airport
takes planes over rebel lerritory.
Meanwhile. Jordan has made a
romplete diplomatic break with
Nasser's TJ.A.R. The Foreign Min
istry in Amman announced the
break at the same time King Hus
sein's government received a 12'A
million dollar shot in the arm
from the United Stales to aid it
over economic hurdles in the
present crisis.
Some 1.400 more American
Iroops landed in Beirut, bringing
he total Mi Lebanon to aooui u.suu.
The new arrivals brought in the
first heavy artillery as well as
rooks, supply and maintenance
men that indicated the United
Slates might be getting ready for
a long stay.
The troops were troubled by mi
nor harassment but there were no
casualties. Pro-Nasser rebel snip
ers took potshots at U.S. Marines
guarding strategic spots in Beirut
and the Marines fired back. The
rebels also aimed small arms fire
at planes. A soda bottle filled with
gasoline and rigged with a timing
device was left with one Marine
unit and exploded, but no one was
hurt.
Migrant Farm Worker!
Mistreated, Charge
(Continued From Page One)
Vtlfi in the year ending Feb. 28.
That is only 1 per cent of the
state's total assistance expendi
tures. Some 1.500 migrant families got
help, but 40 per cent of these
families were on the relief rolls
for one month only.
The state Board of Health Sur
vey reviewed health and hygiene
problems of the migrant workers.
The report said sewage disposal
facilities were unsatisfactory in
more than half the labor camps it
investigated.
Of the 190 camps checked. .13
were reported in good condition,
M in far condition, and 32 in poor
condition.
Tha interim rommitlee has tak
en no action on the surveys.
Lookout Construction
Bids Due In August
Tha U. S. toit.t Service will
open bids Aug. 5 for erection of
a prefabricated forest lookout
house and tower at Grasshopper
Mountain about 33 miles northeast
of Tiller on the South I'lupqua
District of the Umpqua National
Forest.
Present plans are to ferry ma
terials for the station by helicop
ter some V miles from Ihe look
out site. Foresters estimate that
several hundred dollars will he
saved over parking the materials
to the sile.
The Createst
llolufiiblr
When John heard ol
the worka ol Chrial,
he sen) hia diaclDlea
t ...l :, ,
id jsaui, woo repueo:
Go ahew John the
Ihlnaa which ve do
Mat. 11:2-4.
CP!
UllM.'l n :TaVlil M
J ILVWMWi 5
Ore. Mon. July 21, 1958
In the dock area it is not tin-
usual to find a dozen kids trailing
after two or three self-conscious,
grinning Marines.
The worst enemy the Americans
have encountered so far has been
the mosquitoes.
Cpl. Kenneth B. Tucker. Melrose,
Mass., insists he saw one fly by
carrying an 81mm. mortar tube.
"If we can catch a few and train
them, we'll use them for sentries,"
he said.
But it's still the most luxurious
war the Marines have ever attend
ed. They even have ice delivered
to outposts to cool drinking water.
Court Of Nations
To Displace War,
Bar Assn. Urge
COLOGNE, Germany (AP)
The president of the American Bar
Assn. appealed today for a new
international system of courts so
nations can go to law instead of
to war to settle quarrels.
Charles S. Rhyne of Washington,
D.C., spoke at the opening of the
seventh biennial conference of the
International Bar Assn. More than
100 lawyers attended the gathering
of 500-pius delegates from 42 coun
tries who assembled in the 500-year-old
Guild House.
Rhyne pointed out that the basic
principles of law were common
throughout history and were inter
nationally accepted but thus far
had been applied mainly within na
tional borders. The world commu
nity has only one court, the Inter
national Court of Justice at The
Hague, "the most unused instru
ment for peace in the world today,"
he said.
New System Needed
"The world needs a new inter
national system of courts to apply
the rule of law in deciding dis
putes between nations so as to
eliminate resort lo war as the ul
timate mechanism for settlement
of international disputes," he said.
"Peace is the dominant desire
of mankind," he continued. "There
now exists a state of mind among
the peoples of the world immediate
ly receptive to progress in this
field.
"When the people of the world
are fully cognizant of the potential
hack of the idea of guing to court
instead of lo war they will demand
and we will gel that system."
Weekend's Traffic
Dead Totals Eight
(Continued From Page One)
plunged down a 40-foot bank near
lleppner.
Another traffic victim died Sat
urday from injuries suffered in a
Friday crash. Donald K. Doerfler,
45, Salem, died in a Salem hos
pital. He was injured when a car
failed to make a turn and crashed
Into a mail box on a highway near
Salem.
A collision on Highway 30, two
miles west of Boarriman In Uma
tilla County, killed Philip II. Pfci
fer. 36, Vancouver, Wash., Sunday
night. Pfeifer's wife and two
children were hospitalized at Pen
dleton, the wife in serious condi
tion. Tvo other Tragedies
A 10 year-old boy from ancou- j
er, Wasn.. drowned in the Pistol
River in southwestern Oregon Sat-1
urday. The boy, Neil Kolousek, I
who lives with his mother, Mrs. j
Ferris Kolousek, at Vancouver,
was visiting his father. John Ko-
lousek. With other children of the
area he went wading in the river, :
and stepped into a hole. !
A fire swept through a two-story i
j house n Portland Saturday and
I killed Albert Demar Smith, 30, j
Portland.
Oregon Woman Chosen
President Of Rotana
HELENA. Monl (AP) - An
Oregon woman is the new national
president n( Rotana. a women's
service club. 1
She Is Mrs. Georgia M. Kayler
of Mc.Minnville, elected president
as the oiganization ended its an-j
naul convention here Saturday
night.
Three other Oregon women also
were elecird to national posts
Laura Karris of Salem was
named a second vice president.
Eelected members of the hoard of
control were Martha Chichester of
Princvilb and llattiebelle Simon-1
son of Pc rtland.
Story Ever Told
. WAtt Vli7:.,
J V'fiVST lAt
VS -Wv?i?
'n
r t mj
; R
Negro-White
Love Movie
Plan Snagged
Photographers Stoned,
Routed Manager Calls
Off Advertised Show
WETUMPKA, Ala. '. Cars
blocked the gates of a drive-in
theater which advertised it dared
to display a movie last night show
ing a romance between a Negro
man and a white woman.
A Montgomery advertise report
er said some 75 cars arrived at
the Dixie drive-in at 8 p.m., short
ly after it started showing tha
movie "Island in the Sun." An esti
mated 200 persons milled about the
gale, but many of them were spec
tators. A man holding a shotgun sat in
one of the cars blocking the gate
while other men stopped prospec
tive patrons. One of those halting
persons approaching the theater
near here said he was from a
White Citizens Council.
Shortly after the demonstrators
arrived, the power line to the drive
in was cut, and the picture was
not completed. The men then start
ed allowing the 15 to 25 cam of
patrons to leave.
In the darkness the demonstra
tors tried to drive cars into the
(heater from fields along the side.
Employes firing shotguns into the
air turned back the cars.
Show's Plan Canceled
Theater owner Max Singleton
and his wife drove out of the drive
in through a field, and were chased
by Ihree other cars. They went to
a nearby house and telephoned of
ficers. The theater has no phone.
Singleton was quoted as saying,
"We will not altcmpt lo show the
show again for our own protec
tion." The (healer had advertised:
"This is the one that is banned
all over the South. While we dare
to show il, we do not endorse it.
Make up your mind about seeing
a.
The drive-in owner was report
ed lo have received telephoned
threats against showing the movie,
which stars Joan Fontaine and
Harry Belafonte. Singleton told the
newspaper his employes fired snot
gun blasls to freighien away two
men who came lo the theater early
tiunnay in a car witn, covered li
cense plates.
Photographers Stoned
Sheriff Lester Hnlley said dep
uties who reached the scene about
9:30 p.m. reported Iherc were no
crowds outside the theater .He said
he had advised Singleton earlier
against showing the film.
Advertiser nhotogranhcr Richard
Boone, 18, said the crowd threw
rocks at photographers and a
member of the crowd struck him
and exposed his film. Another
newsman reported he was warned
lo lake no pictures. Another photo
grapher said his camera was taken
from him. the film exDosed and
me equipment returned.
Hnlley said except for the photo
grapher being struck he had re
ceived no complaints, and no
charges have been filed. Wetump
ka is about 14 miles northeast of
Montgomery.
Allowable Timber Cut
For Douglas Boosted
(Continued From Page One)
the annual sustained yield
capa-
cuy oi ine u&c lands.
The original estimates ware
based on cruises made in Ihe
li)30's. Modern tochniriues hased
on photographic methods are the 'en's division and since 1953 has
basis for Ihe new estimates. : been assistant chairman and head
Heath said overcutting will not of lne wo""'" division,
be permitted exrept in emergency1 she wa graduated in 19l!8 from
salvage situations. , Wellesley College and received a
ii.. i.,.i ,i. ,i i i i master of arts degree from Co
He noted that sale of salvage ilmlbia jn ,q43
material not included in Ihe in-; " '" 'J-
venlory was responsible for the n -j . n-
fact that timber sold in the fisr.il trane Resident Dies
fear emiing June 30 exceeded the'
eslimale.
i The fifth older called for a rut of
1 892.200.000 board feet. Offered for j
! sale in the last fiscal year were 1
nu.iu.ism. ut this, 780, 737.000 lai Here r rulay night two hours;
board feel were sold. ' alter his car ran off the road and (
The original 1935 order set thei"ru('li bl'ie abutment. ,
allowable oil at .sss Tun onn hna,-,i i State police said the man appar-'
leet. The latest order provides for
a cut of 7H9.3iki.OO0. i
Plane Ruins Yield Two
Bodies After 4 Years
SEATTLE (AP) Bodies found
in the wreckage of a light plane
hmh in Ihe Cascades were iden
tified Miuitav as those of Eric
.M totes, Hamilton, tint., and his
wife, who vanished four years ami
on a flight from Yakima to Van-
rT:ur: ' - . .
."". "vi.i.iiiii. oiieiior oi
me Mate Aeronautics I onimission.
sai l ground cres recovered the
,. ,,, ,,-, ,cr to r, aierl Press tabulation.
the King ( ounty coroner.
Coles. 58. was vice president c r I w
and general manager of the ap.ien't9 Delaying Voting
paraius division of l ansdian We st
inghouse, Ltd.
The plane disappeared April 12,
1954
VfM0': tins ro ivmvint wir
Ml 1 n p,iia IMF PfP IBOKI liM ?l
ino ia it, im io imi louont
Garden of Communion
Garden of Pioyer
. Mil u .
r . vi ii i
Garden of Flowers
Goiden of Meditation
h ".PI Pl'll'l,
C I M Hi... in
Btihyland Two
'.ti u-Jr !i!i
Second Addition
ffl Ml 1-1
Rosrhurg Memorial Gordens
p, ,., , 1,1.1! ,ptt)1WMl
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rSfcr .vA.v-.
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J- "L
Celol Boyar
President of Turkey.
Meeting in Ankara, Turkey, are these chiefs of state of the remaining three Moslem mem
bers of the badly shaken .Baghdad Pact. Iraq was the fourth Moslem member of the
Baghdad Pact. Great Britain is the other member. The Shah of Iran and Pakistan's Mirza
are expected to return to their homelands soon. All three expressed thanks to President
Eisenhower for his quick action in sending the Marines to Lebanon.
Ford Foundation
Fund Has Three
Years Yet To Go
NEW YORK (AP) The Fund
for the Republic, nslablished by
(he Ford Foundation with a treas
ury of 15 million dollars in 1952,
says it will have spent all its
money three years from now.
The fund, which operates inde
pendently, was set up to defend
civil liberties.
A four-million-dollar program,
announced by the Fund Sunday,
leaves an uncommitted balance of
$817,693, said Dr. Robert' M.
llutchins, president of the Fund.
The program, a three-year study
of six major institutions and their
impact on individual freedoms in
the United States, is an extension
of the fund's "basic issues" project-.
The six studies are the individ
ual and the corporation, the in
dividual and the trade union, the
individual and the common de
fense, religious institutions in a
democratic society, mass media
in the free society and political
parties, pressure groups and pro
fessional associations.
Woman Aide
Of GOP Named
To Federal Post
WASHINGTON (AP) President
F.isenhower Monday nominated
Bertha S. Adkins, now assistant
chairman of the Republican Na
tional Committee, to ,bc under
secretary of Health, Education
and Welfare.
s;ha umiilH snreeerl Dr. John
Alanson Perkins, who resigned j
March 1 to return lo his post as
president of Ihe University
Delaware.
Miss Adkins gives her age as 52.
She is a native of Salisbury,!
Md., anil slill maintains a home
there. She was dean of women at
Western Maryland College from !
1934 lo 1942 and for four vearsl
after that was dean of residence
at Bradford, Mass., Junior Col
lege. She has been national Republi
can committeewoman for Mary
land since 1948. Since 1950 she
served as executive director of the
GOP National Committee s Worn
After Antn ArrlHint
BURN'S (AP) A Crane, Ore.,
man Percy Everett Heinz. 46
died in the Harney County Ilospi-
drove across the oncoming
traffic lane directly into a bridge
abutment on the Crane Highway,
' five miles east of here.
I They said they had no idea how
fast Ihe car was traveling. About
10 feet of bridge planking was
i rminH intirin Hie par innnrnntlv
! sheered off by the force of the im-1
n.i-t
1 lleiiu was alone and there were'
no witnesses, police said !
lleinz is survived by his mother j
., (...' h,ihr. k.,-.'
ih brother. Marion of Soring-i
''' !
T,e death bronchi the siiie'si
ir,fc f.i.i.iv inll m . ih. !
year and 21 for July in Ihe Asso-
On Reciprocal Trade Bil
WASHINGTON (API The
Senate is delaying final voting onflow
the administration's reciprocal
trane mil until late Tuesday or
Wednesday.
Advocates of the bill had hoped
to pass it Friday night. But a
compromise was worked out to
lay aside the trade legislation to
lake up the defense reorganiia
ion measure, which passed 800.
1 'niter Ihe i'iimnrniiA tha
trade hill will he taken tin' again
Tuesday tinder a limitation of de
bate arrangement
Three Die In 600-Foot
Tumble On Mount Blanc
CHAMONIX. France ( AP) -M.irysette
Angel. .11. champion
siucr oi r ranee, died taturdv in
a mountain climbing accident. Her
husband. Alpine guide Maurice
Clarvl. and her cousin, a print, i
Uo were killed when they fell1
uiio an u e ahi 800 feet deep
while sealing the Italian sida of:
Mt. Blanc. i
Baghdad Pact Leaders
I1U.'.
Mohammed Reza Pahlev
Short of Iran.
Republican Party
Members Warned
Against Apathy
SALEM (AP) Oregon Republi
can leaders, opening (heir fall
campaign with a two-day central
commitiee meeting here, Friday
warned party workers lo beware
of apathy or the GOP would lose
in November.
But James F. Short, Salem, un
opposed for reelection as Slate
Central Committee chairman, pre
dicted that if party members
"get out and work" the Republi
cans would regain control of stale
offices despite events of recent
months "which have put the party
behind tie 8-ball." '
The party leaders heard
speeches from Douglas McKay,
chairman of the American section
of the International Joint Commis
sion; Marion Weatherford, Johnny
Johnston . and Paul Geddes, the
congressional nominees.
Mark Hatfield, the party's nom
inee for governor who is still on
his honeymoon, sent a message to
the group which was read by La
mar Tooze, his campaign chair
man. Hatfield urged that the party
make "firm, aggressive, articu
late moves in the net three
i I
-4
I $
1Z Li:
months or we shall find ourselves I Manned Flight Te Follow
out of ccntention for ihe net 20 1 prof. Marcel Schein of the
ye?,r,?,' . I University of Chicago, a co-spon-
We are charting a course notlsor of the ONR flight, said the
just for an election but perhaps forjfjim record from 130,000 feet could
f. .?.enS;'a'lon hcr i Oregon," constitute a milestone in cosmic
Hatfield a message laid. I ray study if the equipment is
Both Short and Hatfield said 1 recovered
that the party is "woefully short j Weather permitting, the manned
of funds, and Hatfield said "We i flight will be launched Wednesday
cannot uverlook the importance of from a deep, open pit iron mine
at least minimum financing in the
forthcoming campaign
'j Children Getting
Tnn Pn.neL, IV-i.
1 w 1 "-"jr,
C x il
ApcrT TTdinS
BIRMINGHAM, England UH A
Brilish diet expert is advocating 1
more girui coniroi. i all, lean Dr.
Hugh Sinclair says too many of
Britain's children are too fat.
He told the British Medical Assn.
Vniinirelpre a rn hvinn tl
tions for heart and circulation dis- sphere ' tne Mrlh
eases in later life. ;
The trouble is children get too
much milk and too little exercise,
Dr. Sinclair asserted Jle exDlain-
ed:
"We send a bus to take a child
' a quarter of a mile to school while
I unlimited quantities of milk 'are
! poured down his throat before he
returns nome lo sit in iront of the
it-icwsiuii, pernaps smoking a cig-1
arettc.
"If he survives and noes inlo
industry, his activity will become
'less and less for more machines
will be doing his work for him.
"The underfed hrat playing in
the streets is likely to be more
healthy."
I Iraqi To Continue
; Producing;, Shipping Oil
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Iraqi Embassy said Saturday its
government earnestly intends to
continue producing and shipping
" . regular
customers
throughout the world.
Thl appeared to be a word of
reassurance from the new revolu-j
I'onary government to the West,
who depend heavily on Middle
K" Petrol"""-
me statement saia me an
nouncement is being made "be
cause of the great importance of
oil lo the world economy and .. .
In the national wealth and the eco
nomic and industrial , interests,
both national and international."
The government, It said, has the
"earnest intention to continue pro
duction of oil and its supply and
to us estaousned markets
throughout the world."
Little Cirl Rescued;
Accused Kidnaper Held
AZTEC, NM. (AP)
A little
girl snatched from I
bicycle in
"8u--1'0J'.'i-k.".
Saturday announced the arrest of
1-ia.tcv inmT iiikmi emu roi
a man on charges of kidnaping.
Scott J. Werner, special agent
in charge of the FBI office in
Denver, said that Omi Ray Eid
son, 42, was arrested in Farm
ington, N M Eidsnn was ar
raigned before a I S commis
sioner at Shiprock, N.M , and re -
manded to the custody of the I'.S.
marshal in lieu of S.iO.000 bond.
Werner said.
The FBI agent said F.idson. who
Is not married, cam from Tvler.
Tex., and has been living In Farm-
ington and Ouranm.
The kidnaped girl was picked
up by a motorist near Artec
1 4L - P U
. i t!3
j v . a
I vA gtj
Iskander Mirxa
President of Pakistan.
Cosmic Ray Data
Objective Of Navy
Balloon Flights
MINNEAPOLIS .(AP) 8 the
Navy sent a balloon and scientific
equipment up 130,000 feet for cos
mic ray data Sunday and plans
to put two veteran space explor
ers, 10,000 insects and a television
camera 16 miles over the earth
later this week.
An altitude record for film-re
cording plastic .balloons was set by
me one launched here with a 220-
pound cargo of cosmic ray re
search equipment.
I he instruments, however, were
jettisoned to earth and have not
been found. Near Forsyth, Mont.,
the load was automatically
leased and dropped by parachute.
A spotting plane Iraced the orange
and white 'chute down to 10,000
feet, then lost it in a haze.
Representatives of the Office of
Naval Research and General
Mills, Inc., builder of the plastic
bag, continued their search for the
balloon between Forsyth and Liv
ingston, Mont., Monday.
A General Mills spokesman said
beacon signals being transmitted
from the payload stopped when it
reached 10.000 feet. He said It was
possible the cosmic ray plates
may have landed on a mountain.
near Crosby, Minn. The plan is
for Navy Cmdr. Malcolm D. Ross
and M. Lee Lewis, a former Navy
balloonist, to spend about 24 hours
in a sealed, aluminum gondola
lofled to an altitude of 80,000 to
84,000 feet, just short of the record
they set last fall for two men.
The huge, gas-filled bag also
will carry a small television cam
era. TV signals will be trans-
n,.'tled b,ck. 10 earlh and relayed
over a nationwide television net
work (NBC).
The flight will he the seventh
in a series of Navy strato-lab
voyages into the upper atmo-
Beauty Contestants Give
Public Initial Eyeful
LONG BEACH. Calif. Ml The
public hit had its first close look
at the entrants in this year's Miss
Universe contest snri tha 70
i beauties drew whistling and hand-
clapping approval
The occasion was the official
pageant parade, viewed by an es
timated 230.000 persons Sunday.
Each pni rode on her own float,
pushed by Army and Navy re
servists, who appeared to enjoy
their wor' despite a brilliant sun.
The contestants wore bathing
suits and some of the fair-skinned
girls came away with slight sun
burns. Preliminjry judging begins to
morrow night when 15 finalists will
be chosen for the Miss U.S.A. title.
The winner of that contest will be
named Wednesday. The Miss Uni
verse winner will be acclaimed
Friday night.
Summit Meeting Now
Opposed By Neuberger
WASHINGTON (AP) Holding
a Summit meeting while the
United Nations is working on the
Middle Last problem would be a
blunder. Sen. Richard L. Neuber
ger (D-Ore) said Sunday.
Neubereer said the Leastie of
Nations was wrecked after World
War I by the big powers takina
matters into their own hands.
"I believe it would be a blunder
If the United Nations were humili
ated in the same way," he said.
Sen. Wayne L. Morse (D-Ore)
also commented on the foreign
crisis. He said the Central Inteli
hgence Agency, the U.S. espionage
jorganiiation, missed the boat on
tha mHk.Wm l ,U 1
I Western government last wk
"Our intelligence was just plain
lousy," Morse said in advocating
an overhaul of the CIA.
Ex-College Instructor
Dies Of Bullet Wound
1 SHREVEPORT. La. (AP) Dr
T. D. Keen. 71. retired head of the
I Centenary College nhvtici Hmrt.
(menu, died Saturday night of a
i self-inflicted bullet wound. In 1936.
Ihe gained prominence for floating
i hydrogen balloons 40.000 feet above
' Shreveport to record cosmic radia-
lion and air pressure. He n a
'native of Holland.
Hospital News
Mercy Hospital
Admitted
Surgery: Mrs. Hugh Frelwell,
Roseburg.
Medical: Mrs. Ora Hosford, Mrs.
Maude Lemon, Roseburg; William
Correll, Glide; Frederick Marier,
Winston; Rachel Wixson, Myrtle
Creek.
Discharged
Mrs. Roland Cox, Sutherlin; Er
nest Chilbon, Terre Haute, Ind.;
Mrs. Harold Tegan, Mrs. Gale
Madison, Oakland; Mrs. Clarence
G r u n s t. Canyonville; Richard
Moore, Winston; Mrs. I. R. Low
man, Camas Valley; Mrs. William
Bowman and baby, Mark Allen;
Donna Snyder, Pete Bauer, Rose
burg. Douglas Community Hospital
Admitted
Surgery: Malcolm Schelin, Win
chester; Albert Radcliffc, Mrs.
Raymond Smith. Mrs. James Car
ter, William Phillips, Roseburg.
Medical: Frances Brady, Wins
ton; Mrs. Bernard Anderson, Mrs.
Chester setters, Mrs. Paul Arra
smith, Mrs. Sherman Harris, Mrs.
Paul Trent. Mrs. Hal Farnworth,
Roseburg; George Selby, Dillard;
Daniel DeWeese, Wilbur; M r s.
Timothy Newman, Oakland; Mrs.
Willis Benton, Sutherlin; Mrs. Ray
mond Helms, Idleyld Park.
Discharged
Reuben Train, Robert Clark.
Mrs. Herbert Dorman: Margaret
and Carrie Norton. Mrs. Galen
Mathews, Allen Beckman. Mrs.
Richard Bicknell, Earl Willard,
Harold Freeman, Mrs. Joseph Bu
ford, Mrs. R. E. Camp, Mrs. Har
old Jones and baby, Janet Lynn;
Dusty Hurd, Rose Anne Lingen
felter, Walter Samuelson, William
Smith, Airs. Wallace Spires. Mrs.
John Hess Jr. and baby, Karrie
Lee; Mrs. Clarence Martin. Rose
burg: Joseph Mode, Oakland; Mrs.
O. V. Faker and baby. Tammy
Mary, .Vyvtle Creek: Mrs. Leon
Arne and baby. Pamela Sue, Blue
River; Mrs. Donald Kobel, Suth
erlin; Fred Carlson. Umpqua;
Jack Davidson, Tenmile;- Mrs.
Robert Talbert and baby, Jack
Bill, Lakevicw; Mrs. William Jcf
fervs, Winchester: Eddy Michael
McCallister, Winston.
Only Opponents
Give Arguments
To Idaho Bill
BOISE, Idaho (AP) All the
arguments in a booklet to be sent
by the state to Idaho voters will
be against a proposed "right-to-work"
initiative.
The Idaho Freedom to Work
Committee passed up its chance
to have its side written in the
booklet, to be distributed at state
expense.
Fred Smith, executive secretary
of the committee, explained his
group thought it would have to
file its petitions bv June 20 in or-
dcr to have its arguments included.
That would have laid the names
I open to public examination, and
Smith said the group was reluc
tant to subject initiative petition
signers to possible pressure to
withdraw their name's before the
filing deadline July If
Two groups opposing the meas
ure filed arguments Friday. The
deadline for opposing arguments
is next Tuesday. The deadline for
arguments in favor was June 7.
Secretary of State James Young
said he knew of no law requiring
early filing of the petitions in order
to include arguments for the pro
posal. Baited Summit Meet
Bid Will Be Rejected
(Continued From Page One)
inside or outside the UN. The
British government, particularly,
is under heavy pressure from its
Labor Party opposition to get into
a summit meeting with the Rus-
I sians.
Propaganda Trick Seen
j Diplomats here said it was ev
I ident that war fears generated
! by the U. S. and British troop
' landings in the middle East had
created a receptive attitude for
the shrewdly conceived summit
proposal which Khrushchev made,
j The Soviet premier asked for a
I five-power meeting, including In
i dia, in Geneva on Tuesday to re
' solve the crisis and save world
! peace.
Administrative leaders took the
view that it was essentially a
! propaganda maneuver such an
i early meeting being out of t h e
I question but they ruefully ad
mitted that it was a .maneuver of
such force and imagination as
Washington has not been able to
produce during this crisis. So far
the West has been losing the pub
lic opinion battle in much of the
I world.
Khrushchev appeared to be vul
! nerable lo counter attack on only
one point. He proposed to bypass
i the United Nations.
Secretary of State Dulles and
British Foreign Minister Sclwyn
Lloyd agreed they would use the
U.N. approach for a counter-proposal
and suggest the possibility
of a high level meeting of the
i Security Council.
Chimpanzees Flee Zoo,
Enjoy Costly Binge .
OCEAN PARK. Calif. - Two
chimpantees. Bob Roy and Tonga,
escaped from their cages at the
new Pacific Ocean Park pier yes
terday and downed a gallon of My
Sin perfume worth $2,300.
The perfume 6S per cent al
cohol was on hand to scent the
waters of Neptune's Fountain at
the entrance to the pier.
The two male chimps couldn't
be found but their owner wasn't
too worried.
"They're around somewhere
sleeping it off." he said.
PRUDENTIAL LIFE
INSURANCE
HORACE C. BERG
Special Aetut -Room 301
ecitic luildina
OH. OR 1-7411. Ru. OR 1711
Translation Defers
Return Of Captured
Flags To Japanese
PORTLAND (AP)-Experts are
translating Japanese characters
inscribed on World War II battle
flags so the banners can be re
turned to relatives of the Japanese
soldiers from whom they were
captured.
A program to return the flags
was started by veterans of the
41st Infantry Division, the outfit
Radio Tokyo chose to call "Mac
Arthur's Butchers" when it was
fighting in the South Pacific
jungles.
The division association wound
up its national convention here
Sunday after collecting five battle
flags from delegates as a starter.
Other veterans promised to send
in their flags when they returned
home.)
Samuel B. Huntting, Lake
Grove, Ore., association secre
tary, said the banners will be
turned over to the Japanese con
sul here after the writing is trans
lated, for transmittal to Japan.
The flags carried the name, and
address of the soldier who owned
it, as well as prayers for well
being and messages from loved
ones.
In the final business session
Saturday, delegates re - elected
Joseph Poshka, Chicago advertis
ing executive, as president. Lloyd
E. Bryant, Portland, was named
first vice president; Glenn O.
Stockdale, Billings. Mont., second
vice president, and Dr. Kenneth
Binkley, Seattle, treasurer.
Radio Carried
By Postman Has
Patrons !n Tizzy
KILLEEN. Tex. I Killeen
postmen find themselves treated
like afflicted persons these davs.
Women scream at them. Chil
dren stare. And they hear expres
sions of pity.
The trouble started when post
man Kenneth J. Rogers bought a
portable radio. It straps to his belt
with a wire running to an ear
plug. The assembly resembles a
hearing aid.
That is what most people think
it is.
Eight other postmen quickly ac
quired sets.
Leroy Biels says most people
talk louder to carriers with the
radio sets.
When a carrier reaches to his
belt to turn down the radio's vol
ume, housewives think he's trying
to turn up his hearing aid volume
and begin screaming their mes
sage to help him understand.
Children stare and their mothers
rush from the house saying, "Ju
nior, don't say a word and don't
stare."
Most carriers say they listen to
music during the morning and
baseball in the afternoons. The
postmen say they tend to walk in
time to the music.
Carrier Robert Stubblefield has
one solution to post office deficits.
"If radio stations played fast
march music all day, it would save
money. We would walk our rounds
much quicker," he said.
Sutherlin Teachers
Receive Promotions
Two Sutherlin teachers have
been promoted, one of them to a
newly created position.
Mrs. Rudy Holloway. Nonpareil
School teacher for the past five
years, has been promoted to the
new position of elementary curri
culum director. She will be re
sponsible for the curriculum
through the junior high school and
assist- in Ihe coordination of the
secondary and elementarv work.
Jewell F. Pyles, Nonpareil sixth
grade teacher, has been appointed
I to nil iiirs. Honoway's former po
sition of principal of Nonpareil
School. Pyles has had several
; years experience as a school ad
' ministrator in Oregon and Wash
I ington. Mrs. Charles Sikstrom,
News-Review correspondent, re
ports.
Glide Kiwanians Slate
Annual Red Butte Feed
Glide Kiwanis Club members will
converge on Ihe Forest Service
Red Butte lookout post Tuesday
night for an annual family picnic.
The members will meet at the
high school at 6 p.m., Mrs. Arthur
Selby, News-Review correspond
ent, renorls. Red Rutle lookout i
j located in the Little River Dis
trict.
DON'T KEEP FOOC
THE HARD WAV I
'CAN' FOODS BY
FREEZINC THEM!
U' downright old-foshioned to
con foods ovr o Hot tov.
Just clton, pack and store in
your own large free rer-locker
here in our plant. Coll tor de
tails right away.
DOUCLAS LOCKER
AND STORACE
111 SI Svkoi A.... OR 3-4211
raw