I'. Cf C. Mtj.--r'j RUSSIANS.: CZECHS EXPELLED FROAft tMm : ' . I M Js'" X Jt 4 f ' J! Established 1873 10 Pages ROSEBUP.G, OREGOnTaTURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1960 216-60 PRICE 5e j I - - r-i -rW'&s I 1 . V' t-1" v i WVL-jr W - s . rift .ti.-w it" . i - F , w$ff Retaliates For Curb On Castro Travel Limit Grand Jury Files Five Indictments In Session Start Customers1 Funds' Misuse Charged To Boston Broker BOSTON (API Anton E. Horn sey, 55, a partner in a Boston brokerage firm, was charged Fri day night with using and losing more than $500,000 of his cus tomers' money. Homsey was released on $10,000 bail for U.S. District couri Hearing. He was charged with "hypolhe- iin " or borrowing against, se curities owned by customers of Du Pont. Homsey & Co. The Securities and Exchange Commission said the securities in volved later were sold by banks and finance companies from which Homsey had borrowed in sausidc lion of the loans. niiPnnt Hnmspv St Co. was sus pended Sept. 9 from the New York Stock Exchange. Exchange direct ors said the firm "is in such fi nancial condition that it cannot be permitted to continue in business with safety to its creditors." Stock Exchange President b. Keith Funston said in New York the Board of Governors will meet Sept. 27 to consider charges that Homsey, a member of the Ex change, "committed fraud or frau dulent acts by pledging securities of certain customers without their consent." The SEC said it will seek ap pointment of a receiver for the Homsey firm. The Grand Jury for Douglas County reported Friday on actions taken tnus lar, ana returned inree true bills, one not-true bill and two secret indictments. The jury was adjourned until 9:30 a. m. Friday, Sept. 30. to take up unfinished business. Mel vin E. Reagles, Rt. 4, Koseburg, is chairman. True bills were returned against Richard Juinior Smith, charged with larceny of personal property ot tne value ol more man a; Clarence lon Strider, also for larceny of personal property of the value of more than $75. and John Howard Tabor, accused of assault with intent to kill. The not-true bill was returned against Ernest Mattin, of Drain, who had been accused of assault being armed with a dangerous weapon. He had been accused in a complaint of Aug. 21, signed bv Richard Cloud. He had been ound over to the Grand Jury from the Drain District Court. smith. 34. of North Bend, was charged in the indictment "with larceny, Aug. 6, of a walker male hound dog, named Badge", mark ed with a tattoo NVD in each ear, ana a ifea iick teinaie nound dog. namea BonDie '. marked with i tattoo NVD in each ear. They were tne property of Noble Van Dolah, the indictment states. btriaer, 24, ot Keedsport, is ac cused of larceny of currency from Granvel t. Smalley, on July 7. lanor, 4Z, ot Keedsport, is ac cused of assault with intent to kill John Franklin Tapp by shooting at and toward him with a loaded .22 caliber high-standard revolver, with intent to kill Tapp, who was within shooting distance of the re volver. The alleged assault took place Aug. 27. Bids Called For lob On N. Umpqua Highway PORTLAND (AP) The Bur eau of Public Roads today callad for bids on a highway project in Douglas County. Th project calls for construc tion of four miles of grading and bridges on the North Umpqua Highway northeast of Roseburg. It is a key log hauling route. HIGHWAY GROWS WITH WINSTON The shoulder paving and road widening proect on Highway 99 BR through Winston has increased the width of the road nearly 12 feet. Costing about $5,000, the project was designed to improve traffic capacity and appear ance of the road. (News-Review Staff Photo) Winston Paving Work Completed The State Highway Department has just completed a $5,000 should er paving and traffic capacity im provement in Winston. Highway BR 99 has been widen ed from 4 to 8 feet on both sides of the road, from the junction of 99 and Lookingglass Rd. to a point nearly 200 yards past the junction of Highway 42. According to L. R. Chandler, assistant division engineer, the job was the last in this summer's highway maintenance projects. Purpose of these projects, he said, to imnrove traffic capacity. reduce further shoulder mainten ance and to generally improve the looks of roads in populated areas. The department is allotted each year funds to undertake highway maintenance to improve roads, as well as normal upKeep anu ie nail Prnipcts were undertaken this summer in North Roseburg, Sutlv Oakland. Dillard and Win 'tmoci. nroiects are instigated by the Highway Department and completed entirely with their own local personnel. Five Die In Crash After Grid Game; 6th Badly Injured SPRING VALLEY.- Wis. (AP) An automobile carrying six youths home from a high school football game crashed into a bridge In day night, killing five of the occu pants and critically injuring the other. Three of the victims died in the crash, another on the way to a hospital, and the fifth in a hospi tal early Saturday. Pierce County lindersheriff Roy Simenson said the 1953 car was traveling at a high rate of speed when it left t)ic. right side of the road and crashed into the bridge on Highway 29, four miles west of here. Found dead in the wreckage were Lawrence Guise. 17; .Thom as Reis, 18. and Dennis Wollan, 18. all of River Falls, about 20 miles west of the crash scene in northwest Wisconsin. Charles Dopkins, 17, died on the way to a Menomonie hospital. Dennis Rye, 17, identified as the driver of the car. died early Sat urday at the Miller Hospital in Minneapolis. In critical condition at the same hospital was Lynn Gelo, 16, also ot River Falls. Simenson said the six had at tended the River Falls-Spring Val ley high school loolball game at Spring Valley. Given Envoy, Banks Seized HAVANA (API Fidel Castro's government today slapped tight restrictions on movements of U.S. Ambassador Philip Bonsai in Ha vana in retaliation for the U. S. curb on the Cuban prime minis ter's travels during the U.N, Gen eral Assembly. The diplomatic quarpntine capped a series of anti-American measures taken on the eve ot Cas tro's departure for New York. 1. Armed militiamen Friday night seized three American owned banks operating on the is land. 2. The Castro government start ed a new international furore by ordering the expulsion of an at tractive U.S. Embassy secretary, Marjorie Lennox on spy charges. Three other North Americans were ordered expelled on the same charges. They were ldentuiea Mario Nordio, an Italian - born U.S. citizen, his wife, Mary, and Robert L. Neet, another U. S. Em bassv emnlove. Foreign Minister Raul Roa told Bonsai he was restricted to the Havana area where the embassy is situated and to going to and from his residence five miles out side the city. Russian Sea Activity Hints Plan To Shoot Human Into Space WASHINGTON (AP) The un- Khrushchev's- arrival in New York explained movements of six Soviet for the United iNalions General ships in the Atlantic and Pacific; Assembly. are building tip speculation that the Soviet Union soon may shoot a man into space. New details, released by the- IT. S. Navy Friday, show that two of the ships, a lanker and a tug, are standing off the Grand Banks in the Atlantic. That's just where a Soviet sat ellite might pass if it followed the same palli as Soviet rockets in the past. A capsule ejected by such a satellite probably would fall into the ocean near the two Soviet ships. The speculation is that the So viets' may fire a space capsule with a man in it and then recover it in the Atlantic. Such a spectacular space try, if attempted soon, would come on the eve of Soviet Premier Nikila Lane County Child Found Murdered U. S. Also Plant Tst It also would mean that the world wuuld have two significant space attempts in a brief period of tune. The United Slates is preparing lo try shooting a rocket around the moon. The try will lie made between Sent. 22 and 26, while Khrushchev is in the United Sates. Besides the tanker Kokand and the fleet tug F'edotov in the At lantic, the Soviets have four in strument ships strung out in the Pacific. The four ships in (he Pacific could be used as instrument ships to track the satellite while . the tanker and tug could be used lo hunt for the capsule, according to the speculative theory. Town In Alabama Ripped By Storm SYLACAUGA, Ala. (AP) A se vere windstorm some witnesses called it a tornado damaged sev eral buildings, broke trees and caused other damage at Sylacau ga. The storm struck Friday and damaged at least five business firms, broke display windows and tore roots. A poultry lirm was heavily damaged. Eight or 10 houses were damaged. At least one brick house was heavily damaged. Some others had roof damage and broken windows; one house lost a porch. Mickey Cohen Accused Of Income Tax Dodging LOS ANGELES (AP) Mickey Cohen, 47, is under federal indict ment again. He is accused of evad ing S347.O00 in income taxes. The tubby former gambling king pin was arrested on the 13-count indictment at his west Los Ange les apartment Friday and later re leased on $25,000 bond. Cohen, nearly killed in a gang land ambush in the late 40s, served a 3'i-year prison term in the 50s for evasion of income taxes. He has lived in apparent luxury since his release, but claims little personal income. He maintains he has been supported by loans from friends. The federal government called 70 witnesses in a two-year investi gation of Cohen's finances. The goernment says Cohen reported only $2,472 in income for 19.Vi.58. New Strike Threat- Hits Pennsylvania Railroad PHILADELPHIA (AP) The Pennsylvania Railroad, still striv ing for normal operations on the heels of its first complete shut down, was faced today wilh a new strike threat. The Brotherhood of Railway and Steamship Clerks asked its nation al headquarters Friday to begin strike proceedings against the na tion's largest railroad because of what it said was abolishment of 229 jobs in Philadelphia. Southern Oregon Traffic Crash Kills 2 Persons GOLD HILL, Ore. (AP) Two Californians were killed Friday night when their car went through a slop sign and 'was smashed broadside by a truck. The victims were Bernard Ray mond Alaster. 68, and his daugh ter. Helen Calherine Dixel, 36, bolh of Santa Ana. Calif. The driver of the truck. Ralph Edward Bloom, 58, Gold Hill, was not hurt. Police said the truck skidded 72 feet and the car 120 feet before the crash. The accident raised Oregon's death toll in the Associated Press tabulation to 297 for the year and 29 for the month. Charge Specified In a statement issued early to day the Cuban government said Mrs. Lennox and six other North Americans had set up a monitor ing aonaratus in an 18th floor apartment to listen to what was said in the offices of a Commu nist Chinese news agency. The aeencv oflices are in the same building as Mrs. Lennox's apart ment . Mrs. Lennox and Neet were de scribed as go-betweens for a "spy lins'' and the t: S. Embasay. The police claimed to have found 1 in v microphones with fine wires leading lo two transmitters in a bathroom medicine cainnei. The latest moves came as Cas tro prepared to leave for the Gen eral Assembly to charge the Unit ed States wilh what he calls econ omic aggressions against his re gime. The latest seizure represented the takeover of all American banks on the island. The U. S. Embassy was notified by American bank ing sources that interventors. ap parently from the Cuban National Bank, had begun taking over all branches of the First National City Bank of New York, (he First Na tional Bank of Boston and the Chase Manhattan Bank. Financial sources estimated reserves and un divided profits of the American banks at S5 million to $6 million wilh assets and liabilities of many times that amount. Militiamen also were seen enter ing the Trust Company of Cuba, a Cuban-owned bank. Canadians said their banks were untouched. It was not immediately clear on whose orders the militiamen acted in taking over the American banks. But the action duplicated Ihe pal tern of recent months of the gov ernment takeover of three American-owned rubber companies in the Castro regime's march toward to tal control of American-owned property in Cuba. Soviet Paper Brands U.S. Official As Spy For Oil Companies MOSCOW (AP) The Soviet, oil refineries in Stalingrad, Novo- government newspaper Izvestial kuibyshevsk, Syzran and Lla. today accused American In terior Department official of spy-1 ing inside the Soviet Union. It named him as Alexander Gakncr. The paper, edited by Premier Khrushchev's son-in-law, charged Gakner was sent lo the Soviet Un ion as a member of an oilmen's delegation to collect information on oil bearing regions. The -Jivuslia article, as relayed bv Tass. declared Gakner, "who visited the Soviet Union this sum mer as a member of the delega tion of American oil companies, was a spv sent by the United Stales to the U.S.S.R. for collect ing information on oil producing regions of the country." Movements Data Had The account continued: "The delegation, led by William Keeler, vice president, of Philipps Pelroleum Co., visited oil fields in Bashkiria and Azerbaijan and The Weather AIRPORT RECORDS Fair tonight. Partly cloudy and cooler Sunday. Higheit temp, last 24 hours .- . 77 Lowest temp, last 24 hours 42 Highest temp, any Sapt. CSS) 101 Lowest temp, any Sapt ('54) 32 Prtcip. last 24 hours 0 Precip. from Sept. 1 6S Excess from Sept. 1 M Sunset tonight 4:20 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow, 5:54 a.m. Damaging Car Mishap Follows Safety Talk SAN FRANCISCO (AP) It's safer to be lost in the woods than to cross a street, nowadays. Just ask Russell Cone, Los Gatos, op. orator of a pack of bloodhounds. Cone, 39, delivered a lecture on what to do if lost in the woods to a group of Cub Scouts in Pleas, ant Hill Friday, and left tha hall to gat one of his bloodhounds. As he crossed the street, he was hit by a car and suffered frac tures of the pelvis and right leg. Congressman Forfeits Bail On Spree Charge Rep. SEATTLE (AP) Magnusnn. D-W'ash.. bail Friday on a charge of being drunk. Magnuson. 49. was arrested Fridav morning and held several hours. The ball was Gravel, Road Jobs For Wilbur-Glide Highway Awarded The Douglas County Court this week let contracts for gravel stock piling for the start of work next spring on improvement of the Glide-Wilbur highway. Winning a contract to stockpile 45.100 cubic yards of rock on the Bob Franks properly on the North Umpqua Highway was Roseburg Sand and Gravel. Its bid was $76,455. The other contract for 62,000 cu bic yards of rock to be stock piled on the Kohlhagen ranch on the Wilbur-Glide highway was Byrnes Construction Co. of Eu gene. Its bid was $107,100. On the petiliun of a number of lumber companies in Ihe northern end of the counlv. the court decided Don-in si art a two-year imnrovement fnrleiicn ia program on the 15-mile-long road. Alexander Gakner tried by all means to obtain the inlormation of the capacity of plants and oil fields, which were not inciutied in the delegation's program. Besides that he carefully noted the loca tion of Soviet radar stations, air ports and other important mili tary objects." ' The paper published whut it called a "photographic copy of a document lost DyMlakncr which, the paper adds, "unmasks him completely." This document, Izveslia went on, was written on a State Depart ment blank, and contains, among other things, persistent recom mendations to endorse Alexander Gakner's candidature lo accom pany the delegation of American oil workers on its trip to the U.S.S.R. inasmuch as his exten sive background and natural gift edness will permit him to glean much priceless data. The document says: "Mr. Gak ner was granted secret security clearance on Dec. 16, 1954 under EP 10450. l7.ve.stia accused another mem ber of the delegation identified Robert Ehel, of "unseemly tivity" in photographing plants, radio and radar stations and being "particularly interested in missile fuel." KUGF.XE (AP) - The nude body of little 7-year-old Alice i liuise l.ec apparently stran gled wilh her jacket was found Friday in a shallow grave near the bean field where she vanished Aug. 29. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Lee of nearby Dexter. She was apparently garroled with her blue and gold jacket, which was found knotted around her tiny neck. Her underwear, blue pedal pushers, striped blouse and shoes were near the body which lay half buried in a ravine. Sheriffs Deputy Wayne Dillon found the body at 2:30 p.m. a scant 50 feet from a corn field which had been scoured earlier. Dillion decided to go over the area again. Alice vanished when she left her mother's side lo go to an other part of the field to get a sandwich. thief Deputy Hcrry Mallow said Alice was apparently stran gled shortly after she disap peared. An autopsy has been scheduled. The shallow grave was scratched in the bank of a ravine leading to one of many stagneant pools in the area. A 1 Till-m ii n search crew was organized when the little girt was reported missing. They combed the area for three days. One Vague Clue Several suspects and dozens of leads have been eliminated one by one by Ihe sheriff's olfice line vague clue remains. A man wilh shiny shoes was seen in the field about the time the girl dis appeared. Pickers remembered hnn becatise shiny shoes arc out ot place in a dusly bean field. -For Mrs. Lee, the search ended wilh a brief show of grief. She wept but quickly recovered. Mr. Lee, a railroad section foreman. was at work when deputies noti- tien Mrs. i.ce. Earlier Mrs. Lee had said she believed her daughter had been kidnaped and killed. There are six older Lee children. Lumumba, Aide Of Reds, Said Killed ! I rnpm nvn i r ih f'ONT.O (API The Soviet Union ignomin iously withdrew from the Congo to day, its efforts to swing this new African nation into the Communist orbit blocked at least for now. As Communist officials flew home, Patrice Lumumba, the fiery young politician on whom they had pinned their hopes, vs reported missing, perhaps dead. Reports swept this capital that Lumumba had been slain, but there was absolutely no confirma tion. Any story of the deposed pre mier's death would have to be handled extremely carefully by the government to avoid provok ing Lumumba's supporters in his native city of Stanleyville. tine report said Lumumba was shut trying to escape after being arrested by troops under the emerging strongman. Col. Joseph Mobutu. There was some support for this story from a source close to President Joseph Kasavubu, but details were lacking. Another report had it that Lumumba may have taken refuge in the Soviet Embassy in the hope of slipping out with the Russians. A total of $148,000 was set aside for the improvement work this year. The iob will involve Dotting an jail , oil mat on the present gravel road for-ito make travel bv log truck pos- feited when he did not appear forjsible from the timbered areas of Alunirinal Court hearing. In Washington's primary lastj Tuesday Magnuson won the Dem-j ocratic renomination in the 7th Congressional District. the North Umpqua In another bid opening, Ihe court received identical bids for provid ing 182,000 pounds of steel for bridge reinforcing. The Alaska He Inld Ihe Seattle Times: "I had I Junk Co. and Woodburv and Co. been working hard on Ihe cam-i each entered bids of $7,188 53. The paign and was celebrating win-1 two companies are commonly own- " i art ning the election.' Oregon Man Steps Into Path Of Auto; Killed EMIGRANT GAP, Calif. (API Robert Gillette, 71. Cascade Locks, Ore., was killed Friday night as he stepped into the path of a car on U. S. Highway 40 near this Sierra community. Highway Patrolmen said Gillette had parked his car and gone across Ihe highway for a cup of coffee. As he started back, he an parcnlly didn't see the oncoming car driven bv Lawson W. West- lake. 55. Soda Sorings. Calif. Patrolmen said Wcsllake could not avoid hitting the man. U.S. Flag To Fly Over Canal Zone On Order Of Ike decks Also Ousted Mobutu's coup d'etat put an end lo Soviet penetration in the heart of Africa, at least for the time being. First the Czech flag came down. The Soviet banner wilh the hammer and sickle followed at 11:50 a.m. Minutes later the silver-haired Soviet ambassador, Mikahil Yak oviev, drove in the sweltering heat to board a gleaming white Soviet aircraft which took off for Mos cow. Czechoslovak Ambassador Joseph Virius and an embassy staff of 11 had left earlier in two small Soviet planes. The Czechs were lo stop first in Stanleyville to pick up several score Soviet "technicians. " Some reports said Lumumba had fled lo Stanleyville in the eastern Congo. Others said he left for the seaport of Matadi at the mouth of the Congo River. "Bye-bye, see you again in another place," Soviet newsmen grinned weakly at Western cor respondents wailing at Leopold ville Airport, The Soviet departure was pre ceded by Yakovlcv's vain effort to see Kasavuhu in an apparent effort to revoke Mobutu's order expelling the Communists. But Kasavuhu himself had counter signed the order and refused to see the Soviet envoy, ' According lo some reports Lu mumba had been shot by a Con golese army roadblock while flee ing. None of these reports could be confirmed. Col. Mobutu told newsmen: "I don't know where that man is." The Soviet Union sent 11 llyu-sliin-14 planes into the Congo to assist Lumumba in his war against political foes in Kasai and Katanga provinces. Also sent to the Congo by the Soviet Union were 100 Soviet trucks for hauling troops and sup plies lo the army. The Czechs reached the airport far ahead of Uie Russians Friday. They left their embassy, where all papers had been burned in a small incinerator in the back yard. Douglas County Gets Boat License Money A check for $4,302 has been re ceived by Douglas County as its share of the license fees on boats according to county treasurer Bert Laurance. This is the second payment re ceived by the county from the state Marine Board for boat li censing fees. Bolh payments com bined thus far total slightly over $8,000. Another payment for the year is expected, Laurance said. O&C Timber Sales Earnings Will Be To Support Assn.'s Recreational Program WASHINGTON (AP) President Eisenhower has ordered Pana ma's flag flown in the U.S.-con-I rolled Panama Canal Zone as "visual evidence of Panama's titular sovereignty" over the zone, Ihe White House announced today. The flying of the Panamanian flag in lie zone a 10 mile strip running about 50 miles through the Republic of Panama has been the center of a hitler con troversy for years. There has been a dispule also over the ques tion of Panama's sovereignty over the Canal Zone. In Congress this year there were bitter speeches denouncing reported plans of the Eisenhower Administration to allow tne fly ing of Panama's flag in the zone on the theory that it would rec ognize Panama1! sovereignty over the area some congressmen con tend this sovereignty docs not exist. Under Ihe President's order, Ihe flag of the Republic of Pana ma will be allowed to fly in one place only in the Canal Zone. It is a pubiic plaza called Shalcr's Triangle, which is between the Panamian Republic's legislative building in Panama City, and the Tivoli Hotel in the Canal Zone. R.ds Ask UN Protection The exodus took a dramatic turn when the Soviet Embassy asked the United Nations to pro vide protection during the night. This morning when Congolese troops turned up to enforce the evacuation order the United Na tions troops refused them entry. The Congolese commander then turned his troops over to the U.N. command, and together they guarded the Soviet departure. The reports about Lumumba's disappearance varied widely. One report said he had slipped out of his official residence Fri day, was arrested, then shot while trying to escape. It was reported, but not con firmed, that Ihe shooting had oc curred while Lumumba was being taken to prison outside Leopold-ville. By GEORGE CASTILLO i pressure from a population of peo-' years, however, one-third of this lion development programs, Jack- d: A.a.n Erfiiftr i pie wno nave more time ana mon-; amount nas oeen sei asine mi . sun b,suh- ev and want tn take advantse of rnH r,instrurtion. maintenance. The Association of O&C Counties n,P out-of-doors. i reforestation, research and reciea- has approved a plan to use part i Similarity Cited Uon protects. of the earnings from O&C timber j n,e long-range program will be I In past years, about $750.0)0 sales for extensive development of : jn cooperation wilh the Forest from controverted lands went into recreational facilities on roresi i service which manages the contro lands in the 18 western Oregon j verted lands, and is similar to a counties which belong to the as- pmram which the counties ituli sociatinn. i ated this year with the Bureau of The decision was made at a meet- Land Management, ing of the association this week., financing for the program will It was attended by County Judge come from a portion of O&C funds V. T. Jackson and commissioners ! earmarked for recreational devel Huron Clough and Elmer Metzger. opmrnls and other activities ap- Judge Jackson heralded it as a proved by the counties. By law. great step in the development of the 18 O&C counties get 75 per I the stale. He said the decision was; cent of gross receipts from O&C made because of the continuing timber sales. For the past several Association President Darrell j did George Castillo Slated For News Assn. Speech PORTLAND (AP) The an nual meeting of the Oregon News paper Publishers Association opens here today. Scheduled speakers include Dean Charles T. Duncan of the University of Oregon School of Journalism and Forest W. Ams den, executive editor of the Coos Bay World. There also will be a panel discussion conducted by George Castillo of Ihe Rosehurg-.News-Review. Tom Gerber of the bv the association before work can j Canby Herald, Ken Johnson of l.o,n ,,n ihi.m hni ihp resolution i Ihe Salem Capital Press and Bill Charles Lynch Resigns As Welfare Board Head The Douglas County Welfare Commission is temporarily with out a chairman because of the resignation of Charles Lynch. Lynch resigned his chairmanship which he had held since January in 1959, to accept a position with an electronics firm in Southern California. Lynch was originally appointed to the Welfare Commis-. sion in July of 1957. A temporary chairman is px pected to be elected at the next meeting of the commission, sched uled for Sept. 28. Appointment of a permanent chairman will be bv Gov. Mark Hatfield some time in October. Jones of Clackamas Counly add ed: 4'V,e feel that the recreation industry is of increasing import ance lo the economy of the stale, Ihe fund annually and almost all and that anything we can conlri was spent on access roads. Ac- hule Inward Ihe growth of our third cording lo Forest Servic e figures, ! largest industry is an inveslment however, increased earnings from lor the present and the future." these lands should mean an an-! Details on how it will alfect nual return of around l'i million ' Douglas Counly have not yet been dollars during the next five years. worked out. The association's res (five the Forest Service the Moray To Be Left With the additional funds, the mad program can be continued and still leave sufficient linaneing to enter inio exlensne public retrea-i olution authorized a special com mittee to work with Ihe Forest Service in developing specifie plans for various recreation projects. Approval N..ded The projects must be approved right to consider any areas in western Oregon national forests. The parks need not be limited to O&C lands, as is true on BLM-ad-ministercd land. Meanwhile. Ihe BI.M has already started working on plans for re creational development on its lands wilh funds from the O&C sales. It is using $70,000 this year to launch the program. Jarkson savs the most likely places for development this yeari nr. in ine counly uy no di.. im Wasmann of the Eugene Register- Guard. Second Cuban Airliner Seixed To Satisfy Debt NEW YORK (AP)-A second Cuban airliner was seized today at I'llewild Airport to satisfy a SS7.80t claim by Harris & Co., a Miami advertising firm. Two Queens County deputy sheriffs were on hand when the with about two dozen pas sengers aboard, arrived at Idle Levity Fact Rant By L F. Reizonstein Faced with scarcities , of needed funds, top campaign managers of both major politi cal parties ore holding out their tin cups to the general public. If donations are inad equate, there might be tha alternative of tapping that in exhaustible cornucopia of tha parks on Smilh River and either, wild t 4:?fl a.m. alter t non-stop 'oxpayers money, doled by Rock Creek or Lanion ureek. itiigni irom Havana. ipuons weirara ooaras.