2 The Naw.-Rtviaw, Ronburg, Ore. Mon., Sept. 19, lMouiLal Tftknrrn tt .' ,; , WIIISUI 1VWUVVW industries Given ' rAv ri Tfi n M "A J TIRING ROI.E The star of the sound movie being shot In Brecksville, Ohio, is supposed to be silent. It's a new model Goodrich tire. When the test car makes what would nor mally be a screeching turn, the camera studies rubber distortion while the tape recorder takes down the screech, If any. Engineers on tho project say that a wider, tire ihoulder gives 25 per cent longer wear as well as silence. Large Turnout Greets Candidate By TONY VACCARO DES 1I01NES (AP) Vice President Richard M. Nixon said today Republicans in economic matters have their Democratic opponents licked "on every index that points to progress." Addressing a Republican rally here, Nixon said party workers can campaign proudly on the rec ord of President Eisenhower's ad ministration over the past 7V4 years. He told the Republican rooters that all the devices and methods the Democrats would use to cross the new frontiers of the years ahead "are as old, as outworn as a model T 1'ord." His informal talk, at a break fast meeting, preceded a flight to Sioux City, Iowa, for a farm speech, after which he will fly into Minneapolis to wind up the first lap of his campaign, able to campaign so vigorously. Iln told the workers it was not enoueh for the Republicans to elect a president in November, hut the must concentrate on the election of senators, representa tives, governors and stale legisla tors "to build a solid lounuaiioii for the oartv from here on out. I "There is no reason whatsoever fnr Reoublicans supporting our iirl.pt (hi full to be in a defensive or defeatist position," he said. "I want you to know that we can all feel immensely proud of our rec ord in both domestic and foreign policy." Earlier, chatting with another group of Republican farm offi cials, Nixon explained how he is Cengrtst Need Emphelixed tlx said when he was a boy, his father had a tractor he operated in the lemon Eroves of (Jahlornia He said his father told him "when I was a baby, I would cry so loud he would hear me over the noise ftf that tractor. That's how I can speak so loud. Nixon's voice at times hat been husky and he has looked a bit tired during his campaign lour in Iowa. Bids For Farm Vot A touch of seasonal hay fever, which put a slight huskincss in his voice, did not mar his obvious ly high spirits over the big turn outs that greeted him on a motor cade through several cities in this normally Republican slate. - He made his big bid for the Mid west farm vote at the 21st annual plowing contest at Guthrie Center in west central Iowa. There, before a crowd of many thousands, he outlined his propos als for cutting down the $10 billion, price-depressing farm surpluses. He said he had given much thought to his program, contem plating heavy new shipments of sur plus commodities to the hungry abroad, and creation of strategy food reserves across the country. His coin-growing, shirt - sleeved audience applauded perfunctorily until he got going on his favorite theme: that he and his vice-presidential running mate, Henry Ca bot I-odgc, are best qualified by experience to deal with Soviet Pre mier Nikita Khrushchev. In Des Moines, he gave a re sume of his farm program on a 30-minute telecast, then turned to the peace Issue, on which he usual ly gets lirs greatest response. Iliu news secretary. Herbert G. Klein, said he would hit hardest for Births Mercy Hospital SHOCKEY To .Mr. and Ins. James K. Shockey, Bbx 1243, Rose burg, Sept. 9, a son, Clay Brian; weight 6 pounds 6 ounces. . FUMMKRTON To Mr. and Mrs. William I Fummerton, Rt. 1 Box 620, Roscburg. Sept, 9, a daughter, Maureen Ann; weight 9 pounds 5"i ounces. LEWIS To Mr. and Mrs. Lon nie M. Lewis, Steamboat Ranger Station, Sept. 11, a daughter, Lain a Helen; weight 6 pounds 8 ounces. RAKER To Mr. and Mrs. Dclbcrt E. Baker, Star Route. Ten mile, Sept. 11, a daughter, Klherta Kav; weight 6 pounds lOMi ounces. FRASIER To Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Frazier, 344 W. Military St., Roseburg, Sept. 13, a sun, Jody Scott; weight 10 pounds, 3 ounces. . McKAY To Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. McKay, Rt. 3, Box 870, Roseburg, Sept. 14, a son, Harold Albert; weight 9 pounds 3 ounces. nt Hint ikkiir asain in SlOUX CllV today, while repeating the details of the farm program. He always gets a big hand when he says that, under President Ei senhower, the nation "got out of one war" and avoided others, and that he and Lodge are dedicated to keeping the peace "without sur render" and the extension of free dom around the world. Pledges Of Aid GREENVILLE, S. C. (AP) Sen. John F. Kennedy called today for election of "an administration that cares about farmers 48 months out of every four years and not just for the two months of an election campaign." Kennedy, opening a one-day swing through North Carolina in his Democratic presidential cam paign, renewed his attacks on Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson and what he called 'the Benson-Nixon program." - He said his Republican oppo nent, Vice President Richard M Nixon, "has been trying to cut Mr. Benson out of the herd. "But." he continued, "herds have a way of sticking together, and in any Republican herd there will always be a Benson. And that's not what the American farmer wants. What he does want it a Democratic secretary of agri culture, a man who has the basic qualifications for the job." Qualifications for a secretary of agriculture, he said, must include a determination to balance supply and demand, reduce farm sur pluses, ensure fair prices for farm products, and work for develop ment ol rural areas. In rural de velopment, Kennedy said, em phasis must be put on increased programs for soil and water con servation, flood and drainage con trol, and development of forests, fisheries and transportation. Kennedy, speaking in the heart of the tobacco belt, said: "1 pledge myself to the continuation of the tooacco program to be alert to opportunities to improve it and to work to expand tobacco markets overseas. ...We shall search for ways to get all major commodities under a piogram as good as the tobacco program. His visit to Greenville opened a heavy schedule of campaigning in North Carolina. Other leading North Carolina cities were on the Kennedy sched ule before his return to Washing ton tonight. Kennedy will test his crowd- pulling power in the state after what he regards as highly suc cessful forays into New Jersey and Pennsylvania. His motorcade ap pearances in those stales drew what local Democrats described as record throngs, and in Maryland Friday night 1,800 turned out to hear him at a $100 a plate dinner near Baltimore. North Carolina has become a battleground with backers of Vice President Richard M. Nixon claiming they have a good chance of adding the slate's H electoral voles to their column. Adlai K. Stevenson carried it against Presi dent Eisenhower in 19:6 by a little more than 15.000 out of about 1,165.000 votes. Kennedy told Soviet Premier Ni kila Khrushchev in his Maryland speech that if American voters are not going to be influenced by what he does or doesn't say about cither candidate in the presidential con test. Addressing his remarks to Kru shchev, who will arrive Monday a meeting of Hie United Na Simulated Space Trip Seen Aid To Marital Counseling SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) Air i said his knees got wobbly near L' ..;.,;.... .... . ...... (. .i : the end. i . j . . T I The two men, both with consid- 30-day simulated trip into the erabe jet lng experience, take wild blue yonder, didn t solve all i more tests today then leave space travel problems but it visit their lamiues Scientists Seek Protection plugged a few holes. It might even help marriage counseling, one expert at the School of Aviation Medicine sug gested. Capt. William D. Habluetzel, 36, lngleside, Tex., and Lt. John J. Hargreaves, 30. Castle Air Force Base, Calif., emerged Thursday after 30 days, 8 hours and 21 minutes in an 8x12 foot pressurized sleet tank. Hargreaves lost eight pounds but said he could have gone an other 30 days. Before leaving the cabin they hung a sign inside saying: "Nev er volunteer, always submit an application." Lt. Col. Don Flinn, chief of the neuropsychiatry branch, said im portant information was gained in selection of space crews. There are two very special people with their background and training," Flinn said. "We know now that a mature individual with high motivations can tolerate frustrations more than others." "Many marriages could take a tip from this in learning to cope Habluetzel lost 5V4 pounds and 1 with tensions," Flinn said. 4 s -, ii..sir .V. Ski.''?"" .V ,1 . J i sWiakJiW "11 ' CORVALLIS (AP) A way to protect Oregon fruit crops from falling hailstones will be sought to by weather scientists at Oregon Mate college in uie next inree years. Scientists will attempt to make hail fall slowly and thus melt In the air. If had can be made slushy and trapped with air, it would be slowed and possibly melt in the two miles it must fall from its formation point. Fred W. Decker, in charge of the research, said scientists will have to pre - determine various types and sizes of had in a given storm. To make the hail fall slower scientists are now considering the seeding of thunderclouds with harmless chemicals and plastics. More than 500 stations form a hail recording network in the Rogue River Valley near Medford. Some 30 volunteers immediately put fallen hailstones into deep freezes for later examination. A weather radar station has been established at the foot of the Upper Table Rock by an OSC electronics engineer to study the natural hail fall. The radar system maps thunderstorms. A time-lapse camera also photographs cloud formations. Hail stones vary in size from buckshot size in the Rogue River Valley to 3 inches in the moun tains. Hail falls at about 25 feet a second, or one mile in three minutes, Decker said. WW OH 'W Mrs. Neuberqer Takes Dinnertable Theme CORVALLIS (AP) The farm nrnurams of this decade should aim at getting surpluses "out of the storage bins and onto the din ner table." Mrs. Maurine Ncuber- aer. Democratic candidate for IT K. senator, said. She called for early congression al aetion on the two-price wheal program of the Oregon Wheat t.PHl'IIP "lt onens the way for surplus wheat for poultry and livestock feil nurnose " she said in sueech prepared for the annual meeting of the Oregon Turkey Im nrnvitment Assnriation. "Oregon has a real opportunity to develop its livestock and poul try industries if we can divert part of our over-abundant wheat supply into feed purposes. Cost of sloring surpluses mounted to nearly $1 billion last year. How much more sensible it would be to use this surplus wheat for fattening hogs, beef, chickens and turkeys. No one can eat a storage bin," she said. Students!! KENT A Typewriter from ROEN'S Use Our Rental-Purchase Plan J Month' rental fet may bt opplitd en purchoM it you dcidt to buy. NEW - USED STANDARDS & PORTABLES All Popular Mokes W Givt S & H Green Stamps 1332 S. E. Stephens St. Phone OR 3-5456 lions, Kennedy said the Soviet Premier ought not to be deceived into thinking that because the Democrats criticize Eisenhower administration policies they are preaching disunity." "Perhaps you have been misled into believing that we are a divided country," he said, "or that one side favors appeasement, or that the humiliation of our President would be pleasing to his political opponents. Nothing could be fur ther irom the truth, Kennedy said he hones Khrush chev doesn't use the U. N. forum for "similar discourtesies" to those he dealt to President Eisen hower when the summit confer ence collapsed in May. The Democratic nominee said that if Khrushchev has any dis armament proposals that are "at all constructive and negotiable, I hope we in this country will stand ready to consider them." But he said the Soviet leader does not come to the U. N. with clean hands to talk of peace. Kennedy had what his associates called one of his best days of campaigning in touch-and-go Penn sylvania Friday. Gov. David L. Lawrence said the Democratic nominee drew the largest crowds he had seen in the eastern Pennsylvania areas of Lebanon, Reading. Lancaster and at the York fair. HIGH SOCIETY Famed society beauties of the 20s and 30s, twins Lady Thelma Furness, left, and Mrs. Gloria Vanderbilt blow in tandem to put out candles on their 21 plus birthday cake in' New York City. Renowned as the Morgan sisters before their marriages, Thelma wed Lord Furness. Gloria married the late Reggie Vanderbilt. Serious Crimes Set New Record WASHINGTON (AP) More than one and a half million seri ous crimes were committed in Ihe United Slates in 1959, setting a new record, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover has reported. In a final rundown on police records from all parts of the coun try, Hoover said the over all total of serious offenses last year was only one per cent higher than in 1958. But he said that killers, as sailants, rapists, robbers, bur glars and assorted thieves "com mitted 69 per cent more serious crimes in 1959 than in 1950 and 128 per cent mora such offenses than were committed in 1910. The report said preliminary re ports for the first half of 19U0 in dicate a sharp rise of 9 ner cent in serious crimes over ita same period a year ago. Most alarming, he said, is a major increase in juvenile of fenses. He said that with a 4 per cent increase in 1959, the arrests of persons under 18 have doubled the 1948 figure. The I W ! f IMS' J , - f w fife.; MrfiiriVJ PACKAGED FOR SPAC E-CIotliespinJ hold folds of 15t-foot balloon as technicians at NASA's Langley Research Center prepare to pack two Echo satellites in 2G'j-inch spheres. Circuit Court YOUNGSTER DROWNS BROOKS' (AP) A two-year-old boy wandered away from his home and drowned in a pond Friday. The boy was Kenneth Gregory Bcaty, sought by police after his mother reported him missing shortly after noon. The Fire Department was pre paring to drain the pond when a search in a deep hole yielded the body. More Oregon Jobs Is Hatfield Aim KLAMATH FALLS (AP)-Gov. Mark Hatfield says the No. 1 aim of his administration is more jobs in Oregon. And he added that em ployment lias risen to a record level in the slate. "Last June, we reached an all- time high in employment and August was still another ail-time high," Hatfield said Thursday in dedicating a new Republican Par ly headquarters here. "For the first time since 1953, the per capita income in Oregon was above the national average." Hatfield spoke here on his pres ent tour to campaign for GOP candidates through Central and Southern Oregon, lie later went to Burns. The governor chided legislators for what he said was their failure to follow his plan for overhauling Oregon's tax system, "lt is neces sary that we elect men to the Legislature wko will cooperate in securing economic development and in overhauling our lax sys tem." Also speaking at the dedication was Ron Phair, Republican can didate for Congress in Ihe 2nd Dis trict. He called Rep. Al Ullman, the Democratic incumbent, a "spendthrift legislator who appar ently works only when it is time to impress the voters." Circuit Court Judgments Loren IT. Corder, dba Rocket Lumber Co., vs. A. & J. Lumber Co., an Oregon corporation and Tom Bergcr. On mandate from Oregon Supreme Court upholding Circuit Court for Douglas County but modifying its decision, decree of Circuit Court entered that de fendant owes plaintiff $4,087.83. Plaintiff decreed owner of stand ing merchantable timber and cord wood on the premises, regardless of what disposition of the property is made on foreclosure sale or re demption. Ralph Lawrence Rosera vs. State Industrial Accident Commission. Court orders that plaintiff's claim be remanded to the defendant com mission for payment of additional compensation for permanent parti al disability from 35 per cent loss function of an arm to 50 per cent loss of function of an arm for un scheduled disability, plus attorney costs. James Land vs. State Industrial Accident Commission. Plaintiff's claim ordered remanded back lo the defendant commission for pay ment of additional compensation for permanent partial disability from 10 per cent loss function of an arm to 35 per cent for unsched uled disability, and attorney costs. R. H. Benson vs. Nelson Geer. Decree entered favoring defendant, granting his costs and disburse ments. Suit brought to collect on a promisory note, the outgrowth of a logging and manufacturing venture. Court ruled that defend ant did not owe the amount al leged owing and due. Roseburg Lumber Co. vs. Carl Chambers, S. W. Horn and Samuel B. Stewart, constituting the Ore gon State Tax Commission. Based on the mandate from the Oregon Stale Supreme Court, dated Aug. 24. decree issued ordering that the decree of the Circuit Court enter ed Oct. 29, 1958 be affirmed, and that plaintiff have judgment against defendants and recover sum of $205 as costs and disburse ments. , Delia Jones vs. C. B. Davis, Bon nie L. Davis, David Lee Rodgers and Ida M. Rodgers. Plaintiff granted judgment against defend ants in the sum of $6.6b3.27, plus interest, sums of $55.50, $345.80, Stilio attorney fees, costs and dis bursements. Decreed that plain tiff's mortgage described in the complaint be foreclosed against the defendants, subject lo terms of repossession as allowed by law. The judgment was for an original promisory note in the sum of $8.- 000 made by the Rodgers lo the plaintiff. The property was sold to the Uavises Dy the Rodgers sept 4. 1956, subject to the plaintiff's mortgage. C. L. Davis died Dec. 9, 1959. Burned Land Due Rehab Program WASHINGTON (AP) Interior Department plans emergency land rehabilitation pro gram for about 130,000 acres of burned forest and range land in nine western states. The recent Congress voted $1, 425,000 for the work after the de partment and its Bureau of Land Management urgently requested a $1.5 million supplemental appro priation. BLM Director Edward Woozley said range and forest fires in west ern states this summer have been the worst in 30 years. Many im portant watershed areas have been burned and vast amounts of forage for livestock and wildlife destroyed. "It is absolutely imperative Uiat these areas he rehabilitated as soon as possible." Woozley said. The money will be distributed according to BLM's needs. - The acreage of public land expected to be rehabilitated is: Idaho, about 50,000 acres; Ore gon, 45,000; Arizona, 13,000; and up to about 5,000 acres each in California, Nevada, Utah, Mon taha, Wyoming and Colorado. Playing Child Finds Gun, Shoots Himself THE DALLES (AP) Two-year-old Jeff Wood suffered a serious wound in the shoulder Friday when a gun he was play ing with discharged. Wood, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Wood, and a companion, 3'.i-year-old Stephen Benton, appar ently found the gun on a shelf in a neighbor's home where they were playing. 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