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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 15, 1960)
U. cf C. Library Sugone, Orapen UC.i.''.i n rr 0 n n na h n InJODie iiossoe poseo uo iOTopj (7 7000th Baby Arrives x - X k-a MAKING HER ENTRY 'into the world, ond at the same time marking a milestone at the Douglas Community Hospital, is Kim Martin. Miss Martin, daughter of Mr. ond Mrs. Carl Martin of Rt. 4, Box 780, Roseburg,.orrived this week, all five pounds seven and a half ounces of her, ond she was the 7,000th baby born at Douglas Community Hospital. (News-Review Photo) District 4 Eyes Jr. College Plan The Roseburg School Board Wed nesday night flashed the green light to a Chamber of Commerce committee currently carrying out studies which may lead to the in stallation of a "lower division col legiate program" in Roseburg. The program would offer basical ly the same type of curriculum of fered by a junior college, but would be run on a night school basis. Classes would be held in the high school library. , , . To B Self-Sustaining The go-ahead sign was given by Sutherlin Acquires Gourley Property Recent acquisition of the Rob ert H. Gourley property in Suther lin will greatly augment ways in which the school board can meet the needs of the new junior high school, it was announced by the Sutherlin School Board this week. The tract lies just east of the high school between Fourth and Sixth St., adjacent to the Delos Atterbury and Ralph Dyson res idence, according to Barbara Lie singer, News-Review correspond ent. - The junior high building will be near the athletic field and district warehouse, but will be further from the high school classrooms than originally planned. In addition to the eight class rooms tentative plans call for a large room for group meetings and physical education. The Sutherlin School Board has been operating on a "pay-as-you-go" basis and added to the 1961-62 budget will be -an additional $30, 000 approved by the voters of the district last May. Wayne Struble, Medford architect, will again be in Sutherlin this week for further study of the expansion plan, Angry Castro Says U. S. Provides 'Special Explosives' To Enemies HAVANA (AP) Prime Minister Fidel Castro, in one of his angri est speeches, charged today that enemies of his revolution were be ing equipped by the United States with a powerful new "special ex plosive." Castro made- the charge - in - a 2'i-hnur address at a midnight meeting of the Electrical Workers Union that was summoned to oust what he called traitorous leader ship. Booted Boss Charged Amaury Fraginals, booted out as boss of the union in absentia, has been accused of blacking out Havana for four days with a well placed bomb. The whereabouts of Fraginals is not known. Diplomatic sources said he was not among 11 known members of the union who took asylum in various embassies Wednesday. The Weather ; AIRPORT RECORDS Mostly cloudy tonljht and Fri day. Some chance of rain tonight and Friday. Patchy fog in vat leys. Highest ton, last 74 hours 44 Lowast temp, last 24 hours 40 Highest ttmp. any Dec. CSS) .... 6 Lowatt ttmp. any Dec. ('SW 23 Prccip. last 24 hours 0 Pracip. from Dae. I : 58 Prtcip. from Sept. 1 11.14 Eici.it from Sapt. 1 .15 Sunter tonight, 4:31 p.m. Sunrisa tomorrow, 7:3V a.m. A, the board so the chamber commit tee can prepare facts and 'figures showing the need for such a pro gram ana ine cost to Dotn tne dis trict and potential students. The program is generally set up to become self-sustaining as far as cost to school districts is con cerned and is currently paying its way in several districts in the state. Wayne Crooch. a former school board member and current chair man of the chamber's Education Committee, said he felt that start ing out with a program of this type would "Give us better chance to get a junior college in Koseburg, which is what we all ultimately warn. He explained that the lower di vision collegiate program directed by the state Department of Educa tion s general extension division, offers credited subjects on a local level. He said the credits are ac cepted by all but one major North western college. The courses are set up on three quarters a year; with tuition set at $90 per quarter. The S90 goes to pay the instructors provided by the Department of Education. If the program fails to pay its way, the district would have to make up the difference. Classes would be held four nights a week, Monday through Thursday and would be three hours long each night. He recommended that the program be instigated here with four courses. Crooch said he was confident the added educational facility would pav. its. own way here. After re ceiving the go-ahead from the School Board, he said the commit' tee will now contact school offi cials from Glendale to Drain and from Camas Valley to Glide to de- termine ' just how many students would be interested in the program He said it would take about 60 students the first year to put the program on a self-sustaining basis. . Fraginals was one of the leaders of a march of his union to the Presidential Palace last week to protest what they claimed was an attempt by the Communist-tinged Cuban Confederation of Workers to dictate a union election. Not Allowed Some - members of the union claimed Wednesday night they were not allowed to enter the meeting, which paved the way for a ' Red-line directorate to take over. They claimed the hall was packed, with. pro-Castro. and Com munist followers. Putting in a personal appear ance at 'the 'meeting,' Castro scathingly denounced the union leaders, as. counterrevolutionaries. His unexpected appearance under lined the gravity with which the regime viewed the first real open defiance from the labor front, Seeks Vila Words His fare contorted with rage, he appeared to grope for the vil est words he could recall. A new "special type of explosive of great power" used by the U.S. Army, he said, was being supplied to his enemies by U.S. Central In- Iplliupnro appntc And "Vankpp I Pentagon bandits." I American - financed antigovcrn- ment elements, he added, include I "puppets garbed in cassocks" a , reference to Koman Catholic 1 priests. "I propose to you," he said to the meeting, "that we shake np the electrical industry so that ene mies will know the generous rev olution can also be firm when cir 1 cumstances dictate," q --" - 1 ..:J Established 1873 28 Pages Pay Raises Set For Local 5150-S300 Increases Slated In New Salary Schedule Approved By School Board By BILL SPARKS News-Review Staff Writer - The Roseburg School Board Wednesday night adopted a salary schedule granting a raise to all teachers in the district and lower ing the. number of years required to reach the top of the scale. This new program also increases the pay hikes to teachers in vari ous levels on the experience scale. Blanket Raise In addition to giving the raise to all teachers in the districts, which in most cases amounts to $150 a year, the board authorized a blank et $300 raise for all principals, vice principals, coaches, and other officials, whose salary is not fig ured on the regular teacher pay scale. The District 4 teacher s commit tee on economic welfare had asked for a program offering better start ing salaries, better increases along the scale- and dropping the time requirement to reach the top of the scale. Scale Prepared The pay scale adopted Wednes day night had been prepared by me Doara memoers. Using a schedule of the pay scale as project for next year to allow increment raises before the new raises were adopted, the new scale shows these increases: Starting teachers with a bache lor of arts degree will receive a pay bike from $4,500 to $4,650. They were granted a $400 pay raise at the start of this school year also. The same teachers will receive I $150 extra pay boosts for their sec- ond and third year of experience and a $250 increase after ''aving three years experience, bringing the salary at that point to $4,900, Special Election Due For School Roseburg Supt. of Schools M. C. Deller said Wednesday night he ex pects a special school district elec tion to be railed within 70 days. The election will be to add two members to the present five-man District No. 4 School Board and possibly calling for the re-election of the present five members. Mandatory District ' " " " The special election Is being brought about by a state law which makes it mandatory for District 4 to become an adminislrative dis trict. About the only change this will make will be to add two more members to the board. The change is brought about by the school district reorganization, but the physical boundaries of-Qis-trict 4 will remain the same. Against Change . Deller has been fighting against forced re-election of the present five members of the noara be cause he feels it would be unwise to have any changes in the board. All current board members are well versed in the district s pros ent $1,750,000 building, program Deller has said, Peller made the prediction of Ihe upcoming election after reading a statement from the Douglas County Committee for the Reorganization of School Districts, in which the committee reaffirmed its former decision to turn District 4 into an administrative district. School Evaluation Slated For Drain Dr. Keith Goldhammer of the University of Oregon will soon bring an evaluation team to Drain to study the city's union high school district. The report was made Wednesday night at a meeting oi tne Doara The purpose of the evaluation will be designed to secure background information for higher development of education in the district. The team will try to determine if prac tices in the educational system are achieving the maximum results, reports Drain Correspondent Airs. William Guthrie. Also discussed at the meeting was the district's role in proposed reorganization plan. The union high and elementary districts of Drain have been included in a plan to form an administrative district. Other present districts which would be included are Yoncalla el ementary and union high, Curtin, Gunter and ScotU Valley. A hearing on the matter has al ready been held. The state Board of Education this week approved the plan, so County School Supt. Kenneth Bamehurg will be ordered by the state board to set an election. ROSEBURG, OREGON THURSDAY, DECEMBER IS, 1960 as compared to $4,650 on the now outdated projected scale. Given $300 Hikes for the next four years, they'll receive $300 hikes and then a $325 increase to S5.650 going into their ninth year. Tops for a teacher with a BA degree will be $6,100 at the end of 11 years, as compared to $5,750 at the end of 12 years on Uie old schedule. A BA plus 45 hours credit will net teachers at the top of the scale $6,350 at the end of 12 years, as compared to $6,100 for 14 years under the old scale. Teachers with a masters degree will receive a top wage of $6,650 at tne end of IJ years, compar ing to $6,450 at the end of 16 years under the previous program. The pav. increases will cost the district $67,650 over what the total cost of the previous program would have been. This will put the cost of 236 teachers at $1,352,100. Boivin Expects To Head Senate SALEM (AP) Sen. Harry Boivin, D-Klamath Falls, said again today he expects to be elected president of the Oregon Senate. Boivin said, too, he had rejected a request to release his pledged votes. Boivin said he had nledaes from nine Democratic senators and ex- peeled to get all 10 Republican i votes. ' - ,. - "1 the Tie dD0i-rl wntrol Ihe Sen iiid Uu majority of them are supporting sen. Alfred CorDott, u-i-oruana, lor president. Boivin told today of a telegram received from Sen. Robert Straub, chairman of the Democratic State Central Committee, asking him to release his pledged votes. "We don t elect precinct com mitteemen to tell legislators how to vote." Boivin said. If senators followed the dictates of party of ficials, it would make them rub ber stamps, he said. Straub asked the release of the delegates because the executive committee of the central commit tee adopted a resolution saying Boivin and his supporters should be bound by the unit rule. Nineteen county Democratic central committees have adopted similar resolutions. Some suggest ed that Boivin and Sen. Walter Pearson, D-Portland, vote with the majority of Democrats or get out of the party. Pearson, the present Senate president, recently called for the resignation of Straub as state central committee chairman. Both U. S. senators from Oregon, Wayne Alorse and Maurine Neu berger, sided with Straub. Morse suggested that Democrats who violate the unit rule get out of the party. Honor Group Plans Clothing Pickup Students of Roseburg Senior High School's National Honor So ciety will be gathering good used clothing for children and adults in underprivileged areas of the Unit ed States today and Friday. The clothing collection is a joint project of Save The Children Fed eration, - leading U.S. educators, and more than six million school children Orvillc Bailey, principal at the senior high school today said. "We are urging parents,, friends, a h d neighbors of our students to coop erate in this campaign to get good used clothing out if storage areas and into use by boys and girls, men and women, who otherwise this winter will suffer intensely from the cold." Clothing may be brought or sent , lo Horn', Appliance, a collection Doint. in bass or cartons. The clothes then will be repacked for shipment. SHOPPING DAYS TO CHRISTMAS 7' Schools Decidedly (n The News Toddy Staff members of the News Review were treated to early Christmas decorations or something this morning. Draped between two banks of neon lights, with all the ap pearance of a piece of over head Christmas bunting, were five and a half yards of news copy. They were 10 count 'cm news stories, appearing to day in The News-Review. They evolved from last night's ses sion of the Roseburg School Board.' ' And they were Reporter Bill Sparks' way of saying Merry Christmas and Good Morning. And of reminding that, in deed, he was very much on the job. Ike's Physical Condition Good WASHINGTON (AP)-Prcsident Eisenhower's general physical condition "continues excellent," doctors who examined him at Walter Reed Hospital reported today. Lt. Gen. Leonard D. Heafon, Army surgeon general, and Maj. Gen. Howard M. Snyder, the Pres ident's personal physician, issued a statement saying Eisenhower's chronic bronchitis, noted at the last annual examination, "has shown improvement as has the bursitis of the left shoulder." Eisenhower checked out of the hospital today after completing his annual head-to-toe examina- tinn. He returned to his White House desk immediately alter leaving the hospital, The statement of Generals Sny 'TSr President entered Walter Reed Hospital Tuesday evening, Dec. 13. for the completion of his annual Dhvsical examination. He annual nhvsical examination. He departed waiter need nospnai ai 10:20 a.m. this morning, Dec. 15. 'The President s general condi tion continues excellent as re vealed bv appropriate barium studies of tho gastro-intestinal tract, studies of the cardiovascu lar system, examination of other special systems and various lab oratory tests. The chronic bronchitis noted at the last -annual examination has shown improvement as has the bursitis of the loft shoulder," School Boundaries Adopted By Board The Roseburg School Board Wed nesday night adopted attendance area boundaries for the two junior high schools and the new Fir Grove and Fullcrton IV elementary schools. All seventh, eighth and ninth grade pupils residing in the pres ent Hucrcst, Rivcrsdale. Wilbur, Winchester, Riverside, Benson and Eastwood attendance areas will be assigned to Joseph Lane Junior High School, To John Fremont All students in these three grades living in the present Fullcrton, Rose, Green and Melrose elemen tary areas will be assigned to the John C. 'Fremont Junior High. This will go into effect at the start of the 1961-62 school year and will mark the first time ninth graders have been dropped lrom the senior high to junior high build ings in Roseburg. Fullerton IV School will he at tended by all pupils living on and west of W. Slanton SI. to Rocky Point and south or the umpqua River, including Lookingglass ltd, Pupils living east of the existing Fullcrton School on the SE Oak Ave. bridge and south of the Ump qua River, including the Umpqua Park area, will attend rir orove School. Both of these new elementary schools are scheduled for comple tion by the start of next school year. The present Fullerton III Elementary School will in turn be remodeled and added to, becoming John C. Fremont Junior High. Blaze In Texas Hotel Causes 350 To Flee AUSTIN, Tex. (AP)-An early morning tire at the luxurious 12 story Commodore Perry Hotel to day forced 350 guests from their rooms and left the swank Austin Club a smouldering water-soaked wreck. The blaze that sent scaring flames spouting from Ihe club- room windows on the third floor of the hotel broke about 3 a.m. and was contained an hour later. No iniuries were reported. The actual blaze was held lo the third floor The Austin Club Is a gathering place for slate and national off i cials. businessmen, lobbyists, and prominent Auslinilcs. , -k 291-60 PRICE Se Teachers More Cabinet Selections Slated Today WASHINGTON (AP) Pies!- dent-elect John F. Kennedv said today he would announce another Cabinet appointment "Maybe two later in the attcrnoon. He put the time for a Cabinet announcement tentatively at 5 p.m., EST. Passing this word to newsmen clustered around the ice-covered, sanded steps of his Georgetown home, Kennedy gave no hint as to the posts to be filled or the people to fill them. The spots still ooen are secre taries of the treasury, agriculture and labor, attorney 'general and postmaster general Earlier, Kennedy had said he wasn't sure whether there would be additional cabinet members named today, but that certainly he would have some Friday, if not today. But he also reported he was making some progress." so ap parently the outlook shifted quick ly. Kennedy plans to leave for Flor ida Friday to spend the holidav He said he will not leave until 6 p.m. or later. Kennedy conferred for 70 min utes this mornini! with his hroth. er, Robert, center of speculation about the attornev general nnsl nuuert nurrieu nv reporters on 1 his way out, telling them there! was nothing he could say Another mnrnintipillpr wn th Bri,iBh ,mhii..,Hor. sir immiH CH ,.,., Whim lin loft TTnnnlV escorted him to the door and tolrt rpnnrini'c Ihuf ho hail inttitAA ?J'l ,S,el" -I8" 'J . .. " . Wednesday night it was report- e?. ,ne president-elect would prob- ably name at least two Cabinet members todav. and mizht dos. aiuijr ajjjjuiiii Jive. Mud Layer Costs Roseburg $8,426 The Roseburg School Board Wed nesday night approved an $8,426 change order for Uie construction of Fullcrton IV Elementary School necanse 01 a recently-discovered layer of watery mud at the denlh originally figured as the correct depth to place the building's foot ings. Architect John Briscoe recom. mended the change order at the $8,426 price agreed on by Rose- ourg contractor John Todd lo sink the footings through "the goo" and in'o soua ground. The change order amounts to an addition of that much to the con tract price, but still leaves this the most economically-built school in tne district in Ihe past' nine years. Prior to allowing for the change, which won't figure too heavily in the square foot cost of Ihe build ing, the cost per square foot, in cluding landscaping, fences, equip ment and' paved play areas, was $9.51. Briscoe's estimate had been $10.63 per square loot. Todd Building Co. won Ihe con tract for this school with a bid of $295,244, will under the amount available for it in the budget, Six Die In Fire In New Orleans NEW ORLEANS fAPI-An ear ly morning house fire killed five children and one adult from the same family today and hospital ized two others, firemen reported The fire gutted the house. The dead were' identified as: Marguirette Young, 29; Martin Young, 12; Charles Young Jr., 10; hrrol young 8; rarrcll Young, 4; and Jerry Young, 3. Charles II Young. 35, and Vera Mae Young, 32, were taken to Charily Hos pital, All are Negroes. It Is believed Marguirette Young was the mother of the five chil dren, Charles Young the father, and Vera Alae Young a sister. Lighting Contest Set The Riddle Chamber of Com merce In cooperation with t'opco is again sponsoring a Christmas Home Lighting contest, according lo Erma Best, News-Review cor respondent. ' There will be two categories, one for previous entrants and one for newcomers. Each category will have identical prir.es of $15, $10 : and 5. The chamber will not put mpi trophy until further notice. Crown Prince Seizes Throne During Absence Of Father; Emperor Scurries Home LONDON (AP) Ethiopian) raaio reported several civilians were killed and many wounded in bloody gun bailies on the streets of Addis Ababa today, Edward Heath, lord privy seal, told the House of Commons he had received this information Irum the British ambassador "in the past two hours." The ambas sador threw open the embassy compound in Addis Ababa to any British subjects who wished to take refuge there. Proclaimed King A broadcast irom Ethiopia an nounced that Crown Prince Asia Wassan has been proclaimed king of that African nation in place of his father. Emperor Hallo Selas sie. The broadcast was heard here as the deposed emperor dashed toward home from Brazil, where he had been on a formal state visit while Wednesday's coup took place in Addis Ababa. Airline sources said the deposed emperor was heading for Roberts field in Liberia, the full width or the African continent away from Ethiopia. One report had him' al ready in Liberia. Ntw Pr.me Minister The Ethiopian broadcast . an nounced the appointment of a new prime minister, Ras lmeru, former hlniopian ambassador to India and Russia. The British Foreign Office said the British government has been Public Warned On Fire Scheme Roseburg Rural Fire Chief Cliff Thrasher said today his depart ment had no connection with a group of men currently trying to sell fire alarm systems to homo owners in the Roseburg area. He further said that his depart ment had not endorsed this firm or any other firm which sells fire alarms. Roseburg City Chief Don nm,..ni inn u-.n, in, Marnier slated tho city had no !, Tried Btfore Thrasher said he didn't know (the location of the group, but add ed this tvne of sales urouram has been tried kera before. - Yin snM iv, OBin,mn nnnmnoti the homeowner and claim to be from the fire a-rvice, which for all inlenls and purposes many peo- plo naturally assume to be their local fire department. In Grean District The key to legality of the sales plan seems to bo the use of the words fire service instead of fire department, Thrasher said. "Also, they don't state any particular fire service or department in Uieir claim," he declared. He stated ho had received sev eral calls from persons who had been approached by Uie.se sales men, mostly in the Green District. rccenuy. He wanted to make it clear that regardless of what they were sell- ing, they were not connected with; or endorsed by the Roseburg Ru. rai rue ucpanment JC Seeks More Funds In Drive For Needy A first day "Christmas Shop ping Tour" netted the Roseburg Junior Chamber of Commerce $25 but the group needs more. The money's used to finance gifts, with the underprivileged youngsters being accompanied to stores by JC members in buying gins tor tneir famines. Donations will he picked up by JC members from 5 lo 7 p.m., and donors may call OR 3-3203. Or donations may be sent to "Christmas Shopping Fund." PO Box 681, Roseburg. Turnout Of Fans Surprises Jimmy, Bride NEW YORK (AP)-Jimmy Du rante married pretty Margie Lit tle Wednesday. The ceremony went off quietly, as planned, hut the couple didn't exnect the mob scene which followed, Jimmy, 67, has been going around with Margie since 1944, when he was a widower of a year and she, 23. a show girl. They "tied the knot" at 4 p.m. at St. Malachy's Roman Catholic Church the "Actor's Chapel" on 49th Slrect just off Broadway.. Jimmy didn't bargain on his fans when he looked forward to a nice, quiet affair. The fans plain ly-dressed, off-Broadway types jammed into St. Malachy's, For the most part they sat there quiet ly except for a few chuckles when Ihe priest asked Jimmy if he "would," and bis "1 will" was all but inaudible. After the ceremony Ihe fans made a quiet, determined mass of humanity when Jimmy and his bride Jimmy grinning for the first time since long before the nuptials tried to gut out of the church. The well-wishers were going lo see Durante and gaf a good look at his bride, and Uiey almost knocked over a doien policemen, quite a few newspapciBi'n, and Jimmy and Margie, in Oia proc ess. The way Jimmy had planned It, it would be Jimmy and Margie and a few friends in the fvtiftt row. (Sd an old friend, the Rev", l'hom- asked informally (o recognize the new regime. Telegraphic communications still were severed wuh Addis Aba ba 24 hours after first reports of the coup reached Western capi tals. The Ethiopian radio annnunipd that all air, traflic to and from the country had been suspended and said the armed forces would take necessary measures" tn sen that this directive was carried out. Mortar Fire In London, Heath told Parlia ment the British ambassador in Addis Ababa hud reported fight ing in the Ethiopian capital in volved "moderate small arms and mortar firing." Heath said there was no reason to believe that there was imme diate danger to Britons and Brit ish Commonwealth subjects, total ing 900. 1 He concluded: "There is no evidence of inter ference from outside Ethiopia in the revolt." The 44-year-old crown prince apparently took advantage of his 68-year-old lather's absence to seize power. lmeru, Hi. Ethiopian diplomat, is a nephew of Haile Selassie but is believed to have refused the post of prime minister under the emperor because his powers would be too limited. Ambassador To U.S. lmeru was ambassador to the United States from 194K until 1953. He next served in New Delhi. Last year he was moved to Moscow. lmeru was arrested by Musso lini in 1936 and kept in Italian jails until 1943. Shortly after, his jail cell was occupied by another prisoner, uie disgraced -Mussolini himself. -In Stockholm. Sweden, the Ethi opian ambassador proclaimed the new government "non-Communist and neutral." There was no Immediate expla nation of what opposing groups mignt be involved in tne resorted fighting in the capital, Two Military Croups Ethiopia has. however, two en- tirelv senarate military groups- line regular army ana ine imperial. , 1 household guard and the gunfire - m'8ht indicate that they were tak- I '"ft opposite sides in the revolt. The. fragmentary reports so f i available on tho course of the re- bellion have fulled to make clear O'e ct role of Uie household guard. ... L Ay "nils guarded American, I British and Soviet embassies in I tlio Ethiopian capital. There was n. wora " now me coup was be'n. received by the nalion s 18 muiion people. Florence Awartfs Sewage Contracts FLORENCE (AP)-The city of Ftnrpnep. mill"! f,rHAi-a tn Hn I snmothinif ahmit li mi ,. tern, has awarded two contracts that comprise a major part of a $400,000-plus construction pro gram. The Berry Creek Construction Co. received a $137,448 contract to build sewer lines, and Trilitl Woodworth received a $24,000 con tract for construction of a pump ing station. Both are Florence firms. The work hi scheduled for com pletion by next October. Still lo be awarded arc con tracts for construction of a treat ment plant and another pumping station. The work is being fi nanced by a $:17S,000 local bond issue and a $69,250 federal grant. The extensive project got under way after the Oregon Sanitary Board said the city's sewage emp tied into the Siuslaw River and or dered no more lewer hookups un til a treatment plant was built. At Wedding as de Lucn. of Troy, N.Y., gel ling mem niicnen. Of courso, since it was a Catho lic ceremony, there had to be some Catholic witnesses, but that was easy. They brought Robert and Julius Romano Durante's nephews and last surviving rela tivesin from Los Angeles, and Robert was one witness. The other was Lillian Danowitz, Julius' sister-in-law, from Queens. Also present wire Margie's par ents, Mr. and Mi's. Jack Little, of Scotch Plains, N.J. The best man and matron of honor were Cle ment llirsh, a manufacturer from Northbridgc, Calif., and his wife, the former Edie Mack, who first got acquainted with Jimmy "on the beach" in California when she was nine years old. Levity Fact Rant By L. F. Reizenstein To stop the alarming flow of gold to foreign nations, shirking their lhare of fin ancing reconstruction. Uncle Sam hat plugged the cornu copia on the vaults. He decid ed wisely that security of a national bank roll was of ore importance than en inter national Santa Claus role. 0 o o