The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, October 09, 1961, Page 4, Image 4

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    V
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JhousonJs Strih By Air, Jeff
vim ' In w
In
The
Day's
News
. By;-
ifraiik Jenkins
EDITORIAL PAGE
4 The New,-Ritw, Roieburg 0r. Mob., Oct. 9, 1961
Measurement In Dollars
By Charles V. Stanton
DEAR ABBY
Abigail Van Burtn
Two Heads Are Better...
Reconimendinjf that Oregon's SmihI DunM rca lie
placed under control of the National Park Service, the
DuuKlas County Park Department, through Charles S. Col
lins, former supervUoi, offered several proposals for modi-ificution.
Management of the area, Collins said, makinir a state- hke to know what has happened married
ment to a
posals for
area, should
I,.- UtL ,l 1: :.wl..u:.,l nun U'ulnv mr.r..,rr.mr,rtt
From London come word that "
Oueen Elizabeth h conferred a he contended, should be reserved to the OreKon Water Ke-
hi
M
Sam Rayburn's Long Unchallenged Reign
Clears Way For IMormack's Succession
emeni 01 me area, vuiiiiih nam, iiiiin.niK a nunc- nice to Know wnat nas nappene;! married, hut it didn t worn out. I . , r. 5 t
conffressional sutcommittee inquirinir into pro-j to the backbone ot the American, My parent! had the marriage n-D"' kindly Texin
prospective development of the Sand Dunes 1 male? He doesn't seem able to j nulled and now it i as though it I n'P J.enrt
i . i ' . i. :.i t..t i.. i i think for himself nv more. never haDDened. I am Broun udi. I,u. c u"
i iaKe iiuo cunniui'iHuuu juunc omu m wawn ,. ,h. ih..i.i m roiiino (tenure has been so long the am- ity at this point. ara Bouir
who come in are unable to choose i and ' understanding parents, I am ' P,enllal rivals Kennedy and JkCormack havered a, R
their own clothing without . final going to marry .'fin. man. He U ?'l . LIL"?' J'" t2EZJ
peerage on Antony Armstrong
Jones, whose wife. Princess Mar
Raret, is fourth in order of suc
cession to the British throne. The
story goes that, since he was born
a commoner, becoming a peer of
the realm by appointment goes
against his conscience which has
been telling him that if one is
sources Board in cooperation with the recreational manage
ment agency.
Not much of the land, according to Collins, contains
"a really significant amount of timber growing site."
However, he told the committee, "there is no reason why
much of the available site could not be used for commer
cial timber production." Private timber and timber sites,
he said, Rhould be purchased, or agreements for transfer
WASHINGTON' (AP) Sam suppressed bv strong and capable, MrCormack s chief challengers
Rayburn's long, unchallenged members of the House while Kay-1 at the moment would appear to
reign as speaker of the House ofiburn ruled the roost seemed be the handful o. men who help
Representatives apparently has .bound to burst into reality. And run the Ilouse-the chairmen of
cleared the way for an orderly! a many-sided struggle for the job the important committee.,: the
succession by Majority Leader i whose holder is third in line for, party whip, Rep. I art Albert. D
John W. McC'ormack to Rayburn's ' the presidency should soon de- Okla ; his assistant, Rep. Hale
DEAR ABBY: I am in the men's, DEAR ABBY: When I was much ,el". power-at lean tempo-; velop. ip L i.. J, t
retail clothing business, and would younger (17. to be exact), 1 was,"rl'y- , . A possible obstacle to Mcior- grcauv J u F'h nHir!et h
but it didn't work OUt.l m ux sirunK-wuieu, ; macs, may oe suppucu uv uie ici,
oui ainuiy lexan on me speaiser-; wnue nouse. nui, me possiunuy ma
so strong no rival' of President Kennedy intervening : H-Aia., a aouuieuier mi ''"'
eloped. And his is considered a long-shot possibU-; isonnern naesms.
so long the am- ity at this point. I ara Boning, u-mu.. tji "s-
IVUl'lU S VHVIVC 1U1 a lui-
One of the committee
going to marry a fine man. He is i ., "'.,... ... " 'r r.j l.u o,i.,h nnuihilitv
okay irom tneir wives wno jancy .j2 and 1 am Zo. lie Knows anout , Krt., , . , . pon ui hur n Mi U D-Ark
themselves expert, on fabric, and my un.ucce.sfu. marriage, but ih ' Z l,,!? ''herllMcJormack ca'b.
style. Ihe other ninety per cent, one else in town does because we,the ,r.dition., ..., ,,h ,nH i 7'7,na ih., nwhi.l .ehonU toimled. however, is another mat-
bom a commoner one should re- madet and fned at the tjme the a.ea jlUo contro have noticed the same
mam a commoner. -,.,.., Mnnr,mn( -f fiVi nl m,mp !u" you ...pi?.....' .
' " P.W...-..V - .... r. CLUIHIrtli ,
have nothing to say about fit, col-1 moved here a few years ago. I
or or price. If the husband likes I know I can't wear the traditional
the suit, and his wife doesn't, he I white wedding gown and veil, but
ends up buying what she likes, our wedding will take place in the
.Many of my friends in the men's ! parson's study. What should I wear
etching business have told me they and what kind of flowers should
situation, ' I carry? I want to look as bride
! like as possible.
CLOTHING SALESMAN! cprnNn TIME AROtrND
father some time late Uus month I w" " ' "' " w.rKu. .,c dear suesN: only . man
ijivjvaniuu oiiuuiu uc inauc amu lie nam, ivii i uau i m.--vi- 1 ww wm k,w"w wiiw win;
way and easements in the area. Ml" "" wn. no y. ,
TI . Rtatpment rpencrni'eH thut riina ilpl'liLlp nnnnslt inn I "" m my opinion, is mor. :
is expressed by owners of private property in the area. jgr .pinUsTu'? his own!
But, he pointed out, there also was vigorous opposition to,M-r. WBinsn would do won to
the creation of Douglas County's Salmon Harbor, a project i take their husbands shopping.
which has since received high praise from many or the
people who once opposed it.
ascend to the speaker's chair
when Congress convenes Jan. 10
for the second half of its current
session.
McCormack, 69. is already
or early in November, and the
conscience that tells him one wno
is born a commoner should remain
a commoner is reported to be tell
ing him also that hi. child, who
will be fifth in order of succes
sion to the British throne, should
be of noble rank.
So
The dispatches inform us
It seems probable he will accept
the title Queen Elizabeth, bis sis-tor-in
law, decided to confer upon
him.
It sounds a little silly, doesn't
If
But lei's go back into the dim
beginnings of the institution of gov
ernment. First there wa. the tribal
chief, whose right to rule the roost
derived from hi. strong right arm
and his shrewdly scheming brain.
When he DIED there wa. pretty
sure to be WAR war that con
tinued until some other strong
right arm and scheming brain es
tablished the right of rulcrship.
The people of that day liked war
no better than we like war now.
So. in time, the idea arose that
there ought to be some AUTOMAT
IC way whereby the leadership of
the tribe would pass PEACEFUL
LY from one set of hands to anoth
er .et of hands. Out of that desire
for the peaceful transfer of au
thority arose the idea of HERED
ITARY succession. Why not just
decree that the eldest son of the
deceased ruler should become the
new ruler?
It was thus that the institution
of royalty wa. born. Tho people
LIKED it. It avoided war. of suc
cession, in which the people suf
fered cruelly.
So much for tho system of her
editary royalty.
How about the system of heredi
tary aristocracy?
How did that coma about?
It came about quite .imply. The
ting had to have helpers upon
whom he could depend. If he was
to be able to depend absolutely
upon these helpers, they must be
INDEBTED to him. So he made
NOBLES of his right hand men. He
Cave them great estates. But, to
insure their loyalty, he retained
the right to take their estates
away from them and give them
DEAR SECOND: Wear a dressy jhome at Bonham, Tex. Rayburn
pastel suit, and a flowered hat ; . , Bravely iU with cancer and
with a fingertip veil, and carry l ?"' hu da' may be sharp-
have some share in proposed fed-iter. To his basic training in the
eral aid to schools. (tough schocl of Boston politics he
McCormack'. view, shared by has added iC years in the House,
some other congressmen, was a two-thirds of th-m as his party s
key factor in helping cut the heart floor leader, am' whatever hap-
speaker pro tern by formal voteifrom Kennedy's ambitious scbool,pens he wont b'i taken by sur-
of the House. He was elected late aid legislative program. I prise.
last month when Rayburn was '
forced by illness to return to his!
Lakes Needed
In supporting the Neuberger bill's general provisions,
Collins contended that the bill introduced by Congressman
Durno, which would affect only the Forest Service holdings,
would provide for "only a half park." Durno's bill, he
said, "could scarcely merit the support of anyone profes
sionally engaged in park planning or operation." The bill,
he pointed out, affects only about one-third of the land pro
posed for development, and makes no provision for acquisi
tion of private lands.
The outstanding characteristic which gives the dunes
national significance, Collins said, is the cross-section of
geological history beginning on the beach and extending
through the inland lakes. "To make a complete park."
he said, "at least one of the niaior lakes must be includ
ed.'
Collins recently resigned as supervisor of the Dounrlas
County Park Department. Now he heads the Cul-Ore Rec
reational Development Association, a newly-formed organ
ization designed to direct full use of recreational resources
of the mythical State of Jefferson. He is a past president
of the Oregon Wildlife Federation. He is making a career
of leadership of recreation, local, state and national, and,
lor my money, he s doing a really bang-up job.
Money Involved
Because of his associations and interests Collins, unite
obviously, is particularly involved with the matter of rec
reation.
On the other hand, the Douglas County Court, through
Commissioner Ray Doerner, contends that receipt of mon
ey in lieu of taxes, now received from the Forest Service,
is essential to the construction and maintenance of good
roads. Without roads timber would be of no valu. he said.
Doerner expressed the opinion that the U.S. Forest
Service is just a capable of providing recreational facil
ities and services as is the National Park Service and
maybe more so.
He questioned the advisability of transferring manage
ment of the area from the Forest Service to the National
Park Service.
Doerner said he was attempting to show the import
ance of "income from National Forest timber to our coun
ty financial structure, and also some of the reasons whv
the county government must continue to receive its per
centage of the income if we, as a nation, are to obtain
maximum, sustained benefits from the national timber resource."
The statements suhmitfpd from Ihp tun nffipiul n,nirr.
!?..T.b?,'!''. ei?.."i!,e? f'iled.jn las County groups show the two contrasted schools of
thought pertaining to the proposed park project.
tine would measure the project in terms of recreation.
al advantages, the other in terms of dollars.
There would bo fewer "mistakes'
hanging unworn in tho clothes clo,
ets of America.
DEAR ABBY: Do you think it is
a good idea to make a husband
jealous once in a while to keep
him on his toes?
YOUNG WIFE
DEAR WIFE: Forget it. Instead
daisies. They don't tell. Good luck I
ly limited.
No predictions of harmony and
BROKEN-HEARTED AT 52: Toll next session, however. McCor
your husband you found the letters mack, despite 21 years as Ray
and get it over with. Things might burn's lieutenant in the House
not bo as hopeless as you think. I Democratic leadership, has noth
. j ing like the solid support that
you? Write' nnjuuui speaker muie man
Three-Year Teaching Certificate
Given Dean Bay By Wellington
avI " ' ' o "3 o " .Eitwice a long as any other man.
.'? u The rfream. nf nmver 5n lone
whip hand.
Britain is a perfect example ot
the system of hereditary royalty
supported by a hereditary aristoc
racy. William the Conqueror cross
ed the Channel from Normandy
and took England away from Har
old the Saxon. He parceled the
English land out among hi. Nor
man right-hand men keeping, of
course, a goodly part of it for him
self. It was thus that English tl
tic. of nobility originated.
The ancestors of Antony Arm
strong-Jones weren't among the
fortunate ones who received their
patrimony from William the Con
queror and thus becinie NOBLES
So he and his ancestor, have op
posed the system.
But
Eventually as you will note
from the dispatches the system
is aooui to (jLi aim
Forest Growth Outpaces
Tree Cut, Says Expert
SPOKANE (AP)-Forest growth
in the I'nitcd States is outpacing
consumption, a Washington Stale
University official said recently.
John A. Guthrie, director of the
economic and business bureau al
WSL1, told the third annual Indus
trial and Economic Development
Conference he did not believe pre
dictions of a "limber famine."
Oregon's Provincialism Due
For Panning In National Mag
Hills, Calif. Include self-addressed
stamped envelope.
For Abby's booklet, "How To
of keeping him on HIS toes, you i Have A Lovely Wedding," send 50c
are apt to find him an YOUR to Abby, Box 3365, Beverly Hills,
heols. I Calif.
Hat Boyle
NEW YORK
columnist might never know if he
didn t open his mail:
The common cold, which costs
industry $5 billion a year, is still
one of mankind's greatest medical
mysteries. It is responsible for 30
per cent of all our missed day.
from work.
Hippocrates, the father of med
icine, thought the common cold
started in the brain. Some scien
tists today deny there even is such
a disease. Others hold it is caused
by from one to SO different virus
es. But most doctors say: "T.icre is
no known cure for the common
cold except rest and time. Most
victims will agree
Prosperity note: The more we
tarn, the more w owe. Ameri
cans today owe more than $196
billion on the installment plan.
A Tibetan school child never
gels spanked for sticking out his
tongue at teacher. In Tibet that's
the way you show respect for a
superior. Try it with your boss
ami see what happens!
Highway sign: "Danger: To
touch these wires means instan
taneous death. Anyone caught do
ing so will be prosecuted to the
full extent of the law.
SEATTLE, Wash. (AP) "I Oregon turned him down,
didn't spend years working to- Last mor,h Bay was accepted
ward a teaching goal just to go I as a sevf .ith-grade teacher in tho
back to digging ditches," said , private King's Garden School in
Dean Bay. an ex-convict. Seatt' while he waited to see if
State School Supt. Louis Bruno Wrnington would let him con
gave Bay an opportunity recently I 'Inue. Now that he has the cor
to do somethins else to rv.;poritificate, he'll go on leaching at
his wife and five children. He .King's Garden,
granted Bay 32, a three-year pro- "I don't feel that anything in
visional teaching certificate is-1 my record would jeopardize a
sued to teachers coming from out child," Bay said. "Teaching is a
of state. I profession and mus' have stand-
Eight years ago Bay was a ards. But the fact a teacher has
night policeman in Goldendale, a record is not the important
Wash. He was convicted of a scr- thing it's the individual teacher
ies of thefts, served 18 months in who should be judged.
port as presidential disarmament the Slate Reformatory, and wasj "I've paid for my mistake." he
adviser. I paroled. said. "I tried hard in the reforms-
He quit last weekend and re- He then graduated trom tasl-iory io improve myseu. i man i
reived President Kennedy's thanks'ern Oregon College of Education , believe it when I heard some of
l for the work he had done at his hometown of La Grande, mem say, -vvnais me use you go
"You have made a notable con- Partly '" the help of state .outside and they kick you down.'
irih,,ti. in .1,. ...j , .1.. scholarshiDs. "There is no advantage in hav-
(AP) Things alycar they move up. down, or side-1 wori,i m this most important! lhen ne taught on a temporary ing a program of rehabilitation if
ways soma Jb million times. Ana area Kennedy told him in a certificate at a Weston, Ore., eie-in tne ultimate end tne renaoui-
Common Cold Is Still One
Of Man's Big Mysteries
McCloy Resigns
As JFK Adviser
WASHINGTON (AP) John J.
McCloy has turned in his final re-
letter Imentary school and became a layitated are not permitted to do any-
The White House said McClov's ' Baptist minister. Weston school; thing but dig ditches."
.Hv.i in ih. iB,r.om. i:aa officials, the Chamber of Com- A teacher must be of good.
Hints for dieters: You can pep i w,n continue to ba available ' per- i fierce at La Grande and Wash- character. Bay said. But, he
up your meals with a portion ol i,.,, ,n format nneitinr. Iington slate parole ofliciais sup- asked: "is it required tnat ne De
rattlesnake steak, only 200 calor- A new law created an arm eon. Ported his application for a per-1 a plastic saint who never has
you blink your eyes about 84 mil
lion times, if you are normal, you
blinked a. you read thai.
ies. Five baked grasshoppers, 225 troi an(j disarmament agency, manent certificate.
'made a human mistake?"
calories. Or a small serving of
hippopotamus milk, 80 calories.
All these foods are chockfull of
vitamins, and noni is habit form
ing. Historical oddity The only L'.S.
President who composed his own
epitaph omitted mention of his
White House tenure. He wrote:
"Here was burie-1 Thomas Jeffer
son, author of the Declaration of
American Independence, of the
Statute of Virginia for Religious
F'recdom. and father of the Uni
versity of Virginia."
Wnflh t-amcmhorina- "Th i:wl.
r u'u tm th mnrp up net hp- '
hind."
tacts to file and forget: The
sun weighs about two billion bil
lion billion tons. The world still
has more than 400 active volcan
oes. The cricket can throw its
"voice" like a ventriloquist.
Thought of the week: "Baseball
and Kennedy named William C.
foster to head it.
McCloy, Kennedy's special ad
viser on disarmament since Jan.
27. had a hand in formulating the
legislation that established the
new agency.
In a letter to Kennedy, he said
that with the passage of the legis
lation, the conclusion of some ne
gotiations with Soviet Deputy For
eign Minister Valerian A. Zorin
regarding a forum for disarma
ment talks, and the presentation
of a U.S. disarmament plan to
the United Nations, he considered
his mission completed.
Honors its no-nit pncners. wny ,iu .., mn in,nr,0t .iio
Literary note: More books have ! shouldn't we do as much for our source of hasic j0DS fnr tne tw0 loO-nation Economic Committee
..... nl,.,i A mnriin I nr.. hit mntnrictv0" . . . .. .... - , i..,: c .
Provincialism, reportedly pre
dominant in Oregon, comes in for
a panning in the forthcoming issue
of the Saturday Evening Post.
Lead article in the edition sched
uled to go on the newsstands Tues
day, is entitled "Oregon Dilem
ma.' It is written by Robert C'ahn,
one of the Post's associate editors.
Seven photograph in full color by
Joein Gerdts illustrate the article.
The magazine will be placed on
stands in Sutherlin, Roscburg and
Myrtle Creek Tuesday by the
Chrislensen News Agency. Other
parts of the county will be served
been written about the American
Civil War than about any other
subject except religion.
Our quolable notables: "The
United Slates never lost a war or
won a conference" Will Rogers.
Machine age on the farm: in
I860 it took the labor of eight
farmers to feed and clothe 10 fam
iliestheir own and two others.
Today a mere 12 per cent of our
working population (instead of 80
per cent) arc engaged in agricul
ture. A doien men now raise more
than enough to provide for 100
people.
Your eyes are the busiest visinie
by their regular distributors. Lor
ii v.iiiisiciisc.1 I.-,,,,,,, in,- ...i.. 1)f I)rovin.., at,t,des
iiriu nas oeen supplied wnn airjui jH)rts 0n re 'en'
lour nines as ninny inaga'iiies
air or me rivers or bring in too ',,.,, of vo,ir body.
many people. i
Intrusion Fought
The writer pictures Oregon:
"In Oregon man can live
he pleases, (ind room to set aw
from traffic jams and thumb his
nose at the world if he s of a mind
to. If times are tough he can
shoot his dinner in the forests,
catch it in the streams or grow
it in his back yard. Oregon breeds
the kind of man who sticks out
his dun and hollers for his rights.
He shows his love for his slate
both by boasting but by fiercely
protecting it from intrusion."
But contrasting with his report
'-.Urn le-
proress of mdus
no hit motorists?
If science could just figure a
way to cross-breed chickens and
queen ants, breakfast might be
U. S. Proposes 7 -Point Program
For U.N. Decade Of Development
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP) program:
The United Slates proposed Fri- 1. Establishment of a financial
day a seven-point program to put ; service under the Special Fund to
into action President Kennedy's provide guidance and advice to
proposal for making the 1960s developing countries,
"the United Nations' decade of I 2. The providing of expert ad
development." I vice to assist in development
It put emphasis on Increasing planning, taking into account both
funds for technical assistance to government and individual enter
underdeveloped countries and prise.
making more use of food sur-j 3. Establishment of research
pluses in combating want in tho and demonstration projects in
world. (areas of special promise, such as
U.S. Ambassador Philip M. I desalinization of sea water, dcvel
Klutznick outlined the program opment of cheap power resources
to the U.N. General Assembly's , and improved weatner control.
Economic Committee, 4. The increasing of the supply
states during Ihe next 25 to iO .where a formal resolution for as-land training of technicians, pro
years" by a Northwest forester. ! semh'.y approval will be presented fessional and executive manpower
W. D. Hagenstein. Executive ii .bout three weeks. , 0r developing countries.
Vice President. Industrial Fores-! Ranked No. 1 in the program I
National Forests'
Importance Cited
The national forests of Oregon
and Washington were declared to
cheaper. A queen ant lays up io;irv ,,.., ,H ,. 1, ,e,,ine 1 coal of SIM million
100 eggs a day. , subcommittee on Foresis last for 12 for the U.N. special fund Bf .. T D. UnMHl
it that ihp linn fnrp. lnH,,. land V.nandeH Technical Assist. I TIUI CSJUI l UC I1CUIU
is Du DA.Il.r Im
annual wages must have national reached it will mean the Initeili" I
said 36 per cent of Washington's ; million.
: try workers with their S800 million ance Program. If the goal
forest timber for 10b security. He , States will contribute about $60 1
The theory has been advanced '
that a skilled heavyweight boxing
champion could whip a gorilla.
But none has volunteered to try.
The truth: A fiillgrown male gor-
Ol. I..- ,h, .tanntl, nl ft at-Pruon
111a iiaa -.tic suing,.,, w, a, . . 0,,.,i., j .... r I
Tu... John S. l.aldane who ! Oregon's is in the national forests. ! por.ance to the use of food ur- i . .'131'.:
observed, "I've never met al
we must devise increasingly et- 'r. j -."-a 0
station, fective ways of using food for the : .,, ,
healthy person who worried much
about his health, or a good person jeopardizes two others in
Dr. Clvde Browning, professor
Klutmick attached soecial im-i01 real estate. Lniversny 01 ure-
n.. wk.-j ,k.. i... i,..nC ine ceriuicaie class lur uougias
of a single job in the forest indus-1 "As we look ahead." he said, i -0,unty r . r. l e ... ,1 .u 1? " 1
In a single who worried much about his soul.'
Toymakers Would Like To Give
Santa Claus Year-Around Job
is usually the case
Cahn points out Oregon's de-!"nn'';"' " J "j"""
pendence on the lumber industry. K,mc "'"""" f ''"
He places emphasis upon the re
luctance of many people to sec a
change of conditions. A provincial
aliunde, in his opinion, is retard
ing progress. Oregon, he states,
ranks next to lowest among Ihe
eleven western stales in the
By SAM DAWSON
AP Business News Analyst
NEW YOKK (AP) You'd think
the nation's toymakers wouldn't
he thinking of anything today but
Christmas. From now till then 70
per cent of their annual output
is bought by the public.
But tov makers would like to sell
try throughout Oregon, speaks of more tovs earlier in the year
the stale's excellent financial
standing with a debt free stale
Orchestra Cancels
Season's Concerts
Guthrie said pulpwood output growth rale of employment in
must be doubled hv 1975 to insure ! manufacturing during Ihe last dec
growth of the timber industry in ade
Uie raCIIlC .WIIIWCSI. tWonians " .v t'ahn
.'..'::. ,.,".' .":. ",; '.u- '" Topic will be "Trends in Popii-
eiiuipinrm ini.jii. . ucmii ai p.a.u. ocuc.ii ui ,i mt- M.iun ,ir F , rf lllan Growth as it At-
transportation system, county court countries, including those who are cu ReaT Es.al " This is .he 12th
house or school. food exporters. lecture in a series that started last
Stressing that Congress 64 years! Other points in the U S.
ago stated a principal purpose ol ' - j More' than 3.000 Oregon real e-
the national forests as a cont.n- A,.dcmv Aemblv tate practitioners, including eighty-
nous supply 01 umoer lur .e use. - ---- - - , - , ( mn from Douglas Countv, have
and necessities of the citizens of Feature Accordionist voluntarily returned to the class-
, ine 1 nueo aiaies ami 1111 uus 1
. - ,k ,,.K ,,L 1 was re-emphasized in I960 by the! Don , Comfort, of the National
mand in the make-bcl.ev field , , A , fori.5ter . School Assmhli Awnry, ap.
Ideal, Transogram Kemco and ' h committee of peared at the MUo Academy Sat-
many others are already .n the bl,mys of ,he .,,onal for-,urday. '
outdoor and summer toy business. "Md dev., nt of necessary: Comfort is a concert and popu-
A C. Gilbert Co. is entering the luon, , sa(eiuarri ,he stability , lar accordionist and had an en-
field this year with a line of ,.,, ,,.., ; lirelv new nmeram feaiurina the
ready-to-fly plastic model planes ! ,,...,,,,. ,i lh. ri, electronic accordion. His program This town was without taxi serv
Up to now the company has been .vn(.h ne na(0n faces in provid 1 included popular, ballads, novelty ice for nearly four days while its
known for such indoor playthings j murp , bj and rt,cr(,aln from and classical music. Comfort is a only cah driver. Chester Brenner,
as Erector sets. American Flyer ( ilnuu,rj an, e sal(, -You featured entertainer and musician sat out a $18 75 traffic fine in jail
trains, and science sets. don't create 'jobs hv withdraw-' 'n radio, stage, television, and over at $5 a day. Brenner explained
Making and selling toys on a' nnniuetive land from use Noi-'310 school assembly programs, he probably couldn't make that
........ k-... h. L-aan '
iiuuim ua.,m tn-it,.-, . rr,a!p recreational onoor-
engineering unities without roads. But we can
room in the program sponsored hv
the state real estate department
and the University of Oregon.
TAKE THE BUS
MONTPELIER. Ind. (AP)
sort of givo Santa Clause a year
around job. So the First Annual
Soring and Summer Toy Market
Week is opening here today. This! plant, machinery
is the time to get retailers inter- staffs, shipping facilities and the h under multiple use
ested in post Christmas buying, like operating at peaK capacity, ne c,tcd the census forecast that
and promotions. all the time. ' Oregon's population would in-
This new accent on outdoor Missiles, space vehicles, super- creae 31 per cent by 1970 and
playthings and other spring and sonic planes all inspire toy mak- Washington's by 21 per cent. He
summer toys doesn't mean the ers looking for outdoor, or year-ijai(j lm, nukes" it imperative that
Inv makers are downgrading the ; around, products. Hence the till- 'o i,nii.lu. rienn.ins for the na-
Christmas season. They want loibert plane model with mufflers, llona forests be scrutinized to de
sell just as many in tne closing: and an automatic copuoi 10 ncip, tfrlnin(.
weeks of the year as ever, mil me really young operator
reports Mrs. Kalph Martin.
much working.
I PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The
Philadelphia Orchestra Associa
tion has canceled all scheduled
concerts until a new contract they'd like to raise sales in the I The company also is entering
P.nar i. rh.,nA. n,.n .iti,! u .t....: ..i I agreement ran n learned with' first nine months of Ihe year to the Held ot electronic toys and
and will soon be a widely used hie liial they howl at any sug-l'"cal 77' American Federation of parity with the closing quarter. , offering new types ot microscopes
substitute." he said, forecasting a ! gestion of change. They balk ,t Mwicwn. I The trend already is that way. and telescopes
bright future for pulp nd paper j industrial development fearing, 1 Wanton Balis, association Before the war. only li per rent: Luinel. noted (or lov trains, has
production. I that new factories may pollute the Pri'idcnt, announced Ihe rancella nf the annual output sold in introduced a line of electronic and
- uon rriuay aiier mull suies nati tne earner monins, and now us piasuc engineering seis
whether they should be
managed under multiple or single
use.
Udall Asks Park
To Honor Poet
The News -Review
liltied y Kaws-Reriew .lllh.ni Ca.
J4J S. I. Mai. St., RoMOwrt, Omoh
t (AIM Creation of
park in honor ot poel
I CHARLES V. STANTON
I Editor
I GEORGE CASTILLO
! Managing Editor
iifrmber of the Associated Press,
ADDYE WRIGHT
Business Manoger
DON HAGEDORN
Display Adv. Mgr.
Oregon Newspaper Publisher.
Aasoriation, the Audit Bureau of Circulation
Entered as .ecoDd clas. matter May 7, 19:0, at the post oltice at
Hose bur j, Oregon, under act of March 2. 1873
Subscription Rates on Classified Advertising rag
rejected a proposed settlement of per ceni. The loy industry1 Infrared Industries sells most of BARRK
the II day old strike worked out thinks it should be a 50 50 split I its products infrared detectors a nation.i
by federal and state mediators. I Since total sales this year are! (or missiles and satellites to the Robert Frost was proposed Fn
Balis said subscribers will he expected to be about iz Billion.! liovernment. But II is entering the day night by Secretary of the In
informed by mail about ticket le- with SI 4 billion of that still to lov field with a two-wav phone tenor Stewart 1. I (tail.
I funds. ihe realized, retaintn this l'hrist 1 his will send the voice hundreds He told a Democratic fund rais
Three concerts in Philadelphia mas figure and boosting earlier' of ards without wires if the line ing dinner that in creating a Ron
and one in Baltimore had lieen sales to parity would give a of si:ht isn't broken. The phone eil Frost memorial park in the
j canceled since the season s sched-, pleasant $2 8 billion. So that's will operate thi-oiuh glass, and Hipton area where the poet hves.
uled opening Scpl 29 what loy makers are thinking Ihe voice can be rellected off nui ' tte wnu!,l be loieirr preserving
Union members have refused toi altout this week , tors. : (or future generations a small
rehearse or play until a new con ! That's a lot nf money But toy' i.enei al Flectnc is offering sev- piece of the New England he has
! tract is signed guaranteeing SJOO sales have l.een growing rapidly, en assembly kus in 'he transistor celebrated in verse'
j weekly for 40 weeks, or $8,000 an-in recent years. There has tieen electronics field. Included are la- Ripton is m Addison County
I nually. The association has of a big .lump in buying scientific j boratones and kits for transistor eat of Middlehuiy where Udail
j lered $!A5 Last year musicians toys, with all the latter-day mn a ; radios, analog computers, aid has visited Frost on several occa
earned $177. i clcs in real life adding to the de-' transmitters. i sions.
How to Find PEACE
Attend This FREE LECTURE
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE:
"Religion for a Scientific Age"
by GORDON F CAMPBELL, C S B , of Unf Mon.c, Calif.
Member of the Eoord of lecfur-eh.p of The Metier Cfcurc
Te First Church of Chnst, Saentijt, m Bosion, MoisocHusttti
8 P.M. Tuesday, October 10
Joseph Lane Junior High
21 S) North last V,e
Una.r thf Auspices mt First Church at Chntt, Sci.ntitr, Raitkur.
ALL ARE WELCOME
CAM 'Oft SMALL CHILDREN WILL IE PROVIDES