Thousands Strike By Air, Set : in The i Day's tfr& Jerlkihs In this space tht other day, the fact waa noted that Alice in won EDITORIAL PAGE 4 The Newt-Review, Roseburg Ore. Mon., Nov. 13, 1961 DEAR ABBY Abigail Van Burcn ' Fl ,x. v "Cr- Quick And Snappy! HUNTING LAW ENFORCEMENT By Charles V. Stanton From the Roneburg office of the Oregon State Police conies word that this year set an all-time record for the number of local arrests connected with alleged violations . 4U -1 I M 1 - .. Z "'"V" ....... .t j- .... ....i.- DEAR ABBY: I would like to about this subject because there ... u TV;. .m,n)f " under-lw.ll be on the ground, of H.r 1. 1. "mi ins iiiiuniiaiiuii inov vitnuii jiuiiicm iivai ! . ou nomewor wnue anting i nana, oui wnen l mention it the vara University at Cambridge f jt nstfl .. . . . i ... . IU. . . . . J..4V n1naiJ In f rn. I .if a ,.l...i... . . t . . . 1. . L. 1. II. ...ill I. II. . . 1 mic,i niiu liikc iiirn in iric rcanun junv nuncu. From VMriniia rtnrta nf the atutp rnmp rennrt nf rip. .1 1 n r... 1 o uuiacn;!! i. wuiu 1 wain ui nave explain 1 graduate DEAR MOTHER: Sand me the ed dealing with acx. the tells me Kennedv'a action followed a stueW. report card and I'll snd to look it up in the dictionary J DcZ.y . t' his three 1, .u my en.w.r. j How can I Set my m ,h to teU Siate pdecesso'r, ' Harvard To Get JFK Mementoes WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi dent Kennedy announced today that library and museum wiil be built in Cambridge. Mas.., for hit presidential papers and me mentoes. White House press secretary Pi erre Salinger said that "I think that is a proper assumption" when asked whether the Library picable actions by hoodlums and vandals of the hunting Iraternity. At the same time from the Oregon Game Commission dcrland, first published nearly a comes the paradoxical and puzzling statement that the sea century ago and sun one of the i son just ended was one of the cleanest and most satisfac most widely read books in our tr language, is out in paperback. ao , A . if im'M Intt ..,!. ' ' " " -" -lie.-; w that if you've lost your original copy, which un't improbable, you can get another readable copy for the modest sum o( four bits which a century ago was real mon ey but in these inflation-ridden days is hardly chicken feed. I'd like to suggest another can didate for the paperbacka Mc- Cuffey'a Eclectic Headers (there were several of Uiera, you know.) I'm aware they have been un mercifully panned recently by our modern educators. In one town where they are still being used, the school board has been ordered to cease and desist from their use. Somehow I can't help hoping some body will offer a demurrer to the cease and desist order. It's true enough they are old fashioned. But, in their day, they put a lot of stress on fundamental facts that ahouldn't be ignored, and they were full of good maxims such as HONESTY IS THE BEST POLICY, with down-to-earth illus trations as to why it is the best policy. The modern world could use a little more of the practical com mon sense and sound ethical phil osophy that William Holmes Me- (Julicy put into bis Eclectic Read ers. In one of them, probably about the Third, there ia a piece pointing out the truism that in union there is strength. In these parlous days, the Western world could use that thought. Old Kroosh's favorite tac tic is to try to pry us apart, so that be can deal with us one at a time. If be gets away with it, we'll be in a bad way. In driving home the importance of sticking together, McGuffey used the illustration of a pile of sticks. If dealt with separately, his piece pointed out, they can be broken with ease. But if bound together with UNION BANDS the strongest man can hardly break them. That is a fundamental truth that is worth keeping in mind. I ran remember that I was so deeply Impressed by his illustra tion that I tried it out on my own hook, using hazel twigs. Sure enough, I could -break them ONE AT A time without nail trying I then BUNDLED them. At this point, I made a funda mental error. In reading Uie di rections, I bobbled the word UN'ON. I thought it was ONION. It was MOST disappointing. The onion bands broke easily and the aticks fell apart My faith in Mr. McGuffey was sadly shaken, but was restored when I discovered that u-n-i-o-n doesn't spell ONION. The miscarriage of the experi ment was my fault and not his. When bound together with UNION bands, the sticks were unbreak able (by me). I haven't forgotten that lesson to this day. It has been frequently use ful in handling organizational problems, when somebody wanted to jump the reservation and break up the team. Then there was the one about three cents worth of whipcord and the extravagant boy who threw it away. He lived to rue the deed. He got into an archery contest one day and at a critical moment his bowstring broke. Because he didn't have in his pocket that three cents worth o( whipcord, he lost the shooting match, with resulting great humiliation. That lesson so impressed me that to this day when unwrapping a package I lave the string and wrap it into a name around my fingers and store it away. As a result, I have more or lesa always drawerful of hanks ot wrapping twine. Sometimes they come in - handy. In conclusion, it may surprise you to learn that more than J 20 MILLION copies of McUulfey's Eclectic Readers have been sold. For many years, nearly all Amrei ran school children learned to read from them. And While learning to read, they soaked up a lot of good, hard com mon sense and SOUND MORALS that stood them in good atead all their lives. Let's not scoff at Mr. McGuffey. DEAR ABBY: My husband's brother is a physican. 1 kept ask- , .. ... -" ".j uuuiiu iu uicana lane our any correlation or. mese statements:, two boys to his brother s office to "facts of lite. me things a girl should know? The library of the late Presi- Editorial Comment MISPLACED DEMONSTRATION Albany Democrat-Herald Those baby-carriage pushing mothers staging "Strike of Peace" demonstrations throughout the country certainly have a laudable goal. They represent practically a unanimous American opinion in their deprecation of atomic warfare, or any warfare. It is not only these women who deplore war, but their husbands, even in high places. We don't think President Kennedy feels differently, nor anyone else in government, or out. Scheduled at Portland Saturday is a similar demonstration, called the I N walk for Peace, sponsored by the Oregon Fellowship of Recon ciliation. Avowedly the purpose of these endeavors is to work up sentiment against nuclear weapon testing and against war in general. The trouble is that they aren't taking place where they might fulfill a need. Located as they are. in the United States, they are seeking to accomplish what has already been done. Not only have our oflicials but those of all other tree nations The answer. I believe, is obvious; more and betterihave them checked over. Llovd ul THEIR ' mothers didn't 1 1?" at Independence, Mo and DEAR TOLD-' Nat .11 Jk... dent Franklin D. Roosevelt is lo-' remonstrated with the Russians against resuming nuclear testing. know hew to toll their children " 2y dL . u c i lWe have for '" lried 10 tUect "v'olDl disarmament agreements (If. not ttwir law enforcement, more and better attention to woods ac- h- bad cough that lasted all know now to tell them.) Your that of former President Dwight tivities, more and better publicity concerning vandalism, '"miner, and Clyde had a rash on pobi'e library ha. torn, excellent "j, S;T0, Wi had mora arrosts. f.m convinced, her-us, w v.ih ' h,,.w? couldn t rid book en this sob.ee, for girl, iu.t e"sl,PZ'le . .(-.: .- iu- . r - l J. I...T. oi. i goi urea oi waiting so 1 took i yr age. ask your librerian to: "'""' "- me ooys to another doctor and i recommend e tew. " paid this doctor in cash I have yet I Tm Wl" 08 ,he arrangement to hear the end of it Whit wnnlri CONFIDENTIAL TO MARRIED for the Kennedy library it hasn't you have done, Abby, under thej'N WHITE BUT BLUE: You are: been named that officially, yet. same circumstances? (expecting too mucn. A marriage: aaiinger iu " " piemaiure DOCTOR'S RELATIVE license is not e lic.no t oViw. . to get into the question of a com mittee to solicit tunas lor tne library-museum. more attention to the enforcement of laws. Mora People Hunting At the same time we had more people hunting than ever before, which would account in some measure for the record number of arrests. That more hunters were found in violation of game laws than in former years is not unique in the Roseburg area. This same situation applies all over tne state of Oregon. This increase in arrests is being wide ly proclaimed as evidence that hunters are hoodlums and vandals as a class. Nothing, in my mind, is further from the truth. The record from the Roseburg office of the State Police, I believe, gives proof of the fact that vandal ism was one of the least causes of arrests for infractions of the game laws. One of the major factors, it seems to me, is the growing complication of hunting regulations. Such compli cations probably are necessary. Hunting and fishing have become multi-billion dollar sports, important to the econ omy of our state. Because these outdoor sports have grown so large and so rapidly, it has become necessary to de vise complicated control devices. But these complications also lead to violations. The violations can, in turn, be classified as intentional, care less, or resulting from ignorance. Here in the Roseburg area 27 of 78 arrests were be cause of failure to properly tag gnme animals. Five hunt ers went after elk without tags. Two hunters didn't have tags on their deer. This tagging of game animals is just one of the many complications. The deer tag specifies the month and also the dav of the kill. Both dates must be shown by being torn. The majority of the hunters arrested had torn out the piece showing the month, but hadn't indicated the day of the kill. If the day wasn't shown, it was possible to use the tag again. Consequently we must assume that gome hunters were deliberately striving to get by the law. But it also is safe to assume, I am sure, that some were careless and some were ignorant But neither carelessness nor ignor ance Is an excuse. Publicity Pays Off Only two hunters were picked up by the State Police at the Roseburg office for wanton destruction of game. Fourteen were charged with Illegal possession and again we must constder some extenuation. Some of the viola tions probably involved complicated regulations. A couple of hunters were charged with loaning their deer tags, and two were picked tip for shooting from the highway. None was charged with deliberate destruction of property. It is evident, I believe, that the fact we have a record number of arrests this year stems rather from closer at tention to technicalities of hunting, rather than because of deliberate violations. Part of this close attention comes from the fact that hunting, hunting safety, hoodlumism and vandalism have all been getting a lot of publicity. Thus the public's atten tion is focused on hunting and on game law violations on misconduct in the woods. Because we are thinking more about it, we see more of it, even though it may not be st least percentagewise as prevalent as before. Oregon originated the Red Hat program, designed to produce better relations between hunters and landowners, reduce accidents and cut the number of fires. No better evidence of the fact that this program is working is to be found in the fact that public awareness has been created and that enforcement steadily is becoming more vigorous. Hal Boyle Conscience Is A Feeling That Someone Is Peeking ORTHODOX DEPARTMENT NEW YORK (AP) A new De partment of the Laity, to coordi nate relationships between the church and branches of the laity, has been set up by the Greek Orthodox Church of North and South America. NEW YORK (AP)-Thing a columnist might never know if he didn't open his mail: Our language as well as our population is exploding. The latest unabridged dictionary lists 100.000 new words and meaning, that have developed over the last quar ter century marking the greatest growth of the English tongue in history. Grownups chew more gum than kids. Adult gum accounts for Si per cent ot chewing gum sales, bubble gum only 11 per rent. Itty bitty babies: A mama marbles but rattlesnakes lose their buttons. So you can't tell their exact age bv counting their rattle buttons. They grow a new rattle every time they shed their skin about three times a year Our quotable notables: "Con science. 11. L. Mencken once said, "it a persistent uneasy feel ing that someone is peeking." Do you have trouble with your false teeth' George Washington did. too. He owned at least six sets of false teeth. One set was carved from the tusks of a hippo potamus. Another set, msde of black bear may weliih several lead, weighed over three pounds hundred pounds, hut her cub at Pedestrians led a simple life birth may weigh only 9 to 12 bark ounces. I S.ooo DEAR RELATIVE: I would have called my husband's brother, made an appointment with HIM at his office, taken the boys and paid HIM. DEAR ABBY: I am 13 years old and my mother has talked to me about the facts of life only once and that was when I was ten. I'Abbv, Box 336j, would like to talk to her again! Calif. Everybody has a problem. What's yours? For a personal reply, write to Abby, Box 3365, Beverly Hillj, Calif. For Abby.s booklet. How To Have A Lovely Wedding," send 50c to Beverly Hills, James Marlow Molotov Is Back In Moscow In Disgrace And Jobless WASHINGTON (AP) V V Iv.il. i,i.. m,.m j.... u ..i. Molotova life has been ruined in er, he is more subtle Uian Stalin a hair-sputting contest. About the j so far using devices short of war. but all to no avail. We haven't been able to get the Russians to apree to any plan attended by guarantees against treaty violations. We have made repeated offers to disarm if the Soviet Union would do likewise. We quit testing atomic bombs and have never re sumed surface testing despite resumption by Russia. So it is in Russia, rather than in America, that these demon strations should be taking place. We don't look for that to happen soon, however. In fact frcm all we can gather the Russian people don't even know their rulers have exploded a 50-megaton bomb. Their rulers haven't told them and they have so jammed the radio broadcast bands that Ivan hasn't learned much, if anything, from outside about the tests. ( Why can't we demonstrate against that? w.c.e. omy consolation left him ia to wonder: Viho s next? The old Bolshevik nnn 71 thinks Stalin, his great friend and benefactor, was a more aKBres- sive revolutionary than Premier Khrushchev, and he said so. For this he has been disgraced and Sunday went borne to llnnw jobless. Just as any difference, hriwean American Democrats and Rennh. licans, seen from Moscow, must seem infinitesimal, so any differ ences in the ultimate aims of Stal- and Khrushchev, looked at from here, are practically invisible. Many of the old Bolsheviks. . ecuted by Stalin, were restored oy premier Khrushchev to good standing in the Russian history books after Stalin's death, al though this must have been cold comfort to them then. That was four vear. apn u-hpn Khrushchev first denounced Stal- But this wasn't good enoush for stubborn old Molotov who de scribed Khrushchev's tactics as "antirevolutionary" and "paci fist." Khrushchev now has linked Molotov and the others with Stal in's terror, although he was Stalin's boy, too. The result: The Soviet Commu nist party's 22nd congresi recom mended that Molotov be thrown out of the party. Thus Molotov's whole life's work done as he thought right, no matter how it looks to others goes down the drain. Since the part." switches tactics to fit its needs at any given time. Molotov can only hope that in time Khrushchev will be de nounced as an enemy of commu nism and he himself restored to good standing in the history books. But what makes Molotov's be lief that Khrushchev is antirevolu tionary and thus anU-Stalin look Prnlpvnim uhnn nhcuul mm h.LIm"d'!u, mons,er- At here is that Stalin abandoned the time he was in a Dower stniir. gle, which he won. with Molotov and other old Stalinists like Georgi Malenkov and Lazar Ka-ganovich. They were demoted to nhscnro Jobs, under the Kremlin rule of winner take all, but otherwise left unharmed because Khrushchev was trying some changes such as more civilized treatment for the Soviet people at home and a for eign policy more flexible and im aginative than Stalin s but less openly pugnacious and stupidly stumbling. Here are a counle examnle. nf the atupidity: 1. Stalin tried to shut off Berlin with a blockade. President Tru man countered with the airlift. Stalin tried to be tough. He wasn't tough enough. Because he lacked courage to risk war by shooting down the airlift, the blockade failed. 2. He tried to test the West's will with a war in Korea, letting the North Koreans start it. This not only got nowhere, but Stalin so scared the Allies thev formed their NATO military alliance, the last thing he wanted. Nobody has accused Khrushchev of not want- High Court Faces Litigation Increase SALEM (AP) The Oregon Supreme Court is faced with a big increase in litigation, but doesn't quite know why. Chief Justice William M. McAllister said recently. In the 10 months ended Oct. 31. 396 appeals were filed. There were 331 in the similar period of last year. The court has caught up with its docket now, having been 22 home ownership and inspire residents to avail themselves of the monuia oeiunu omy iwo jean, ,dvlntagei o(fered Dy ,oa lnd climate In the beautificatton of their S- i, . McAllister said that if the pres- hmes- ..... ent trend continues, the court WeU. now. ain ' ln" mce- might have to go back to using We can't help but wonder what it ia with Roseburg that the Circuit Judges as pro tern Su- foreign-born, except for that eight per cent, seek to avoid it, despite preme Court justices. It stopped (itJ inspired community feeling and climate. Is it possible that, fear thia practice at the end of lasting l0.ctUei "racial problcmi," Roseburg mildly discourages the '"he seven justices, however, lorei8n born from et,lin2 within " hallowed boundaries? have two retired justices to help. I We'd in tnat hape today if the American Indians and the Justice Hall S. Lusk rejoined! founding fathers had felt the same way about those who had the the court early this year. Justice misfortune of having been born in the wrong country (wgk) James 1. Brand rejoined the court on Sept. 1, but will leave Jan. I, the chief justice said. WELCOME TO ROSEBURG Coos Bay World We like the city of Roseburg. It is a pleasant enough place to visit and, according to people we know who've lived there, a pleasant enough place to live in as well. We think somebody over there is pretty darn conceited, however. In a program announcing the fourth annual Juvenile Advisory Coun. cil Conference to be held in Roseburg next week, some enthusiastic city booster penned the following exuberant lines: "Roseburg is the largest city in Douglas County and distinctly a city of home owners. Ninety-two per cent of its population is Ameri. can born and racial problems are non existent two factors which have done much to stabilize the community, create a desire for FLYING PARSON PUT IN BAY. Ohio (AP) Be cause his congregation is scatter ed over three islands in Lake Erie, the Rev. Lee Lindenberger. 33, has made an airplane a tool of bis j ministry. He's had only one crackup In five years of flying to and from the islands in his work as pastor of St.. Paul's Episcopal Church. He was uninjured. Communist revolution not long after he took over from Lenin in the 1930s in order to build up "socialism in one countrv." This was simply recognition of a real ity. Russia at the time didn't have the strength to export revolution. So Stalin set about building up the Soviet Union as a No. 1 world power. The foundation he laid at home in industrial and nuclear development is what now enables Khrushchev to talk tough. There are some who look upon both Stalin and Khrushchev not as revolutionaries at all but as man agers. This kind of conclusion seems too early. Stalin was begin ning to stir himself after World War It when he had power. This country's possession of the atomic bomb kept him from be ing too brazen. If it had not been for that alone after the war, when Europe was prostrate, he might have tried with his huge and in tact armies to overrun the area with war and revolution. There is nothing to indicate Khrushchev is any less revolu tionary than Stalin. He is just not as clumsy. Aid he. like Stalin, is now living in a nuclear age when PRUDENTIAL LIFE INSURANCE HORACE C. BERG Special Aaent - Room 301 , Pacific Buildinq OIL OR 3-7491. R.i. OR 3-7193 A to I RENTS HOSPITAL BEDS WALKERS OXYGEN COMMODES it CRUTCHES li CANES WHEELCHAIRS OR 2-3472 ii . ,. m ,.j20i FREE DELIVERY ROSEBURG AREA '. S24 W. Military Ays. ing to spread communism. But in he has to be careful. This doesn't me nydrocen bomb age. when mean he won t push where he can IPenney's 5 DAYS ONLY! BEGINS TUESDAY Don't worry if jour doctor tells you that your't suffering from "occhymosis of the coniuctive tis sues and the periorbital cuticular tissue. " Th.t'a tu.t hi. w-.v nf telling you someone gave you a141""1 "mk- 'nKe disease, black eye. Absent-minded: More than half I million I' S. motorists lock themselves out of their cars each year. Peonle .nmelime. Ins. any luxury jusi Insurance Claims Run High After Two California Fires I.OS ANGELES (AP) Insur-( personal belongincs. "You must anee claims from the devastating j remember that fine art can build j Bel-Air and Top.nsa Canyon fires some of these personal claims up range from S18S to $;oO,000 pretty fast." says Simkins. I averaging about SM.00O. Some homes in the area, he "They're running very high."svs. contained collections of one official said recently. original paintings and statuary. Adjusters from manv parts of -Most polices will also pay hold-1 the West have poured into the c" ,or Witional living expenses' stricken area to sift the ruins of -,he moW room.' nd resjaurantl . I .. . . metal lalrnn u n 1 1 a lami u s in 1900. There were only !xutnern taiitornias worst fire L" "1 "V u ' automobiles in the countrv I and to help homeowners collect n0J?' .' T" u an estimated $24 million for in- . """' u..-.u i,m en sured losses. Some 4S0 homes ' Uct w"h mor' ,n" hon,"; were destroyed, all but nine in , """"V"""'. ,ir 'J",' ,-y the Bel-Air section. of ,he ,,r-,t " having difficulty The News -Review then. Now there are more than 60 million. Here's the reason the problem of solving the problem of cancer is so difficult: It isn't, as most It 1 is a sroiiD nf nerhart. a hundi-ed diseases, similar and yet differ ent. Cancer's annual U.S. toll: Two million lives. Wise crack of the week: " A ne- th.ir eeasity." says ainger Jrannie Thomas. bought by your neighbor RvUitk.4 by Newt-Rtvio Pakliikiet Ce. S4S S. I. Main St., R.Mkerf, Oreaea CHARLES V. STANTON ADDYE WRIGHT Editor Business Manager GECRGE CASTILLO DON HAGEDORN Monoging Editor Display Adv. Mgr. Member of the Associated Press, Oregon Kewtpaper Publishers Association, the Audit Bureau of Circulation Entered as second class matter May 7. 1920. at the post office it Roseburg, Oregon, under act of March 1, 1873 Subscription Rates on Classified Advertising Page n..rr. ,r.r. nH lof ,..,. ' reau. representing 320 stock prop- j numbcr I erty insurance companies, says 32 .., Mn of toa, dfvas.; adjuster flew in to join a local tion.. M1( Slmkin,. .., so murh: staff of 82. They began examining, , n(,f hous, nllmb.r js ,,,f, the fire scene less than 24 hours Rmde tlw adjust(.r t0 th, prop.: after the blaze began and two1. ; days before it was controlled. s'.mkm. .t Ret. Air virtim. .... I'hil Simkins. the bureau's re gional director, could not say how- Inventive America: Since 1ST much Hollywood notables, or nth ually were insured to full value To recover valuables buried in debris but not destroyed, a shaker ! ih. i' c d.i.. . i . . " : , ' neons oui nin oesirojea. a snaKcr the L S. Patent Office has issued , er certain individuals, were : device similar lo a eolH minin-. ihi-e million n.t.ni. nnu. o-.m. 1 .!.:.. n.. v. i . device similar 10 a gold minins r --. -- .n.. au, in. iu .uhiv lay about 50.000 yearly. Abraham Lin coin held patent No. S.469 for a device to buoy vessels over shoals menta began Tuesday. "We urge the insured not to operate under shock, not to com (Had it made him fortune, Ihi- piete their listings under duress," country would probably have lost I said Simkins. the services of one of its greatest : "They ve almost lost a loved statesmen.) ione." he said. "This is their loss. Foamy voyage: An Assyrian not ours. We wsnt them to proper uic uauns imin i.uw b.i,. says iy ev.iu.ie 11 r.ven to ak a per- mechanism sifts ruins where a . homeowner recalls leaving sucb items. Simkins estimated adjusters! should finish their work within three weeks. , KOREAN GiNEROSITY SEol 1.. Korea (Al'i In a country wherj the average annual ik.. v..k . , , . - . - . : . ' ruunuv wihtj ine awr.ye annual '""""PP'yrf'l0 " he ' rebuild is not a ,ncomP is e ,han , p.r p,r. ; on his famous ark. So. for that! (air question right away." j K,)r(.a Methodits lat vear ' matter, did the Pilgrims on the Simkins estimates 30 per cent gave their chnrcr an amount equal Mayflower. (Beer kept better thaninf the amounts claimed will he to ST for every man, woman anil water ln past times ) ,ior homes, nearly Jo per cent fori child in the ios.too membership.' . r I fTWJ BUILD BABY'S I f7 w'" v A i I L PHOTO ALBUM WITH Beautiful 5x7" photograph, for only 59c Nun-glart lights get natural smiles. pixy pin-ups txausivnr at pinniy s PHOTOGRAPHER S HOURS:' 9:30 A.M. to 5 P.M. Do your baby-bragging" with a beau-' liful photo , ."worth mors that, a thousand words." Get a completely finished photograph for only. 69.. You will not b urgd to buy but if you wish the remaining- poses they're yours for 1.35 for tha first, 1.25 for the 2nd and 1 for any additional. AGE UMIT 6 years. One or two children per family will be photographed singly for S9 each for the tint picture, tach additional child under five, I SO.