E minis Striktjf Air, Sen 11 in The Day's ews ... ; By ..;-' Wt& Jenkins j Under the termi of the 19C0 U.S. Internal Security Act. the Com munist party of the U.S. mut register with the Justice Depart ment of the United States as a tool of the Soviet government or face n avalanche of legal action by the U.S. government. If and when it registers with the Justice Department, the Com munist party must turn over the names and addresses oi lis om cers and file a financial account ing (including where its money comes from) and a list 01 its printing presses. If the communist party as an organization fails to register with the U.S. government, the respon ibilitv falls back on the party leaders. If the party leaden fail to register, the burden of respon sibility for registration shift to the ENTIRE MEMBERSHIP, estl mated at about 10.000 persons. Failure to comply with the law subjects the party, it leadership and the membership to fines of $10,000 day for every day tney fail to register. In addition. Individ ual members of the Communist party would be liable to five years in prison for EVERV DAY they fail to register. As this is written, the U.S. Com munist party has notified the U.S. government that it will IGNORE the deadline for registration. U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy has announced that be will enforce the law. Question: Is the irresistable force about to meet the Immovable body? If so, what will happen? From Berlin: East German communists work ing under searchlights are rein forcing the wall dividing East and West Berlin and art installing tank traps at strategic points. This feverish activity appears to be the communist anawer to a demand by West German Chan cellor Adenauer that the wall must come down as part of any East West settlement on Berlin. One can't help wondering about this wall business. Who is most harmed by It? ' The East? Or the West? It dramatizes East Germany be fore the world as Communist PRISON. It has all the trappings of pris ongrim walls with barbed wire at the top. Armed guards patrol ling it with orders to shoot down anybody who tries to cross it to freedom. It is eye witness evidence that a Communist state is a PRISON state. It is eye witness evidence that Russia, the leader of com munism in the world, has GONE BACK TO SERFDOM and Is for mally announcing that the serfs who try to escape will be a hot down. That ISNT good propaganda no matter what the Communists may claim.' Ike Says Soviets Hope For Bankruptcy Of U. S. AUGUSTA. Ga. (AP) Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower says the Soviet Union hopes to defeat this country by forcing us "to spend ourselves Into bank ruptcy," not by military power. For that reason, "wo n.ust nev er demand one dollar more than is necessary for adequate mili tary strength," he told an esti mated 6.000 persons attending a meeting Monday night of the Cen tral Savannah River Area chap ter of the Association of the U.S. Army. It was Eisenhower's first pub lie address in Augusta where he spent many golfing vacations as president. He said he doea not believe the United States is, on the brink of global war because "there is no one in the world who would dare challenge us with any hope of winning." Galvao, Six Companions Leave Dakar For Rio DAKAR, Senegal (AP) Por tuguese opposition leader Hen rique Galvao and six companions left Dakar today for Rio de Janeiro. Galvao and hia friends were ex pellcd from Morocco last weekend after the hijacking of a Portu- guese airliner which had been made to fly over Lisbon dropping ; opposition leallets shortly before Portugal's parliamentary alec- tioni. I The News -Review FeUithed ty News-Review FaUlihleg C. S4S S. I. Male St., Raukerf, OreeM CHARLES V. STANTON Editor GECRGE CASTILLO Managing Editor Member of the Associated Press, Oregon Newspaper FubUsheri Association, the Audit Bureau of Circulation Er.tered at second class matter May 1. 1920. at the post office at Roseburg, Oregon, under act of March J, 1ST! Subscription Rates on Classified Advertising Paga EDITORIAL PAGE 4 The Newt-Revtow, Roseburg SCREWBALL REGULATIONS By Charles V. Stanton Not all the price advantage, permitting' Canadian mills to put cheaper lumber on the east coast of the Unit ed States, stems from lower stumpage costs, lower wages, cheaper transportation. We also must include in any com parison of problems the matter of government controls, subsidies, favoritisms, conflicting regulations, and other such factors. Canadian mills presently of lumber to retail ysrds of en area in which the Pacific formerly led. But British Columbia mills can put lumber into New York at $8 and up per thousand board feet cheap er than can our own mills. As a result a good many of our woods workers will be sitting in their rocking chairs this winter when they would otherwise be working. Canada, as hag been pointed out. has some economic factors in her favor. Loggers much less thnn the prevailing Northwest. Timber owned by out to the mills according forced to compete in bids for as is the case in the U.S. Our own competition probably will come under control eventually. Here in the Pacific Northwest our installed cutting capacity is far greater than the allowable cut. As a result we're almost out of privately owned timber. It win not be long until, the bulk the public domain. Adjustment Coming; That means that some of ation until our cutting capacity reaches a balance with the volume of available timber. That's already the case in British Columbia. The government owns the bulk of the timber and permits each mill to buy according to its need. The price is adjusted to the need rather than to a competitive demand. Then. too. Canadian coastal mills are nermitted to load lumber in any ship, whereas our U.S. coastal mills must load only on American boats, where wage scale, both on the dock and on the shin, brines about a s-reat increase in transportation costs. The question is asked: ment, to favor maritime economy, forces the use of Amer ican ships in handling lumber, why shouldn't the govern ment pay this subsidy? Why should it force the lumber industry to subsidize the higher wages paid U.S. mari time workers? Canada has another big transit cars. The United States government recently "put the screws on transit car operations. Small mills, in parti cular, are hurt by this ruling. Small mills, usually with age of lumber, put their product in freight cars which then proceed to move toward markets. Transportation Speeded The cars could be kerjt in with no particular destination was iouna. ine retailer had inventories to meet tne stocks But that practice delayed shortages hurt timber producing areas. As a result the federal government has decreed that there shall be no transit cars. The list of cars for storage, as was the for mer practice, has been stopped. But the Canadian arcvernment nllmv its ahlnnora 15 days. This allowance is a trreat heln to the amnll retnlW and works against some of our Northwest production, ac cording to some of the smaller operators. some or our operators talk about "screwball" regula tions. Our own government, they assert, has some of these "odd" regulations, and could partially overcome the price disparity between Canadian and U.S. lumber uses by consistency. For example, they point in making contracts for any tion specmes in the contract the contractor must use the production from domestic mills. But, if the builder of a house secures an FHA loan, the contractor is freed from the restriction of using domestic lumber and can use for eign lumber, cheaper in both inasmucn as a major part or our lumber production goes into the building of houses, a provision on FHA in sured loans to correspond to requirements in other branch es of federal construction would help immensely in solv ing ine lumber problem, producers contend. Maurine's Tumor Said Completely Removed PORTLAND (AP) A report from the University of Oregon Mdical School Hospital Monday said tnai tne slow-spreading can cer for which Sen. Maurine Neu- berger. D-Ore., underwent surgery last Thursday, waa completedly removed. This pathology report confirmed the Immediate post-operation re port. Tne tumor, tne report said "was confined to the inner surface of the large Intestine. It was a low grade tumor, meaning it Is the least malignant of tumors of this kind." A hospital spokesman added that there was "no evidence what ever of extension. Thie ia very good news. Her physician said the prognosis (outlook) is excellent. PLIA OF SELF DIPINSI HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) Two hunters were arrested during Jnnaylvania,i small game aeason ,ur """"ng a cow, ine aiaie game tvM""""",n "ponea. The hunters told the game ward en the cow attacked them . ADDYE WRIGHT Business Manager DON HAGEDORN Display Adv. Mgr. Ore. Tues., Nov. 21, 1961 are predominating In sales the Atlantic Coast. This was Northwest's Douglas Fir mills and mill workers are paid wage here in the Pacific the government is parcelled to need. The mills are not federally controlled timber, of our timber will come on our mills will die of log starv If the United States govern advantage in the matter of limited dock snace for stor transit for a rntinle nf wopV given them, while n market an opportunity to adjust his in transit cars. the movement of cars. Cnr out. the federal o-overnment. type of governmental construc price and aualitv. The Cartoonist Says: 'He's Mine! All Mine!" DEAR ABBY Abigail Van Buren It Is ---And It Isn't! DEAR ABBY: I have something on my conscience which 1 would like to unload. Also, 1 want to know if I really should feci guilty under the circumstances. My husband doesn't know how to hang on to money. All he knows is how to spend it. He gives me money whenever he feels like it. which lsn t very often. 1 have been going through bia pants pockets while he is asleep in order to get enough money to feed our family properly. If I didn t get the money this way, I would never see it. Is this stealing? POCKET-PICKER DEAR PICKER: No matter what you call It, helping yourself in this manner IS wrong. Insist on a household allowance, and step filching. DEAR ABBY: I have been see ing a man for the past fe months who claims he is not mar ried, but I have a few reasons to believe he Is. He sees me only one night a week. He has never given me his home phone or address. He says he loves me, but avoids the subject of marriage. He never asks me anywhere, just comes to see me at my apartment. 1 can't afford a private investigation, but I would like to know how I can find out for sure if he is married or not. MUST KNOW DEAR MUST: The next time he comes to see you, in the spirit of kittenish play, douse his neck and hair with perfume. If he washes n off before going heme tie's mar ried. DEAR ABBY: We have in our school a girl who tells the most outlandish lies you ever hea-d. She told a bunch of us girls that her father had a 90 foot boat. She also said she had a siring of horses, and her father had an airplane. She aaid she has a transistor radio to match every outfit and that she has had $900 worth of skating les sons. You can't prove she is lying because, when you ask to see any of these things, she says she gave them away. The girl is only 13. She is very pretty, and not dumb. What makes her fib like this? Is there any way we can cure her? HER FRIENDS DEAR FRIENDS: Your school mate's stories are too whopping to be lust ordinary ' fibs." The girl sounds like a psychopathic liar. (One who actually confuses fan- Two Oil Firms Lease Oil Tracts By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Two major oil companies have begun leasing tracts of Oregon land Gulf Oil In Linn County and Humble Oil nearby Canby in Clackamas County. There have been no direct state- ments from the two companies, but the leases have been recorded Robert Beacon of Northwest Oil Report, Portland, said today it was possible these leases were the start of setting up land blocks for later drilling. He said that under normal conditions it would be at least a year and possibly two be fore the stage of actual drilling was reached. Moreover, be said, if some other company should get leases in areas that would prevent substan tial oloc.es Irom Deing formed, drilling plans could be abandoned Oil has never been found in commercial quantities In Oregon. Some shows of gas have been reached in past Willamette Valley armings. tasy with reality, and believes her own tales.) It usually stems from a basic Insecurity and a desire to be accepted. Psychiatric treat. ment may be In order. On the eth er hand, she might outgrow it. Everybody has a problem. What's yours? For a personal re ply, write to Abby, Box 3365, Bev erly Hills, Calif. Enclose a stamp ed, self-addressed envelope. For Abbv's booklet. "How To Have A lovely Wedding," send 50c to Abby, Box 3365, Beverly Mills, Calif. James Mario w JFK Makes Direct Attack On Impatience, Extremism WASHINGTON (AP) A plea for patience and reasonableness has been a more or less steady theme in President Kennedy's speeches from the day he took office. Until last week he sandwiched the plea in among a lot of other things, depending upon what par ticular group he addressed. But twice last week he made his most direct attack on impatience and extremism. It may indicate the impatience is getting under bis skin. Kennedy has been criticized for not going more often to the people through TV to explain his prob lems and solicit support, both on foreign and domestic dilemmas. He has been aware of this com plaint. Still, he has steadily avoided the fireside chat method except for his report on his June meet ing with Premier Khrushchev and his July appeal for more arms and spending. He has used another device. He has had newsmen into the White House, aingly or in groups, an oblique substitute for going to the nation himself. Ask a White House aide why and you're apt to be told he doesn't want to wear out his welcome with the public. But what now seems to be his growing impatience with impa tience is quite different from his awareness of criticism because he doesn't use TV more. While he has remained oblique in the latter, he has become more di rect in the former. He began his plea for patience in his inaugural address last Jan. 20 when he warned that there might be no solution for our for eign problems "in a hundred days" or "in our lifetime." Last June 9 he said this coun try must realize the struggle with communism is not only worldwide but "is going to be with us a long time that there are no easy and quick solutions to the difficult problems that we face." He was talking then to a group of editors and publishers. On June 16. speaking to the National Conference on International Eco nomic and Social Development, he said he had found in this coun try a "great desire 'to do some thing.' " He urged those who want "to do something" to "channel their energies behind our new foreign aid program to help prevent the social injustice and economic chaos which invite subversion and revolt." On Oct. 12 at the University of 2" Opinions From U. S. Military Aid 1 Won't Stop Communists To The Editor: Now we have trouble in Cam bodia! What if Cambodia? Cam bodia is a country south of China. Cambodians are very unhappy. They are denouncing the U.S.A. in no uncertain terms. The trouble is that Cambodia Is only receiving about $25 million a year in U.S. military and econ omic aid. The people are unhappy with this small amount. The neighboring countries of Thailand, Laos and South Veitnam have re ceived far more U.S. aid than has Cambodia. This kind of stupid U. S. aid all over the world only increases our national debt. Military aid does not win friendship or stop com munism In these countries. Before World War II the com munist press said: "Fight against North Carolina, referring to rally ing cries of past generations, he said: "It Is a dangerous illusion to believe that the policies of the United States can be encom passed, stretching as they do worldwide under varying and dif ferent conditions, in one slogan or one adjective, bard or soft or otherwise, or to believe that we shall soon meet total victory or total defeat Last Thursday, at the Univer sity of Washington, he hit the pa tience theme again: "We must face problems which do not lend themselves to easy or quirk solu tions." He banged at those "who cannot bear the burden of a long twilight struggle. He split them into two groups those who would appease commu- inism and those who urge what he said he considers the "path way to war." In Hollywood on Saturday night he went after what he called the "extremists," and described them as those who "have sought to es cape their own responsibility" by finding an "appealing slogan or a convenient scapegoat. He said they call for a "man on horseback because they do not trust the people, find treason in our finest churches, in our high est court and even in the treat ment of water." For some reason Kennedy stopped short of being completely direct. He was making an obvious attack on such groups as the John Birch Society and the mil itia-type men but he didn't say so. Last Oct. 27 Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson made a sim ilar attack on groups which sow doubt about the courts and Con gress and suggest there are trait ors in the executive. But he. too, skipped nimbly over identifying his target. But the fact that Kennedy and Johnson both unloaded on the "ex tremist" would tend to show that they are becoming a matter of increasing irritation or concern, to the administration. Condemned Man Denied Hearing By High Court WASHINGTON (AP) The; Supreme Court denied today hearing to Salvatore Agron, a Puerto Rican facing execution in New York for the slaying of two 16-year-old boys at a darkened playgro-ind on the west tide of Manhattan. Agron, born in Mayaguez. Puer to Rico, stabbed the two boys to death in the early morning of Aug. 30, 1959. His counsel said he was then one day past bis 16th birthday. Counsel for the boy said the stabbings occurred when 15 teen- age Puerto Ricans sought revenge on an Italian group for an alleged earlier assault. None of the vic tims naa any connection wiin ine original objects of the Puerto Riran group, the attorney :an group, the attorneys said. The appeal to the high tribunal contended Puerto Ricans were arbitrarily discriminated against in the election of grand and" trial juries in Agron's cse. in viola - tion of the constitutional guaran tee of equal protection of law The New York St at a Court of Appeals rejected this contention in a decision last July 7. Union Church Service Scheduled At Glendale Glendale's annual Union Thanks- giving service will he held at the Glendale Southern Baptist Church! Wednesday at 7:30 p m. according! to Mrs. Gerald Fox, Glendale cor- respondent. I The service was planned by memners oi uie iiicnaaie aumsirr- ial Association at a meeting held recently at the home of the Rev Bruce Manning. Program Listed ine program wiu inciuae a cm to worship by the Rev. Norman Naugler, pastor of the Glendale Olivet Presbyterian Church; pray - er by the Rev. Bruce Manning of the Glendale Assembly of God Church; scripture by Bill Cum- minss. layman in the Glendale Southern Baptist Church which is currently without a pastor: and the Thanksgiving message by the ! Rev. Arnold Dalke of the Aralea : Community Church. Mrs. Ben I Rrmple of the Glendale Southern 1 Baptist Church will art as pianist, I The Glendale Assembly of God 1 Church will furnish special mil- 1 sical numben. war and fascism." When the Hit-; ler-Stalin pact waa signed the communist changed their tune and said: "Fight for peace and democracy." They did not say "pray tor peace," but "fight for peace." How does one fight for peace? In communist lingo peace means communism. When the comirunist press con demned the fascist warmongers, the same press had articles about the splendid progress of the com munists fighting for peace in north China. When the great nations of the world were engaged in World War II the communists were able to conquer China. Now they are bringing "peace" to Tibet, North Veitnam, Laos and South Veitnam. The military aid we give one country is often used to conquer the adjoining country. Part of the military aid we gave to the U.S.S.R. is used in China and Korea. The military aid given to Laos is used in South Vietnam. This kind of military aid is fine for the communists. After World War II we alone had the atom bomb and the mili tary power. We could have written the terms of peace and could have defined the boundaries oi tne de feated nations. This is exactly what we did, only everything we did had to meet with the approval of the U.S.S.R. Our statesmen drank toasts to Stalin and called him "Uncle Joe They said he wasn't such a bad guy, although they knew his hands were bloodier than timer s. Our own Morganthau Plan was used to divide Germany in such a way that it would never again be a threat to the peace of Europe. Today the problem in Germany is a tnreat to the peace of tne world. Men are speaking of nuclear war. Are we to drop "the bomb" on every communist cell in the na tions of the world? Are we to go to war because the "slaves" in some parts of the world have new masters? We don't have to be red or dead. Nothing will be lost if we remain at peace. Everything will be lost to everybody if we have war. I don't fear the communists near ly as much as i fear our own people who want war. Let us hope and pray we will not be led into war or lied into war. We are will in to die for our own great coun try, but we don't want to die for Cambodia, the Congo or Berlin. The enemy we must fear are the traitors in our ow- country, those who have sold us down the river during the past 40 years. Frank Liening Camas Valley Rt., Box 545 Winston, Ore. Roseburg Man Reports Acts Of Vandalism To The Editor: I do not make it a practice of going hunting on Sunday but be ing that Sunday October 22 was the last day of the general hunting season I called my brother-in-law before going to Sunday School and church and asked him if he would go hunting with me, as he had told me he thought he could take me to where I could get my deer. We got up on the Ingram place about 1 o'clock. I parked the car well off the road so any one would have plenty of space to get past it We hunted until about 5 and went to the car. Roy told me I had a flat. I looked and found both front tires and the right rear tire were all flat. Roy figured that some one tried to break in and steal some thing and couldn't, so as a re venge let the air out of the three tires. I figured that some one mistook my car for some one else's car and let out the air. r Hal Bovle Every Ulcer Victim Ought To Get A Raise In Pay NEW YORK (AP) Jumping to being ragged, conclusions: I It isn't love that makes the Every ulcer victim ought to get I modern world go round. It's sales a hike in rav. He nrobahlv cot manship. Anyone who looks down the ulcer from worrying about his j hia nose at the art of salesman job or from listening to i-ship ts kidding himself. No other - . , , ' , S'nK a demands as to why I nT "uesn ' m?" m money. either case, he needs compensa- tion. Red haired eirls have the mnsi , faithful husbands. I never knew 1 man married to a red-haired in nu ecr descried ner anu M- u,uv ,. ran off with a brunette. I if he really chose to. The average wife can usually w U "vy each other for dif tell when her husband is lying to ferent reasons. The man you her; her big trouble is that sho "'y for his money may envy you is never Quite sure when he is; telling her the truth. Many girls buy their boy friends expensive and unusual gifts for Christmas. But the quick en way to win a working man's heart is to present him a new him more than to glven frce pr 0f snoes o,It f;t The best companion is a man wh0 laughs when it's raining and does all his griping on sunny d,yl. you n,,y think him mad- Dut he ll keep you entertained. If bigamy were legal, it wouldn't appeal to more than one man in five. Monogamy is j widespread because it fits the true nature of the average man. i He is simply too lazy to try lo defend himself to more than one ; woman at a time, There has been much public tear shedding over the plight of healthy, vigorous men forced by corporation policy to quit their jobs at 65. But we have met many more strong vigorous men who complain about soilless corpor- ations that insist they keep on working after the age of 30. A rugged individualist is a fel low who repeatedly interrupts his bnsj' joke with. "I already heard it." And sometimes it's just a j short step from being rugged to Readers tried to pump up a tire but the air hose broke and I had to cut off four inches of it and fix it back on the pump. 1 iinany goi me one tire about half way up and used m snare. Roy went to see if he could find some help and return ed with his son-in-law who loaned me his spare. I made it uuo a service station and got the tires pumped up and ate my supper, and my wife and I just made it to church in time. Had the dishes to do after getting home. I had read your article on hood lum hunters. But what kind of a hoodlum would let the air out or three tires 11 milei from help. If I had caught the one I would have made him pump them up for me. then maybe he wouldn't have found it so funny. I drive a 1959 all green Chevrolet Biscayne. One Sunday night in August, coming home from church, I saw something in my garden and found several beer cans had been thrown into the garden. Several people who live next to me had beer cans on their places and none of us liked it. But one Sunday night, Sept. 24, when coming home after church we found a freshly killed skunk at oar door. Whoever put it there had to open the screen door and throw or carry it across the porch to the front door. It smelled so strong that we could hardly stand it, and the smell stayed in the house for several days. My wife scrubbed the porch to clean up the scent the skunk left. I called the police who came right out. I try to be good to my neighbors and give them corn and other pro duce from my garden. If any of my neighbors have anything against me I wish they would be men or women enough to come to me and get it ironed out instead of pulling dirty tricks on us. Albert T. McDonald 2116 NE Commercial Ave. Roseburg, Ore. Demo's Mistakes Said Those Of Trial, Error To The Editor: In the editorial "Collision Im pending," in the News-Review Nov. 16, it appears you said ev erything, except that the things you said are not factual. They are the opinions of one man, your self. On the first page of the same edition, reporting the death of Sam Rayburn. speaker of the House, the headline reads: "Death Ends Colorful Career of Mr. Dem ocrat' Today." During the last twenty-five years referred to in your editorial. "Mr. Democrat" gave of himself without one selfish interest, more of himself to the people of the United States than any man should ever be asked to give. Looking at the record of "Mr. Democrat," a very important per son in the Democratic Party, can anyone believe the things you wrote? Certainly the Democratic Party has changed since its birth, as times made the need for change apparent. Only the Republican Party and a few Greek farmers see no need for change. Television says some of the Greek Farmers still till their land with a wooden plow, using the wife and a burro for power. While the Democratic Party has made mistakes, they were mis takes of trial and error, the only way to learn. After reading your editorial I suppose Democrats should follow the lead of Sen. Pearson. But I .have a feeling they will not. Joseph P. Hulse Star Rt. Winston, Box 14 Ore. . u .11 ; i; t i fil" "V!. 5?""''fL - " uu or lawyer. a businessman or minister. Every married man. no matter how mouselike .is secretly 'certain i he knows at least one hatcheck tor your aoiuty to eat rea cabbage without paying a penalty. vKti.'u.vex' PACIFIC MACHINERY & TOOL STEEL CO. 9tt Quontltltt end dtit Varieties of Ouoltty eciol Sreeli. Call Colltt. SS M. w. lul . jaaW'otTuwo. on gCA 6-76 ON OIIOOM 7656 nun? ! I STEEL (W) 99