IsMiiilliI sal ''full I ll-mL,:,,-i.L:S TALKS FRUITFUL President Kennedy shakes hands with Konrad Adenauer as the West German choncellor leaves the White House Tuesday after an afternoon conference on the Berlin crisis. A joint stotement issuey by U. S. and German spokesmen said the talks continue to be fruitful. (UPI Telephoto) UJ S.Turkey Production Control Appears Headed For Opposition By DICK KERRUISH Nws-Rviw Stiff Writer A government proposal to estab lish a nation-wide federal order covering turkey producers appears headed for stiff opposition at hear ings slated across the nation dur ing the holiday season. The hear . ingi will possibly precede a na tional referendum on the question. The American Farm Bureau Federation board of directors has voted to oppose Secretary of Ag riculture Orville Freeman's plan to establish controls over turkey production. Physicists Object To Atomic War Survival Articles IOWA CITY. Iowa (AP) Dr. James Van Allen and seven other Vniversity of Iowa physicists take issue with Dr. Willard Libby'a syndicated series of articles on how to survive atomic attack. They call it "extremely danger ous. Van Allen, who detected the ra diation bells circling the earth through satellite studies, heads the Iowa Physics Department. The Iowa physicists, in a letter to the editor of the lowa uty Press-Citizen, said of the series by Dr. Libby, a Nobel Prize chemist: "It is extremely dangerous to give the impression to the public that the building of fallout shel ters will enable the average citi zen to survive a nuclear war. "This gives a false sense of se curity. The percentagewise small! margin of safety gained in no way detracts from the very real pos-l sibility that an atomic war will mean the end of the civilizations! of both opponents." I Libby. asked by The Associated Press by telephone for his com ments, replied: I "I agree that anybody who in-1 terpreled my article as saying that fallout shelters make atomic! war tolerable should be outraged. "I did not intend to say any- thing like that. What I intended, to say was that fallout shelters greatly increase the chance of sur vival for those who were not hit I directly by blast or thermal bums. "That is my message " The lowa group particularly criticized Libhv's estimate that 90 to 95 per cent of U.S. residents rould survive an atomic attack with proper protection. They said other estimates are much lower than Libhy's, and added that survival figures obvi ously "depend on the length of a future war, the number, size and distribution of bombs actually dropped, and many unforeseeable circumstances." 4 SW There are critics of the plan in Douglas County, too. Among these is William Scott, who operates Nicholas Turkey Breeding Farms, Inc., located on Fisher Rd., one of the county's larger turkey farm operations. Plan Opposed Scott said the Nicholas enter prise, with headquarters in Cali fornia, represents over 15 per cent of all turkey breeding organiza tions in the U.S., having farms in California, Oregon and Canada and hatchery franchises in 23 states. Scott said his firm is opposed to the plan "because we still like to think we are free." The orders, as proposed, would affect hatchers men who maintain more than SO breeder hens and producers who grow out over 400 market birds a year. A "back yard" type of flock is not affected. Production would be regulated through the establishment of quo tas and each handler or processor would take a percentage cut, if there were a surplus. Many tur key producers regard this as an indirect control over the producer. A marketing order committee could be given authority to take charge of surplus turkey and dis pose of them. Boy Dies In Crash Near Cave Junction CAVE JUNCTION (AP) Thommy Haven, S, was killed Tuesday when two cars collided headon in heavy rain about two miles south of Cave Junction. Mrs. Carolyn Chimenti, who lives about three miles south of Cave Junction, was injured and in very critical conditions at Jo seDhine General Hospital in Grants Pass. State police said she was the driver of one of the vehicles. The driver of the car in which the Haven boy was riding was I Lewis Dahl Brunow, 15. tthe boy's ta Fe to acquire control of West half brother, rxilice said. He was: p m d d Tuesdav listed in fair condition. The Bru- . , now children and their half broth- The 'al parties must file sum er were from Kerby, north of mrS' efs " Washington, D.C., Cave Junction Maxine Mae Brunow, 16, the driver's sister, and Cheryl Kay Warner, 15. of Cave Junction, also were passengers in the Brunow car. police said. Miss Bruno! condition was described as fair although she suffered a good deal of shock. Miss Warner was listed in good condition. The doors of the two cars were so jammed, police said, that it took 30 minutes t extricate the injured. The death of the Haven young ster raised the Oregon highway fatality toll for the year to 439 in the Associated Press count. November, 22 have died. In FALL-OUT FREEDOM Grandma had to heat with fire, but you don't! Join most other moderns ond put o flame'ess, fumeless, foolproof electric heating system in your home. Eliminate soot, smoke, fumes ond ail other measy flame by-products. Live in the sunshine-clean vvormth thot only on electric hoofing system con bring. Talk te your favorite Col Or Electrical League wiring er heating contractor. Find eut how you can install a truly modern electric heoting system In your home without down-payment end for es little ai J10 o month! - : Scott said there are controls over both handlers and producers. "The proposal has a number of choke points that the government will be able to enforce," he said. The Nicholas organization will of ficially oppose the measure at a regional hearing slated Nov. 29 to Dec. 31 at Las Vegas. The Douglas County Extension service said there are probably fewer than a dozen turkey farm op erations that would be affected by the program in Douglas County. The American Farm Bureau claims a nation-wide federal order covering all producers of one com modity cannot work because it would fail to recognize differences in production and marketing con- options. Charles B. Shuman. president of the American Farm Bureau, con tends turkey growers are in trouble because of over-production. Restrictions Scored "Attempts to restrict supplies and force prices higher would place a premium on the develop ment and purchase of substitutes, cause unwarranted shifts in pro duction of turkeys and other crops, and encourage producers in other countries to take over our foreign markets. In addition, a turkey con trol program would be a precedent for extending this kind of nation wide order to other commodities and would represent a step toward stricter controls over all farm ers," he said. Western Merger Hearing Ends SAN FRANCISCO (AP) The 11 - week Interstate Commerce Commission hearing into the rival bids of Southern Pacific and San- before May 1, 1962. ICC examiner Paul C. Albus will in the meantime review 9.500 pages of transcribed testimony. The ICC will render a decision as to the respective merits of the case following a study of Alus' recommendation. Southern Pacific has stated its intent to absorb WP outright. The two roads now compete through Utah into California and the Pa cific Northwest. Santa Fe says it would make WP a wholly owned subsidiary on a line end to-end basis. Each side claims its plan would . best benefit shippers and the pub- Hie. 1 I 1 Mi t Nation To Pause Amid Year's Travail To Mark Another Day Of Thanksgiving By THI ASSOCIATE!) PRESS amid the travail of i vanishing on the rest of the country with ins nauun wuw iiiuiaua? , Salmon Meets Set On Coast ... . This year, as the harvest sailed across the bay to settle wn Fish Commsion an- draw, nt.ar its cl0s) and the permanently in l'lvmouth. m-t. 0!i,yn!!., TmJ,k " PP""h" "id, awesome I It was in the Plymouth settle meetinss in Astoria. Tillamook, I perils again remain to be faced, ment in the following year that Newport, and Coos Bay to discuss , Yet we have, as in the past. the first Thanksgiving was held, plans for improving coastal salra- ample reason to be thankful for; Friendly Indiana introduced the on production. the abundance of our blessings," Pilgrims to the turkev, now the During the 1961 session of the: Kennedy said. traditional staple of the holiday state legislature a bill was passed The President will spend the feast. providing the Fish Commission I four-day Thanksgiving weekend At Plymouth, there will be the with $120,000 for the maintenance ! on Cape Cod, devoting part of it customary open house ceremony and rehabilitation of the anadro-1 to a conference on the military with cider and doughnuts served mous fish resources of the coastal ; budget and part to an interview to visitors. Costumed townspeople sireams souin oi ine voiumoia Kiver. Forty per cent of the cost of any specific project must come from sources other than the $120. 0(io provided from the slate general fund. At the present time the tentative plans provide for three general types of projects, namely, reinoval of log jams and other similar ob structions, laddering falls, and de veloping or utilizing natural im poundments for rearing salmon and steelhead. Staff members have pre pared a preliminary list of proj ects which they feel should have a ! Koin I benefit to the resource under the requirements of the program. The purpose of the meetings is to inform interested parlies of Fish Commission plans to discharge their responsibilities as directed by the legislature in this act. The money is available for expenditure or commitment prior to July 1, 1963, and the commission is inter ested in finding out what sources are available for providing the necessary 40 per cent share of these projects. Any information on projects in addition to the recom mended list contained herein will be welcomed. The first meeting will be held In the City Hall in Astoria at 7:30 p.m., Nov. 27. Additional meetings are scheduled for Tillamook, Nov 29; Sam Case School in Newport at 7:30 p.m., Dec. 4: and Coos Bay, Dec. 6; the specific time and place for Tillamook and Coos Bay will be announced later. Pre-Trial Hearing Asked By Hickman Chris Frank Hickman, 33. of 1167 SE Main St., Roseburg, asked for a preliminary hearing on a iciony charge of issuing a bank check withmit sufficient funds On ar- raignment in the District Court of Gerald K. .Hayes lucsoay. i n e hearing was originally set for to day. He pleaded Innocent to a second NSF check charge, a misdemean or, and Judge Hayes set his trial for next Monday at 9:30 a.m. Charges of vagrancy were dis missed against three Sutherlin vouths, I.erov Shorey, 18. Ronnal J. Linton. 20. and Clyde Robert Pres nail. 22. by Judge Hayes. However. Presnall is still being held on a charge filed by the dis trict attorney of assault and bat tery by means most likely to no bodily harm, a felony count. He was scheduled for appearance in Circuit Court today. The charge stems from an al leged beating administered Wayne Arnold Wood. 20. at a Sutherlin trailer court Sunday night Thomas Joseph Simpson pleaded innocent to being drunk on a pub lic highway and jury trial was set for 2 p.m. Dec. 20 by Judge Hayes. Episcopal Church Sets Thanksgiving Services A service of the Holy Commun ion with choir and sermon will be held at St. George's Episcopal Church in Roseburg at 9:30 a.m. Thanksgiving Day, according to the Rev. Alfred S. Tyson, rector, who will be the celebrant. The choir will be directed by Robert E. Robins with Mary Beth Hill at the organ. jr iu inarK anoiner inanjtsgiv-1 mg Day the Wotr in America's At Provinceton. Mass., 50 per history with prayer and festive 1 sons braved a bitter wind to gath camaraderie. jer at the scene of the Pilgrims' The mixture of joy and solemn- first landing on the tip of Cape ity surrounding the occasion was ; Cod in 1S20. The Mayflower summed up in President Kenne-1 dropped anchor there after a fly's annual Thanksgiving Day .stormy M-day journev, the Pil proclamalion. 1 grims taking shelter before thev wun aoviei eauor Aiexei i. aq- zhubei. son-in-law of Soviet Pre mier Khrushchev. Kennedy leaves Washington to day for his Hyannis Port, Mass., home, where members of the family will gather Thursday for a big Thanksgiving dinner , at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph -P. Kennedy. Else-vhere in the nation, Ameri cans will mark th Thanksgiving holiday with church services, pri vate gatherings, sports events and parades. Airlines, trains and buses have stepped up service to handle thou school year holidays. Not far from President Kenne dy's Cape Cod home, descendants of the brave souls who came over on the Mayflower stole a march Protests Follow Survival Talks PORTLAND (AP) Odd Bjer ke, Spokane, an expert on sur vival in the wilderness, gave in struction last Sunday on how to eat when stranded in the wilder ness, or because of nuclear war. That instruction apparently in cluded how to eat dogs and other small animals. City Commissioner Ormond R. Bean ordered Tuesday, however, that there will be no more such demonstrations. Bean said a num ber of protests had been received about the demonstration, which was held in the city'i vast Forest Park. "I think it was disgraceful and if I'd known about it I would not have granted the permit," Bean saia. The Mazamas, an outdoors ornnn nnnenrrf tha ftBmrmilra. tion. One member of the group said meat was eaten and Bjerke named some nieces as covote. dog and other small animals. One of the most vigorous pro tests came from Graziella Bouch er, president of the Animal De fenders League, and a vegetarian. "The dog has gone along with us in all wars. I don't believe this is the way to repay him for what he has done." She said the dem onstration was a moral victory for the Russians. Tax Report Forms Due After Christmas Season SALEM (AP) State income tax returns will be mailed after Christmas tn every address in the state, the Tax Commission laid Tuesday. The returns now are made on simplified cards. Every taxpayer Is required to use the card . But supplemental forms must be used by those who have farm or business income of more than $5,000, or who report capital gams or losses of $1,000 or more. Industrial Accidents Claim Seven In Month Death growing out of injuries suf fered in the course of their em ployment claimed seven men in Oregon during the month ending Nov. 16, according to the State In dustrial Accident Commission. Also reported for that week were 1.244 industrial accidents and 27 claims for occupation disease. Those whose injuries proved fa tal included Harold Herman Graves, a worker from Roseburg who was injured Oct. 31 in a log ging accident near Steamboat. State Nixes Cutting Of Christmas Trees SALEM f AP) The state For estry Board said Tuesday it will maintain an intensive patroi to prevent people from taking Christ mas trees from state lands. It said it won't sell any trees except for four small sales. These sales are made for the purposes of road and power lines, stand improvement and right of way development. The Food Mart Will Be OPEN Thanksgiving Day Thurs. Nov. 23 9 A.M. to 8 P.M. The Food Mart a ceienrauon lue&uav. will reenact the Pilgrims' armed march to church on that first Thanksgiving in 1621, In foreign lands around the world, American servicemen will be remembered with holiday feasts. The Pentagon announced that the menu will feature shrimp cocktail, roast turkey with giblet gravy, bread dressing, cranberry sauce, mahed and candied sweet potatoes, buttered peas and succo tash, assorted crisp relishes, hot rolls and butter, pumpkin pie with nipped cream or mince pie, as sorted fruits and candy, tea, cof fee, milk. New York City expects lla mil lion children of various ages to line Broadway for the annual Macy's Thank-giving parade. Mil lions more will watch on national television networks. The down-and-outera on the Bowery in New York, and along the skid rows of other cities from coast to coast will be treated on the holiday with turkey dinners served by charitable groups. Special prayers of Thanksgiving will be offered in New York at St. Patrick's Cathedral, the Epis copal Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine, the Jewish Tem ple tmanu-el on upper Fifth Ave nue, and the Salvation Army Memorial Temple on the lower West Side. Members of the Jewish. Pres byterian and Methodist faiths will gather at the Central Synogogue at Lexington Avenue and 55th Street for the 26th annual Inter faith service. While the rest of the nation feasts on turkey with trimmings. 250 vegetarians will sit down to Thanksgiving dinner at a West 38th Street restaurant, where the menu win teature "vegetable roast Traffic Safety Programs Urged Civic and service organizations in every Oregon community are being urged by the Oregon Traffic Safety Commission to have a pro gram on holiday traffic safety dur ing the month of December. Safety officials said they want to reach every Oregonian with a personal reminder of the need for greater concern over the state's traffic toll during the holiday pe riod. "In this way," officials said, "we hope to keep traffic accidents, in juries and deaths at a minimum despite increases in both vehicular and pedestrian traffic." The commission will serve as a source for speakers to appear be fore organizations. Program chair men interested in obtaining a speak er during the month should con tact the commission office, in care of the Department of Motor Vehi cles id Salem. Wool Growers Request Anti-Strike Legislation PORTLAND (API The Oregon Wool Growers Association called Tuesday for. state legislation to prohibit picketing at larms. i The organization aiso opposed what it called featherbedding or ; the use of excess workers in the i transportation industry. I Other resolutions at in annual meeting: I Support of railroad mergers which would reduce costs and im prove services. A more effective tariff on for eign wool and wool fabrics. The growers at the closing ses sion elected Harold Cohn of Hepp ner as president. He succeeds Ken Johnson of Enterprise. Other new officers are Kent Magmder of Clatskanie, first vice president, and Marion Krehs of Roseburg, second vice president. Slaytr Pltacft Innnify PORTLAND (AP) The man accused of Portland's grizzly butcher slaying last summer en tered an insanity plea Tuesday. He is Richard L. Marquette who is accused of killing Mrs. Joan Caudle and then dismembering her body last June, i The trial is to start next week. Quality SHOE REPAIR FREE Pickup & Delivery Daily At BYRD'S MARKET HILL'S SHOE SERVICE WI 6IVI SILVIR DOLLAR STAMPS AT IKYD'I! Wed., Nor. 22, 1961 The Newi-Keview, Toicburj, Cre. 3 'V fee 3 0 ,;. . I -I '4 YULE DECORATIONS GO UP The Roseburg Street De portment Tuesday began adorning the downtown district with holiday decorations to greet another Christmas season. Bells, garlands and stars were hung in festive array at inter sections and strings of fir added flavor to the holiday attire. Decorations ore provided by the Roseburg Chamber of Commerce, and the city handles the installation task each year. City worker obove is busy stringing length of fir boughs ond Christmas lights across on intersection. City's installation task is facilitated this year by the use of a new truck-mounted ladder which was acquired during the year. (News-Review photo) Road Condition By Oregon Highway Department A weekly summary of traffic highways affected by construction activity was reported today by the Oregon Highway Department. FoUowlnff is a condition renort ror eacn nignway: North Oakland Junction Rice Hill section, U.S. 99 Equipment is crossing highway at Turkey Hill and motorists should watch for fall ing rock at North Oakland Junc tion. Any delays are minor. A speed limit of 35 m.p.h. is in ef fect for the construction lone and a 2.000-foot detour at Turkey Hill is in use at intermittent two-day intervals. Coos Bay Roseburg, Highway 42 Construction is under way from 2.5 miles to four miles east of Myrtle Point. A construction speed tone of 25 m.p.h. is in effect but no delays are expected. Grad ing work is in progress from four to 11 miles east of Myrtle Point with a 25 m.p.h. speed zone in effect. Fifteen to 30-minute delays are possible. Caution is urged since the area is slippery when wet. Flagmen are controlling traf fic. Elkton Sutherlin Highway, High If you're a safe driver you are a pre ferred risk and that means a lower rate for you. Today would be a good time 19 find out fast how much your own driving record means in savings on your automobile insurance. UMPQUA Insurance Agency - tom AGrr VIC LIWIS DAVI OIDDIS JR. aUe3m mvHTj ' f is. 4 ;rr l ; S ix I l mi Summary Issued st way 225 This highway is closed seven miles south of Elkton. A bridge is out. A temporary detour is provided along the county road from Tyee Bridge to Kellogg Bridge. East Diamond Lake Highway. Highway 230 Slight delays are possible because the Bureau of Public Roads is performing clear ing and widening work. North Umpqua County Road- Surfacing work is under way from a point 80 miles east of Roseburg to Cascade Lakes Highway Junc tion. No delays anticipated. Speed limit of 35 m.p.h. is in effect. Worry of FALSE TEETH Slipping or Irritating? Don't b sHnlMmfaed by Kmm fmlM tMth allppliift, dropping or wobbling when you eat, talk or laugh. Just prink t llttl PA8TECTH on your plaiM. Thla plMuant powder glva remarkabls triiM of added comfort and tecum? by holding piatea mora (irmly. No gummy. Rooey, puty tait or feeling. It'a alkaline (non-acid). Oat FAbTSKTU at anjp drug oountar. SECURITY BUILDING Comer Rsm 1 1 Sh. PHONE OR 2-3348 Hit PARKING IN RIAR O' IUILDINO OUR 44fh TIAR IN ROSIIURa