The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, August 01, 1963, Page 3, Image 3

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Chicago Racial Riot
Said Worst In Years
By United Press International
Hundreds of rock-throwing
whites staged Chicago's worst ra
cial outbreak in several years
early today in front of the apart
ments of two Negro families who
moved into a previously all-white
neighborhood.
The area was blocked off, tav
erns closed and extra police sum
moned. The FBI and 5th Army
Headquarters were alerted. There
was fear the outbreak would
spread to other parts of Chi-1
cago's South Side where most of
the city's 800,000 Negroes live.
Officers arrested at least 37
persons during the melee in
which four policemen were hurt.
Two Negro boys were knocked
off their bicycles and beaten.
It was the third night of dem
onstrations outside an apartment
building into which the Negro
families recently had moved. The
Negro section begins about one
block south of the building, lo
cated in a white working class
neighborhood
Violence also erupted briefly at
two other racial demonstrations
in the nation Wednesday but po-
lice quickly restored order in
uoiii instances.
I I VI I Vlf'htc mrL-ntc - o nn-, 1
stjuction project in Brooklvn,
N.Y., clashed with police who
formed a solid line and backed
the demonstrators off a street.
One Negro was arrested during
the pushing and shoving melee.
It was the first violence at
picket lines thrown around city
construction sites by demonstra
tors demanding more construe-
Storms Hit
Eastern U.S.
By United Press International
Scattered thunderstorms prowled
the nation from the Great Plains
to the Gulf Coast today and day
long showers were on tap for tlie
North Atlantic states.
Rainfall during the night was
generally light with the highest
amounts measuring a tenth of an
inch through the Great Lakes area.
A tornado spun through the out
skirts of Cadillac, Mich., Wednes
day night, demolishing buildings,
unroofing homes and uprooting
trees. The twister came within a
quarter-mile of a large crowd
gathered at a fair but no injuries
were reported.
Gusty thunderstorms Wednesday
dropped more than lV-i inches of
rain at Robins Air Force Base
near Macon, Ga., and other storms
drenched the Chicago area and
sections of Wisconsin, Michigan
and Indiana,
Hail piled nearly one inch deep
at Effingham, 111.
The mercury rose to 107 de
grees at Lamar, Colo., Wednesday.
Las Vegas, Nov. also had a 107
degree reading, Presidio, Tex.,
had 106 and Fort Worth, Tex., had
102.
The Weather Bureau Wednesday
said August will be a hot month
for the Northeast and Southwest
More than usual rain was forecast
in the Southeast and Northern
Plains for the next 30 days while
subnormal rainfall was expected
in the Northeast, Southern Plains
and Great Basin.
Sheriff Finds
Bear Unruly
PAULINE, Neb. (UPD Bob
Anderson, the sheriff of Adams
County, has captured his share cf
criminals, but confesses to lim
ited experience with bears.
After his meeting Wednesday
with Martha, he's not sure he
cares for bears.
It's not that Martha was dis
agreeable. Uncooperative, maybe,
but for a 400-pound black bear,
she was rather friendly.
That doesn't mean the sheriff
had an easy job when he set out
to catch her and get her hack
home.
Bob and his deputy, Jake Thiel,
were alerted Wednesday morning
that Martha hid wandered away
from the Grover Staplcman place
near here. Staplcman has a string
of donkeys he hauls around to
stage donkey baseball games for
fairs and festivals. He also kept
Martha.
While Stapleman was out drum
ming up business luesday, iMar
tha decided to wander. Anderson,
Thiel and three other bear "hunt
ers'" followed tips and tracked
down Martha.
They spent about two hours in
the chase, during which Martha
got tangled in some barbed wire
and foundered for a while in a
V-shaped tree trunk.
Anderson, who's pretty fairden valley Hig'hwav intersection
witii a lasso, finally used some;
borrowed rope to capture her. i
He and -Manna were aouui iu -
miles from Stapleman's place. So
, .tirt
thev besan trudgm?. kows not,
dusty road. Ever, nnw and then i t S'S
perhaps because of the heat Mar-, and on Mun rf E1
tha deeded to sit and rest in theThc n wju bfi fnjg 3;30 a m
nudd e of the road. ,,, I until 8 a.m. that day.
A friendly farmer in a pickup; , ., .
truck finally gave them a lift the 1 , The company also urges that no
last quarter-mile 1 lawn sprinkling be done at airair
Said the sheriff: "I've worked I Friday to conserve water for the ;
with horses and cattle, but never S Veterans Hospital and for fire pro-;
before with a bear named tectum purposes.
artna Customers on Dogwood, Estelle,
! .Munson and Ellen streets are ad-
i vised they should turn off the
NEEDS A DOIfKSY j switches to their hot water tanks
LONDON (Lft) a woman i
advertised today in the Times of
London" for a "gentle aoniccy re
quired to hire for one month;
lavish loving care assured."
ICS! 0U LICENSE 10 OllVt?
ROLF'S PREFERRED
INSURANCE
'r Fait It'iM- Itltlllccltl Tli!ll
939 S. E. Stephens 673-8166
i
tion jobs for Negroes and Puerto
Ricans.
At Anderson, S.C., two white
men attacked two of 11 Negroes
being served in a formerly all
white lunch counter in a down
town department store. Police ar
rested the whites on assault
charges. The Negroes were part
of groups totaling about 50 who
got service in a number of An
derson eating establishments.
tour white men demonstrating
against lunch counter desegrcga-
tion were arrested at Birming
ham, Ala., Wednesday on charges
ot parading without a permit
Blaze Destroys
Redmond Mill
REDMOND (UPD A million
dollar fire destroyed the main
I smvmill nf tlio Tito TCnnt Dina f ill
here Wednesday afteiH-jen, razing
five buildings,
Owner Phil Dahl said rebuilding
'would begin immediately.
Redmond firemen
90
volun
teers, and two fire trucks from
Bend battled the flames for 1W
hours before they were controlled.
Ihe planer, dry kilns, stacked
lumber, green chain and storaee
sheds weie saved, but the fire
destroyed the main sawmill, the
boiler house, the barker and chip
per and the fuel house.
Dahl said the fire apparently
started in the mill's welding de
partment. He said an investiga
tion will be conducted.
The mill, which employed about
200 men, provided the city's sec
ond largest payroll.
Vein McGowan. a volunteer
fireman and president of the Red
mond Chamber of Commerce, was
hospitalized after being overcome
by smoke. His condition was re
ported not serious.
A plan to spray the fire with
a borate solution from a plane
was discarded because ot the
hazard from tall smokestacks at
the mill.
Former Sanitarian
Gets Security Post
Second Lt. David Monger was
recently graduated from the Com
munications Electronics Officers
Branch of the Keesler Technical
LT. DAVID MONGER
. . . Washingotn bound
Training Center of the Air Train
ing Command at Biloxi, Miss.
He is presently enjoying a 30
day leave visiting his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Monger of Look
ingglass, and other relatives and
friends. He has been assigned for
duty with the National Security
Agency at the Naval Security Sta
tion, Washington, D.C., where he
will report at the close of his
leave.
Monger is a graduate of Rose
burg High School and Oregon State
University where he completed his
course in 1981. Following gradua
tion from OSU he served approxi
mately one year as county sani
tarian with the Douglas County
Health Department. He is a na
tive Orcgonian and has resided in
Lookingglass Valley except when
in school.
Water Shutoff Due
Ciiy Areas Friday
Because' of a replacement of wa -
tor mains necessitated by the Gar-
improvement, the Oregon Water
Coip announces w ater will be off
,n certain areas Friday.
i ne auiiuuiiceiiieni. states me wa-
. ... ., . .... ,
danng the shutdown.
AUTHORIZED DEALER
AEROQUIP
HOSE and FITTINGS
FACTORY REBUILT
G. M. C. INJECTORS
DIESEL
INJECTION SERVICE
1750 N. E. Stephens 673-6156
ALL READY to leave for an
Camp rire tiirls at Camp lyee on the Umpqua River west or Sutherlin. Ihe girls have just
finished a "cook-out" in which they prepared their evening meal without benefit of
stove or utensils. Judging from their happy faces everything turned out fine. It appears
also that some of the exuberance expressed might have been carried over when it came
time to settle down for the night. In any event, it would appear that they are having a
mighty good time. Final week of the four-week camping period will begin Sunday. Any
girl interested in attending may call the Camp Fire office in Roseburg. (Photo by Dan
Dimick!
Railroad Spokesman Warns JFK's
Plan is Only Solution To Dispute
WASHINGTON (UPD-The Sen
ate Commerce Committee came
to the end today of testimony on
the railroad work rules dispute
with a warning by a management
spokesman that the problem can
only be solved by President Ken
nedy's plan.
J. E. Wolfe, chief railroad ne
gotiator, told the Senate commit
tee Wednesday night that "posi
tive, deep-seated and pervading"
differences separated the carriers
and the five unions involved. He
said it was "highly improbable"
the dispute can be settled if Con
gress does not approve Kennedy's
proposal to turn the matter over
to the Interstate Commerce Com
mission (ICC).
Charges Compulsory Arbitration
The House Commerce Commit
tee called AFL-CIO President
George Meany who has joined the
railroad unions in charging
the presidential recommendation
amounts to compulsory arbitra
tion and would destroy free col
lective bargaining.
The Senate committee today
Adm. McDonald
Head Of U.S Navy
WASHINGTON (UP1) Adm.
George W. Anderson Jr., hauled
down his flag as chief of naval
operations today and relinquished
command of the worid's largest
Navy to an old friend and fellow
aviator, Adm. David L. McDon
ald. Anderson now will become U.S.
ambassador to Portugal, entering
a diplomatic world with which he
is familiar from international mil
itary assignments.
McDonald, a soft-voiced Geor
gian with essentially the same
hard ideas as Anderson on the
Navy's future, became the na
tion's top-ranking sea officer in a
colorful change of command cere
mony at the Washington Navy
Yard.
There were tributes from Navy
Secretary Fred Korth, 19-gun sa
lutes and full honors rendered by
squads of Marines and sailors as
the Navy observed the time hon
ored tradition of swearing in a
new chief.
McDonald's selection by Presi
dent Kennedy, announced May 6,
was a surprise throughout the
armed forces. Not the least
amazed was McDonald himself.
It had been expected generally
that Anderson, top military man
in last fall's Cuba crisis opera
tions, would get a second two
year term at the Navy helm and,
perhaps, succeed Gon. Maxwell
D. Tavlor as chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff.
McDonald had become a full
admiral only on April 1. and had
just moved from command of the
6th Fleet in the Mediterranean to
London to be commander of U.S.
naval forces in Europe, the East-
lern Atlantic and Mediterranean.
AMANN'S
SERVICE
NORTH UMPQUA HWY.-GLIDE
Gas O Diesel O Lubrication
Tires r Tune-Up
TREMENDOUS POTENTIAL
lc Gal. on Gas 1c Diesel
INV. APPROX. $5,000 GROSS $75,000 & UP
overnight camp-out to study the
called Lester P. Schoene, Wash
ington attorney representing the
rail unions, and then planned to
close the record of its hearings.
Acting Chairman John O. Pastorc,
D-R.L, said the committee would
go into executive session Aug. 8
to act on the proposed legislation.
Wolfe said carlior Wednesday
that the carriers had made "some
adjustments" in their proposals
for settling the dispute and avoid
ing a nationwide strike, giving
rise to hope that give-and-take col
lective bargaining might begin.
Wolfe said "in a sense" the ad
justments could be considered con
cessions but he emphasized that
the proposals mainly were trans
lations into collective bargaining
terms of recommendations made
earlier by a presidential board.
Blames Unions
Wolfe said the railroads be
lieved further negotiations in the
four-year-old dispute would be
"fruitless" without the aid of a
program such as President Ken
nedy proposed. He blamed the un
ions for the impasse that brought
about the presidential action.
Labor Secretary W. Willard
Wirtz met in his office Wednes
day with railroad management
negotiators but' had no comment
on the session.
Hospital News
Visiting Hours
2 to 3:30 p.m. and 7 to 8 p.m.
Douglas Community Hospital
Admitted
Medical: Noble Burgess, Rose
burg; Frank Williams, Mrs. Don
ald Sorter, both of M y r 1 1 c
Creek.
Surgery: Arthur Gilbert, Stephen
LaDoux, both of Roseburg; Mrs.
Charles OIp, Sutherlin.
Discharged
Mrs. Chris Clausen, David
Crouch. Mrs. William Adamson,
Mrs. Maynard Troxell, all of Rose
burg. Mercy Hospital
Admitted
Medical: Mrs. Fred Dickinson,
Roseburg.
Surgery: Diane Schaaf, Tiller;
Mrs. Harold Martin Riddle.
Discharged
Mrs. Royce Webber and son Mi
chael Royce, Mrs. Charles Stan
ton, Peter Rudolph, all of Rose
burg. ON GOOD BEHAVIOR
LONDON (UPI) The Inde
pendent Television Authority an
nounced Wednesday that children
appearing in commercials hence
forth must be put on their best
behavior.
In the future, no child is to ap
pear unattended in street com
mercials, step carelessly off a
curb, cross a street without care,
lean out of a window dangerous
ly, climb up to high shelves or
be within reach of medicines, dis
infectant or matches.
FLYING "A"
STATION
LEASE
stars are these sixthOgtadeO
Wolfe told the Senate commit
tee he did not want to sir? -Hie
dispute is beyond all collective
bargaining but "it appc-.frs. uopo
less." Asked by Seu. Norris Cot
ton, R-N.H., if the carriers would
agree to placing the dispute before
an entirely new and independent
group named by President Konne-
dy, none of whom had snrved bo
fore, Wolfe said thu railroads
would "accept it on the snot."
Daniel Loomis, president of tho
association ot Amoncan Railroads
told the committee "Congress will
nave to lace the issue and it
might as well face it now."
YES
Savs On Band
American Artist Flute
Grand Rapids Cornet
Elkhart Trumpet
Continental Tenor Sax
Cava ier C arinet
u
ill I vim
USE OUR RENTAL PURCHASE PLAN
On Any Band Instrument
$LOO
Per Month Be
Easy Credit Terms - Of Course!
10 DOWN
UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY
Trade-In Now - Your Trade-In May
Make Your Down Payment.
House Committee Seeks Action
On Reduced Foreign Aid Bill
WASHINGTON (UPD The
House Foreign Affairs Committee
sought today to complete action
on a foreign aid bill for $4.1 bil
lion $428 million less than
what the administration asked.
The House group, headed by
Rep. Thomas E. Morgan, D-Pa.,
had scheduled a final vote
Wednesday but was not able to
finish work on the measure.
The bill contains, among other
things, a ban on further U.S. aid
to Indonesia unless President
Kennedy makes a formal finding
that such assistance is vital to
U.S. interests. The committee re
jected Wednesday an amendment
calling for congressional review
of any possible future decision by
the administration to help India
Local Firm Submits
Airport Paving Bid
The Roseburg Public Works De
partment received one bid on a
proposed sealcoating project at the
municipal airport, city officials rc-!
ported today.
Roseburg Paving Co. submitted
a bid of SG.363.99 for sealcoating
with asphaltic oil and cover rock
70,711 square yards of runway
taxiways and ramps. The firm's
bid, which will come up for coun
cil consideration at its Aug. 12
j meeting, was based on 9 cents
per square yara.
II is proposed to finance the
project with an anticipated state
Board of Aeronautics grant of $t,
870, and the city handling the bal
ance. Officials also gave notiuc that
bids will hj onouud at 2 p.m. Aug.
12 on a project of rcrfuckina eitjut
crty streets. The work is part ot
the city s regular street improve
nicnt program and will bo fiiumued
from budgeted mnnios. i
Streets to bo rcdcckcd arc SE'
Jackson St. from Court to Dmifi-1
'las; SE Main from Musher tui
Hawthorne; SE Main from Doug
las to Court; SE Fowlor from
Court to Deer Creek; SE Jaekson
from 1,100 feet north of Blakcly
to Moshor; SE Jackson from
Haines to Waite; SE Overlook
from Chadwick to Terrace and SE
Court from Fowler to Jackson.
We're "ALL HUNG UP" With Trade-ins. .
MAMMOTH TRADE-IN SALE C0NT
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Crosley Console
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Wc Slashed Prices On These Before
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Thurs., Aug. 1, 1963 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 3
to build a giant, new steel plant.
Vote on the amendment, by
Rep. William S. Broomficld, It
Mich., was 17 to 15.
Other congressional news:
Space: House members faced a
vote on a triinrned-down version
of the administration's budget for
the federal space agency. The
committee approved bill repre
sented a cut of $473 million from
the administration request of $5.7
billion.
Rails: The Senate Commerce
Committee expected to wind up
today testimony on the adminis
tration's proposal to let the In
terstate Commerce Commission
settle the railroad work rules dis
pute. Civil Riahts: Sen. Richard B.
Russell, D-Ga., leader of the
Southern anti-civil rights bloc, in
dicated he planned close ques
tioning of Pentagon representa
tives todav on a new policy al
lowing military base commanders
to declare segregation towns off
limits to troops. "We aren t
spending $50 billion to maintain
an
organization tor suunu icuw utwij-Hina.wi
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form," Russell said.
Schools: A S1.2 billion school
aid bill for college construction
is reported to have gained GOP
support that should get it through
me cutiicuit waters of the House
Rules Committee. The bill still
faces the possibility of the kiss
of death of an anti-discrimination
rider on the House floor, how
ever. New Area Adds
91 Residents
Annexation of Garden Homes
and adjoining property in the
northwest Roseburg area has add
ed 91 new residents to the city of
Roseburg, a census for the area
indicates.
City officials said this boosts
Roscburg's population to 12,016.
An ordinance annexing the area
was adopted at the last Roseburg
City Council meeting. The census
revealed there arc nouses in
BOND
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