2 The Ncws-Reviw, Roseburg, Ort. Thur., Aug. 29, 1963
Civil Rights March Gave Impetus
To Struggle For Racial Equality
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
greatest civil rights march in
U.S. history, hailed as a huge
success by its backers, gave new
impetus today to the American
Negro's centuries-old struggle for
racial equality.
A vast throng, estimated by
Police Chief Robert V. Murray
to have numbered more than 200,
000 at its peak, converged on the
capital Wednesday for the rally
which resembled more a revi
valist camp meeting than a mili
tant civil rights demonstration.
At the end of a long and weary
day, with words of praise from
President Kennedy and Washing
ton officials, they streamed out
of the city by bus, train, plane
and auto in the same disciplined
manner that prevailed throughout
the "march for jobs and free
dom." The President, who met
with the 10 march leaders for
more than an hour, declared that
the march had advanced the
cause of the nation's 20 million
Negroes and of all mankind.
He said he could not help but
be impressed with the "deep fer
vor and the quiet dignity" of the
gathering. He pledged to push
Sanitary Authority Orders
Sewer Pipeline Extension
The Oregon state Sanitary Au- of a complaint by attorneys for
(hority has advised the city of Mr. and Mrs. G. S. McCarthy,
Roscburg it will be necessary for
the city to extend its sewage treat
ment plant outfall line into the
main channel of the South Ump
qua River in order to effect ade
quate and immediate dilution of
effluent.
The authority said its finding
stems from an investigation of the
outfall undertaken following receipt
Filing Of Tax
Petitions Due
SALEM (UPI)-Formal filing of
petitions to refer the 1903 legis
lature's $60 million tax increase
measure to a special election Oct.
IS is expected Friday afternoon
or Saturday, J. Francyl Howard
said, today.
Deadline for filing is 5 p.m.
Sunday.
Opponents of the tax measure
already have well over 30,000 val
id signatures. A total of 23,185
signatures was needed.
Jack Thompson, elections su
pervisor, said if the petitions are
filed Friday, the formal certifi
cation of the measure to a special
election by Secretary of State
Howell Appling Jr. could take
place Tuesday.
Howard said he had more than
17,000 signatures in his possession,
and thousands more with volun
teer workers in 'other parts of
the state.
Multnomah Has Many
In Multnomah County alone, IS,
062 petition signatures had been
certified as valid by this morn'
ing, and there were still several
thousands more on hand, More
than 21,000 signatures had been
turned in to the Multnomah Coun
ty clerk, and they were running
about 88 per cent valid.
Thompson said as soon as How
ard files the petitions, his office
win begin tabulating the certifi
cation made by county clerks.
"If our tabulation shows the re
quired number of valid signatures
has been filed, we will begin the
formal procedure to certify the
measure to the ballot," Thomp
son said.
He said he expected to have
people in the office Monday, La
bor Day, to speed up the process.
Meanwhile, education groups,
organized labor, management
groups, legislators and state of
ficials were mapping campaigns
to try to salvage the tax meas
ure from defeat by the voters.
The McCarthys, who reside im
mediately downstream from the
treatment plant and withdraw wa
ter from the river for the purpose
of irrigation and swimming, have
complained their river frontage is
affected by a pollution condition.
The Roseburg City Council, aft
er being introduced to the situa
tion this week, referred the mat
ter to City Manager Craig Mc
Micken for study. McMicken said
today he has written to the state
Sanitary Authority requesting op
portunity to discuss the matter
with them at the site.
"Basically, the problem is that
during the late summer and early
fall months when the river is low,
a lagoon that extends downstream
to the McCarthy property is form
ed below the sewage plant outfall
line," Kenneth H. Spies, deputy
state sanitary engineer, told the
city.
"Since the main river channel is
beyond the end of the outfall pipe,
this lagoon becomes composed
primarily of sewage effluent. Bac
teriological tests of this water con
ducted by our own as well as an
independent laboratory have shown
that during the time in question
the coliform count is well above
that recommended for public swimming."
The official also advised that the
city should take all possible pre
cautions at the sewage treatment
plant to insure against the dis
charge of unchlorinated or inade
quately chlorinated sewage be
tween May l and Nov. 1.
Hospital News
' Visiting Hours'
2 la 3:30 p.m. and 7 to 8 p.m.
Search Continues
For Missing Pilot
MCCHORD AFB, Wash. (UPI)
The search for a jet fighter
pilot who was seen to eject from
his plane after a collision with a
jet bomber early Wednesday con
tinued today.
Four Coast Guard patrol boats
searched the area off the coast of
Washington's Olympic Peninsula
during the night and this morn
ing aircraft were to rejoin the
search for 1st Lt. Roger Axlund,
Sioux Falls, S.D.
A search for 1,800 square miles
of the Pacific Ocean Wednesday
turned up no trace of the oilot.
Coast Guard officials said they
will increase the search area be
tween Cape Alva and O c o a n
Shores, Wash., from 30 miles out
to SO miles into the ocean.
Axlund's F-106 fighter was en-!
gaged in a mock attack on a B-57
medium jet bomber and brushed '
the bottom of the larger craft be-:
fore going down. The bomber 1
landed safely at McChord near '
Tacoma, where the fighter was
based.
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Douglas Community Hospital
Admitted
Medical: Ruth Swinney, Mrs. Roy
Burnhart, Mildred Ellington, Ray
Hayncs, Kenneth Waters, Dorene
Wood, all of Roscburg; Mrs. Royal
Lang, Sutherlin.
Surgery: Warren Desonia. Ar
nold Desonia, both of Sutherlin;
Leo Brown, Winston.
Discharged
Elizabeth Allen. Mrs. Robert
O'Neil, Mrs. Harry Crosthwaite,
Nita Barmorc, all of Roscburg;
Mrs. Charles Redding and daugh
ter Lucille Helen, Tiller; Bernice
Bishop, Winston; Samuel Miller,
Wilbur; Alton Stone, Katherin
Stone, both of Dillard.
Mtrcy Hospital
Admitted
Medical: Lucy Kruse. Mrs. Wil
liam Welt, Carol Martin. Mrs. Wal
lace Martin, Mrs. Larry Kingry,
an 01 KoscDurt; Mrs. Thomas Da
vidson, Mrs. James Phillips, both
of Myrtle Creek; Clyde Meatland,
forest Urovc; Lester Anderson. Se
attle; Cheryl Beam, Dillard; Mrs.
Gary Hart, Oakland; Mrs. E. E.
fuller, buthcrltn.
Surgery: Mrs. George May,
Roseburg; Leon Halloran, Gregory
McCoy, Regan McCoy, Daniel Hoi
HnRer, all of Myrtle Creek; Daniel
Norris, Sutherlin.
Discharged
Doll Willis, Dennis Wright, Mrs.
Benjamin Patterson, Mrs. Wain
Lease, Mrs. Harley Widcncr. Mrs.
Henry Thomas, Mrs. Lee Freeman
and daughter Stacy Rac, all of
Roscburg; Daniel Clauson, Tiller;
Leo Friend, Idleyld Park; Tim Par
ol, Dillard; Jack Salbcrg, Winston;
Benjamin Doss, Glide.
for new civil rights legislation,
and to continue efforts for more
jobs "and to eliminate discrimi
nation in employment practices."
Predicts Other Marches
The Rev. Fred L. Shuttles-
worth, a Baptist preacher who
was one of the leaders of the
Birmingham, Ala., civil rights
battle, said the march would in
evitabiy lead to an outbreak of
little Washingtons all over the
country."
"I shall propose a civil rights
march through the South that will
go straight into the Black Beit
of Alabama and Mississippi this
year and in 1964. We must pro
vide 'little Washingtons' every
where so that the Negro in the
cotton field who can't get to
Washington can have a chance to
express himself," he said.
Floyd McKissick, newly elected
chairman of the board of the
Congress For Racial Equal
ity (CORE), described the march
as "the end of the Negro protest
and the beginning of the Ameri
can protest."
To 74-year-old Negro labor lead
er A. Philip Randolph, tired and
drawn from the weeks of plan
ning for the march, it was "the
greatest demonstration for free
dom in the nation's history."
Plan Early Meeting
The morch leaders will meet
in New York within the next 10
days to mop further plans. These
will include possible continuous
"counter-filibuster" demonstra
tions in the capital should a
southern talkathon threaten Pres
ident Kennedy's civil rights leg
islation when it comes tip for con
gressional action later this year.
Chief Murray estimated that
about 10 per cent of the
marchers were white; other esti
mates by newsmen and other
observers ranged as high as 30
per cent.
Population Growth
Leads Employment
SALEM (UPI) Oregon's popu
lation has been growing at a fast
er rate for the past decade than
have new job opportunities, a De
partment of Employment spoKes
man told the Interim Committee
on Technological Employment
Wednesday.
Committee members also were
told that during the past 10 years
agricultural employment has
shown a steady decline. Manu
facturing and other industries
have shown a slight gain, despite
a 5,000 reduction In the number
of railroad employes in Oregon
The statements came in answer
lo Questions by committee mem
bers who are launching a probe
into the effects of automation on
Oregon's labor force.
Public instruction Supt. Leon P.
Minear said the 1960 federal cen
sus showed Oregon had the low
est high school drop-out rate of
any state in the nation.
But Minear warned there was
a critical need for vocational
training at the high school and
community college level.
He said Oregon was a rural
state, and most of the state's
high' schools were too small to
offer vocational training.
! s? iTp!HStrri;
DEBRIS LITTERS the area in the vicinity of the Lincoln Memorial Garden (behind trees,
right) ofter the breakup of the massive civil rights March on Washington Wednesday.
(UPr Telephoto)
Slaying Suspect
Gives Self Up
NEW YORK (UPI)-A nervous
ex-convict, the bullet-riddled body
of his pal on a marble slab, sur
rendered meekly Wednesday night
to end a wide manhunt for the
killers of two New Jersey police
men.
Thomas (Rabbi Tom) Trantino,
25, Brooklyn, accompanied by an
attorney, turned himself in at a
Manhattan police station. He was
booked as a fugitive.
Less than ' 24 hours earlier,
Frank Falco, 23, was shot to
death in a hand-to-hand struggle
with ' detectives who traced him
to his hideaway in a mid-Man
hattan hotel where he had regis
tered under another name.
Both had been sought since
early Monday morning for ques
tioning in the "thrill slaying of
Dct. Sgt. Peter Voto, 40, father
of three children, and probation
ary Patrolman Gary Tedcsco, 21,
both attached to the Lodi, N. J.,
police . force; .
Authorities said the two officers
had gone - to the Angels Lounge,
a Lodi nightclub, to quiet a dis
turbance caused by Falco and
Trantino.
Police said the two hoodlums,
both with long criminal records,
were celebrating a $2,000 Brook
lyn stlckup staged only hours, be
fore. They said the two suspects
pulled guns on the policemen,
forced them to disrobe partially,
then shot them dead.
Floyd C. Frear, Ex-County
Engineer, Dies In Eugene
Floyd C. Frear, 75, a well-known
former resident of Roseburg, died
Wednesday at a Eugene hospital.
Frear was born June 10, 1888, in
Factoryville, Pa. He was married
to Hazel Stone June 17, 1915, in
Roseburg. He had lived in the
Roseburg area for 45 years before
moving to Eugene in 1957.
Frear was county roadmaster for
Douglas County and county engi
neer from 1920 to 1957 until his
retirement in 1957. He had earlier
been city engineer for Roseburg
and Douglas County surveyor. The.
Frear Bridge on the Wilbur-Glide
road was dedicated tu him in his
honor about the time of his retire
ment. He attended Keystone Academy
Frans de Haan
Frans de Haan, 66, of Lone Rock
Road, Glide, died this morning at
a Roseburg hospital.
Funeral arrangements are pend
ing at Long and Shukle Memorial
Chapel.
SIGN NUCLEAR TREATY
. WASHINGTON (UPI) The
African states of Cameroon, Mo
rocco and Dahomey have signed
the nuclear test ban treaty.
' The signings, held . here Tues
day, brought to 81 the number of
nations who have initialed the
pact since Aug. 5.
in Factoryville, Pa., and also Penn
State University. He was a mem
ber of Laurel Lodge No. 13 AF &
AM of Roseburg.
Frear is survived by his wife,
Hazel, of Eugene; one daughter,
Mrs. Paul (Dorothy) Hult of Dil
lard; two grandchildren; one son,
Donald, preceded him in death in
1957.
Funeral services will be held at
Wilson's Chapel of the Roses Sat
urday at 10 a.m. with the Rev.
John Adams of the First Presby.
terian Church officiating. A Ma
sonic ritualistic service will be
conducted by Laurel Lodge No. 13
AF St AM. Private committal serv
ice and interment will follow at
Roseburg Memorial Gardens.
The family has asked that those
who wish may make donations to
the Shriners Crippled Children's
Hospital in Portland. Donations
may be left at Wilson's Chapel of
the Roses.
Victims Of Sutherlin Accident
Were About To Become Citizens
Joint funeral services for two
members of a vacationing Califor
nia family who were killed Wed
nesday morning in a highway acci
dent at the Sutherlin Interchange
on Interstate Highway 5 will be
held at 1 p.m. Saturday at the Lat
ter Day Saints Church in Palo Alto,
Calif.
The victims, Mrs. Albert (Joy)
Stevens, and her 10-year-old son,
Peter, were killed when the 'Sta
tion wagon in which they were pas
sengers blew a tire, causing the
vehicle to go into a skid and over a
25-foot embankment. Mrs. Stevens
and Peter were thrown from the
State Fair Readies
Friday Opening
SALEM (UPI) Sunny skies and
warm weather were forecast for
the opening Friday of the 98th
Oregon State Fair, and predic
tions are that more than 300,000
persons will attend the event be
fore it closes Sept. 7.
The gates will open at 10 a.m.
At noon, Gov. Mark Hatfield
will participate in formal opening
ceremonies, and dedication of the
new floral building.
Opening day also is kiddies day,
with all under 16 admitted free
to the grounds, and reduced gay
way prices in effect for the young
er set. Children 12 and under get
free admission daily.
Horse racing will be held daily
except Sept. 1. The rodeo-horse
show will be stated at 7:30 p.m.
daily through Sept. 5, and on
Sept. 6 and 7 the ,4-H horse show
will be featured.
Judging of entries and exhibits
began last week, and is now near
ing a climax.
The fairgrounds have been buz
zing with activity all through the
week.
The first Oregon State Fair was
held 102 years ago on the banks
of the Clackamas River near
Gladstone. The following year the
fair was moved to Salem.
The first fair was sponsored by
the Oregon State Agricultural
Society.
Because of World War interrup
tions, this is the 98th fair. Plans
already are under way for a cen
tennial celebration at the 1965
state fair.
station wagon. The father, Albert
Stevens and two other sons, An
thony, 16, and David, 12, were
taken to Douglas Community Hos
pital and later released. They were
reportedly uninjured.
The Stevens family, all of whom
came to the United States from
England on Aug. 30, 1957, were to
have been sworn in as United
States citizens on their return to
Palo Alto from their vacation. .
Joy Ann Ivy Stevens, 43, of 3920
Park Blvd., Palo Alto, was born
May 7, 1920, Middlesbrough, Eng
land. She was married in Middles
brough June 21, 1943, to Albert
Stevens. She was a member of the
Episcopal Church of England, the
Daughters of Scotia, and of the
PTA in Palo Alto.
She is survived by her husband;
two sons, Anthony Edward and Da
vid Ronald Frank Stevens, all of
Palo Alto; one sister, Mrs. Regin
ald (Edna) Wriglcy, of Guilford,
England; two brothers, Ronald
Cheesebrough of London, and Jack
Chcesebrough of Middlesbrough.
Peter Craig Stevens was born
May 3, 1953, in Perth, Western
Australia. He was a member of the
Latter Day Saints Church.
He is survived by his father and
brothers; and a grandmother, Sar
iah Ann Stevens, of Cleveley, England.
Roseburg Women
Vie In Bake-Off
Two Roseburg women have been
notified by the Pillsbury Co. that
they have been selected as state
winners in the company's 15th
Grand National Bake-Off.
The two arc Mrs. Robert W.
Mitchell of 1072 Alameda Ave. and
Mrs. Helen R. Morley of 2973 NE
Yount Ave.
Each will receive an award from
the company in recognition of an
outstanding recipe entered in its
annual recipe search and baking
contest.
After the final screening of en
tries later this month, 100 of the
state winners will be selected to
compete in Beverly Hills, Calif.,
Sept. 15-17, for top baking honors
and cash prizes. "
Mrs. Mitchell's recipe was for a
chocolate pie, and Mrs. Morley's,
a filbert coffee cake.
a3 Back-To-School
Bring the Children'i School List to
Park-n-Shop for all Basic Needs
Jury Returns Innocent
Verdict In Murder Trial
THE DALLES (UPI)-A unani
mous innocent verdict was return
ed by a Circuit Court jury Wed
nesday, sotting Dolphus L. Baker,
54, free from a second - degree
murder charge in the April 9
shooting death of Edward Richard
Bisig, 31.
The eight women and four men
of the jury deliberated two hours
and 10 minutes.
The case was tried on a change
of venue from Sherman County
before Circuit Judge E. H. Howell
of Canyon City.
llaker testified he was only Irv
ing to disarm Bisig when the
shooting occurred.
Bisig's estranged wife testified
earlier she had fled to Baker's
garage after her husband had
beaten her.
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