The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, June 23, 1949, Page 2, Image 2

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    If
2 Tho Nows-Roviow, Roseburg,
LOCAL
Rummigt Sale The Catholic
vnmmnora main Uill h& held
Saturday in the basement of the
rectory irom 10 a.m. to p.m.
Grang to Meet Evergreen
Grange will meet at a 6:30 o'cIock
potluck supper Friday night at
the hall to be followed by the
regular business session.
Here From Portland Mr. and
Mrs C. C. Myers ol Portland are
Jn Roseburg visiting the former's
parents, Mr., and Mrs.' Lloyd
Myers, on Umpqua Avenue.
O. of U. V. to Meet Florence
Nightingale Tent No. 15, Daugh
ters of Union Veterans of the
Civil War will meet Friday night
at 7:30 o'clock at the K. or f.
hall.
Mra From Kansas Citv Mr.
and Mrs. Graham Robinson of
Kansas City are visiting the for
mer's brother and sister-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. John ri. Kooinson
Sr., on the North Umpqua at
Glide.
Zultima Club to Meet Zuleima
Club, Daughters of the Nile will
meet Friday night at a potluck
supper at the L. E. Hennlnger
home on the North Umpqua.
Those desiring transportation are
asked to meet at the Hotel Rose
at S p.m. ,
Back From Coast Mrs. Harry
F. Hatfield has returned to her
home in Roseburg, following a
trip to North Bend to act as in
stalling oflcer for the American
Legion Auxiliary officers cere
mony, which took plafe Monday
evening.
Mr. Rutherford Improving
Jim Rutherford, who suffered
serious injuries in an accident
May 23, while working for the
Roseburg Lumber Company, is
reported improving at Good
Samaritan Hospital In Portland,
where he Is receiving treatment.
Biok From Meeting Mr. and
Mrs. H. O. Pargeter, R. E. Par
geter and Thomas Pargeter re
turned to their homes in Rose
burg Wednesday, following a
trip to Paradise Inn, Rainier
National Park, to attend a fire
insurance meeting. They stop
ped over in Puyallup for a short
visit with relatives of Mrs. H. O.
Pargeter. . i ;
Move To Roseburg Mr. and
Mrs. E. V. Lincoln and their two
small daughters, Karen and Kath
ryn, formerly of Grant County,
have moved to Roseburg and are
living on the Melrose Route, Box
108. Lincoln, a special agent for
the Business Men s Assurance Co.,
will bt associated with another
B.M.A. agent, Al O. Bates,: of 900
E. First St.
RECORDS
RECORDS
RECORDS
P0UPLAR
WESTERN
49c
2.49
POPULAR
ALBUMS
From 4.00
by
RCA Victor
Artists "
Vaughn Monro
Freddy Martin
Perry Como
Sammy Kayt
and many others
pKUleik
Radio-Record Shop
Better Because
Ore. Thur., June 23, 1949
NEWS
Will Spend Summer Hero
Mrs. Emmett Hall of Toledo,
Iowa, has arrived in Roseburg
to spend the summer visiting at
the home of her son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Maynai'd
Byrd, and.with other relatives.
At MoClintock Home Mr. and
Mt-o Inhn Moflintwlf And Sfin.
Toni, and the latler's friend, Fred
die Zwahlen, ol roruana are
visiting until Friday with Mr.
Krtr.rwt'a narpnls. Mr. and
Mrs. J. E. McClintock, on East
Cass street. The AlcunniocKi ior
merly resided here.
.
Here On Vacation Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Hutchings have re
turned to their home on Blake-
lot et root following a months
vacation trip to Minnesota and
points 01 interest in tne miuuie
West, where they visited rela
tives and friends.
Dessert-supper The Methodist
Vmralnno Clllh will mPPt flt a
7:30 o'clock dessert-supppr Friday
nlnrht at tho hnmp nf Mrs. Ned
Dixon with Mrs. S. A. Warg, Mrs.
A. W. LamKa, jvirs. i-ucien luiid
and Mi's M I. SlIfrHpiV hostesses.
This meeting was previously plan
ned for Thursday, but has been
changed to the evening oi June it.
Here On Honeymoon Mr.
and Mis.- Dean Baughman, who
were recently married in Wood
burn, are in Roseburg visiting
the former's uncle and aunt, Mr.
and Mrs. Dexter Baughman, and
cousins, Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Swcn
son, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Morgan
and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Baugh
man. Return Home Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Ogle and sons, Rodney
and Russell; Mr. and Mrs. N. F.
Keblhek, Mr. and Mrs. Francis
M. Kcnsmoe and Miss Shirley
Mathre have returned to their
homes in Portland, following a
trip here to attend the Land-Ogle
wedding. Mr. Ogle is a brother of
Eldon T. Ogle of this city. Aunts
of the bride coming for the wed
ding were Mrs. Blanche Brown
of Portland and Mrs. M. T. Bales
of Gaston, Ore., who spent
several days here visiting their
brother, R. R. Harding.
Moose Lodge Planning
PAL Entertainment
John Kilpack, Portland, mem
ber of the board of PAL, Inc.,
was in Roseburg today making
Drellmlnary arrangements for an
appearance of PAL entertainers
In KoseDurg, jury xi. ine enter
tainment will be sponsored by the
Moose Lodge.
PAL, which provides activities
for more than 400 boy members
in Portland, was organized by
Micky Pease, a Portland police
man, to corneal juvenile delin
quency. Club members participate
in various forms of athletic enter
tainment and now are preparing
a statewide tour in an effort to
Interest more communities in the
same type of effort.
Local committees are being or
ganized, Kilpack said, to take
charge of arrangements ior tne
appearance oi tne troupe in nose
burg.
Michael Bakke, Infant,
Diet At Myrtle Creek
Micheal Bakke, Infant son of
Mr. and Mrs. Brownie Bakke of
Myrtle Creek, died Wednesday
after a short Illness. He was
born Sent. 28. 1!)48, in Roseburg
Surviving besides his parents
are two brothers, Gerald and
Anthony; two sisters, Eloise and
Maralyn, an ot Myrtle urecK;
his grandfathers, Harry Plunck
and Alfred HaKKe, rotn ol Port-
land, and his grandmother, Mrs.
Carry Unkke, 1'ortland.
Graveside service! In charge
of the Roseburg Funeral Home
will be held Friday at 10 a.m. in
(he Masonic Cemetery of Rose
burg.
Roseburg, Drain Legion
Juniors' Game Dated
Roseburg Legion Junior base
bailers will meet Drain under
the lights at Drain at 8 o'clock
tomorrow night. It will be
the first game away from
home for the Roseburg team.
The last time the Roseburg
Legion Juniors met Drain, they
were beaten 3 to t. Drain Is
still undefeated In three games,
while Roseburg has won two
and lost one. .
Public Housing Bill's
Triumph Is Predicted
(Continued From Puge One)
citizenship, by reducing juvenile
delinquency and crime, improv
ing heallli. and Instilling contl
dence in Democracy.
The legislation proposes a vast
program oi mum clearance, low
rent public housing and farm
housing aids. Its cost has been
estimated all the wnv from $7,
300,000.000 to $20,000,000,000.
000.
Electrical output in the United
States Increased 58 times from
1902 to 1!H0.
It's Fresher!
Freshly baked
every day In Roseburg
Rufus Garoutte
Funeral Will Be
Held At Bandon
Funeral services for Rufus
Vernon Garoutte, 69, who died
Tuesday from injuries suffered
in a logging accident on N.
Myrtle Creek, will be held Fri
day in the First Presbyterian
Church at Bandon at 2 p.m., with
Rev. Geo. Kemesik officiating.
Mr. Garoutte was born March
4, 1880, in Adele, Iowa, and came
to Oregon 44 years ago. He was
employed by the Chappel Log
ging Company of Canyonville at
the tlmeof his death.
Surviving are his wife, Rena,
D.n.inn. throp nns. Ieonard.
Klamath Falls, and Walter and
Mark, both ol Banaon; a oroener,
Alex G Cottage Grove; four
sisters, Mrs. May Hart, Portland;
Mrs. Jessie Kelly, Cottage Grove;
Mrs Lela Penland, Mineral,
Wash., and Mrs. Calista Morris,
Disston, Oregon.
Interment will follow In the
Knight of Pythias Cemetery in
Bandon. Arrangements are in
charge of the Roseburg Funeral
Home.
'Slicker' Passes
Bad Checks, Takes
Man's Daughter
ASTORIA. June 23. (iW Po
lice said today they were look
ing for a fast-talking 20-year-old
who not only passed worthless
checks to buy a car and a farm,
but also made off with the farm
er's daughter.
Sheriff Paul Kearney said the
youth gave a $2550 check to an
automobile firm and got a 1949
car and $124.75 in change. Then
he gave a $7000 check to farmer
E. M. Butts for his farm, Kearney
said.
The checks bounced, but by that
lime Farmer Butts' daughter
Mrs. Marguerite Marshall, 27-year-old
mother of two, had dis
appeared. Kearney said she had accom
panied the youth out of town.
Kearney said the youth had
been working here as a fisherman
under the name of Lcroy All
corn. His last check, also worth
less, was for $125 to Butts' son
to buy a radio, Kearney added.
The sheriff said Allcorn was
believed headed for Houston, Tex
as. Police along the route were
notified.
Sour milk is a favored drink in
some parts of Europe.
Platinum was called unripe
gold and thrown back into the
streams to "ripen" by early day
Indians in South America.
Jmim)mm! 'wrimm )IT-v . ' 'i,, ' i
flj!iieW'" .... . G!1NrMQtt&4ar. . .TfajBBaaeiBBBisssBBBBBiaeBBjjBjpj- Bt
ACT QUICKLY and in your neighbor
A hood it might ho you.
For there's no doubt that this exciting
new Riviera model styled and exe
cuted by Buick is the very last word
in new body types.
It lias, as you see, the swift and racy
lines of a Convertible, made even more
distinctive by a bold new sweep of
chromium along ils fenders.
But the top is solid -a single sheet of
AF Of L To Offer Plan On
Legislature Apportioning
(Continued From Page One)
the executive board for study.
The executive board also got
for study a proposal to change
tne primary election law so that
voters would not be bound by
party lines.
A peace proposal from dele
gates of the Salem Labor Council
ran into troubled times. The Sa
lemites urged that the CIO be
invited to return to the AFL.
They also proposed that machin
ists, now independent, be asked to
return, with their original juris
diction guaranteed.
The machinists left In a dispute
over Jurisdiction rights.
President J. D. McDonald said
millwrights might object. , The
millwrights' Jurisdiction overlaps
that of the machinists. McDonald
also said the Oregon Federation
has no authority over such Juris
dictional matters.
A minute of silent prayer was
offered by delegates for the mem
ory of William S. U'ren, father of
the Initiative and referendum
plan in Oregon.
Another controversial resolu
tion appeared. It specified that
conventions be awarded only to
cities which can guarantee union
service. Sponsors said that in the
past delegates have been unable
to eat in convention-city hotels
because they were non-union.
In a separate meeting the State
Association of Barbers elected Ed
Classen, Astoria, president; Roy
Rose, Kosehurg, first vice presi
dent: Graver Sibley, Pendleton,
second vice-president; C. T.
Crane, Portland, secretary-treas
urer.
Alice Maler, Eugene; Phillip
Johnson, Salem, and Roderick
French. La Grande, received a
pen and pencil set each and $500
checks from the Federation for
winning in a recent statewide
scholarship contest.
Airliner Crash Near
Italy Kills More Than 30
(Continued From Page One)
the huge two-engine Convair
were injured when the airliner
crashed two minutes after taking
off from municipal airport here
yesterday. None of the injured
was considered critical.
Spokesmen for American Air
lines lauded Capt. Ed Hatch of
Memphis for his skill and judg
ment in crasn-lamiing tne crail
in a field after skidding It across
a highway and into a large tree.
The craft, the Fort Worth-to-New
York "City of San Antonio,"
nosed down three and a half
miles from here. When Captain
Hatch brought It to a stop, com
pany rpokesmen said, a wing was
smashed, an engine was ablaze,
and P.s choline was loose.
ROSE &
". . - - , v-! -.;-:'--'r',iy- I1v:
Foreign Polices T
Of U. S. Receive
Governors' O. K.
COLORADO SPRINGS, Col.,
June 23. P) .The national
conference of governors ended
here yesterday after the passage
ot a series of resolutions.
In one of these, the governors
gave a general endorsement to
the administration's foreign poli
cies, including support of the
United Nations, the European Re
covery .Program and the North
Atlantic Pact.
The resolution's call for Senate
action "to implement the pact and
to give it full force and effect"
generally was regarded as indi
rect approval of the proposed $1,
130,000,000 program to rearm
Western Europe.
In their final 'action, the gov
ernors ignored a special commit
tee which met with Congress
members last year and urged a
20 per cent cut In federal aid
grants in return Jor the govern
ment's vacating some tax fields.
Indiana's Democratic Gov. Hen
ry F. Schricker, who headed the
Resolutions Committee, said the
governors just weren't , "in the
position where they can turn
down tcderal aid.
Instead, the conference reaf
firmed a resolution it adopted in
1944 calling for "all'levels of gov
ernment" to "participate finan
cially" in unemployment, relief
and other matters.
With its unanimous vote rule
in effect, the conference killed a
proposal by Georgia's Democratic
Gov. Herman Talmadge, support
ed by.' Louisiana's Democratic
Gov. Earl K. Long, calling for
distribution of all federal aid to
states purely on the basis of need.
Orchards, Oil Derricks
Burn In California Fire
LOS ANGELES, June 23. f.P)
Blackened orchard trees and
oil derricks marked the path to
day of a raging brush fire near
Whittler that was. brought under
control after covering some 2,000
acres.
The blaze, which started yes
terday, destroyed at least 12 der
ricks, most of them in the
Murphy Whittier Lease, and
three big oil storage tanks.
The flames coursed through
Turnbull Canyon and over the
Puente Hills. Several avocado
groves were reported hard hit by
the blaze.
Some difference In the propor
tion of gases composing the ait
are observed at various places on
the earth's surface.
The game of auction bridge
0' " :d in India.
stout steel, neatly finished off inside
with chromium bows. And a broad rear
window curves gracefully around, giv
ing really abundant rearward vision.
Push-button controls drop all windows
out of sight at a touch, leaving' not even
a doorpost to block your outlook. And
the interior trim is the richest yet a
really stunning creation inside as well
as out.
As pictured here the Riviera is now in
production on the Burlk Road.m.vster
ROSEBURG MOTOR COMPANY
WASHINGTON
Daylight Saving Ban
Target Of Petitions
PORTLAND, June 23. tJPt
Supporters of daylight saving
time nave b,ua valid names on
petitions which would halt opera
tion of the state's ban on fast
time, the county clerk's office
reported.
A total of 15,296 names are
needed. The clerk s staff is still
at work on the counting job and
petitions are being circulated in
other counties.
If sufficient names are obtain
ed, the state law banning day-
ngm saving time unless pro
claimed by the governor which
becomes effective July 15 will
be referred to the November,
Thompson To Retire
From Insurance Post
PORTT.AMn T..r, OQ in.
Seth R Thnmmnn etata Inoiti.
ance commissioner, will step out
oi omce June ou.
ne continued reports that he
Would not accent rpannninlmant
when his present term expires
June 30. His future plans were
nut uisuuseu. -
Thomnsnn hn urueH elnm
March, 1940.
Noted Oil Field Trouble
Shooter Found Slain
AMARILLO; Tex., June 23.
(JPh Tex Thornton, renowned,
death-defying oil field trouble
shooter, was found slain in a
Is
ast Word?
chassis which means 150-hp Fireball
power, the silken luxury of Dynaflow
Drive, and the matchless levelness of
the Buick "dream ride." That means
"the last word" in brilliant perform
ance as well' as in luxurious dress and
styling.
Production on this high-styled road star
is limited, as you might expect.
To be "first with tlte last word," there
fore, it is wise to see your Buick dealer
soon about getting your order in.
PH0NI 141
The Weather
U. t. Weather Bureau Offloe
Roseburg, Oregon
Cloudy this morning, tlearing
this afternoon. Increasing cloudi
ness tonight and Friday. Scatter
ed showers Friday afternoon.
Mignett tamp, for any June, 106
Lowest temp, for any June 36
Hiaheat temo. veaterrfav 7ft
Lowest temp, last 24 hrs. 53
precipitation laat 24 hra. 0
Preeinltation ainr. .Inn 1 n
Preoipitatlon since Sept 1....27.S4
Deficiency since June 1 .85
tourist court here today.
Police said a shirt and towel
were wound tightly about his
throat.
The famed explosive exDerl.
about 60, was president of the
U. S. Nitroglycerin Company of
Amarillo.
Floor Covering
Linoleum Konrilo Vinyl
Largo Stocks Aisuro Easa In
Selecting Pleasing Patterns
Seo Display At
01H SUPPLY COMPANY
Everything For
Flood A Mill Sts.
THE SANITARY MARKET
Open Now to
VVNtt Unnn mm, os ilWcolW.
' rout tit TOGHKm VAltl
Tu 1. Hf NIY J. TAVIO. ABC N.lwort tnry MWr tnah
N. Roseburg Sanitary
Dist. Ian Is Offered
(Continued From Page One)
Roseburg Sanitary District'!
Dresent vatllaHnn Ifm,.!.-.!
pested th riistrfft .,., in n,"
" , ""J w jiuiis
each year tor teven yeart, then
reduce the levy 21 mill each two
years until the indebtdnesa would
be paid. The bonds would be of
the eeneral ohlipatlnn tun. mmu
Landu.
Howland will present hla pre-
llminarv rennrt nt m nm, .
- ' - piwiuiea
janunrv riiirHr In t!. Mr -
Roseburg area at a meeting
scheduled at 7:30 p. m. nextTuea.
day evening in the Free Metho
dist Church, corner of Umpqua
and Harvard Avmm Th m
cial committee for West Rotei
h M f CT hAartoH hv Al Hum ka
O I .7 - - JIUUCO
to cooperate with North Rose.
uuif jn cunnirucuon OI a Treat
ment plant.
Tho Builder
Phone 121
Serve You
For tasty meals with frtsh meats shop
our union market. Wo carry comploto
line of fresh moats and fish. So far f ooej
meat and good service shop tho Sanitary
Market.
FREE DELIVERY
Phon 134
SANITARY MARKET
31 S W. Cast
A-
tralWa al mm (Ml
r