TWO ' SECTION Established 1873 ROSEBURG, OREGON THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1949 158-49 I , ' v , ' , f 1 ;. - -sl . , c J " XJt N. ' ' V r' - w; 1 .. ; - 1 -r t f s - '.Vs jt!.i,;,-' ..;.! : " ( , , w .'4 ; r - ; ' ; A . . 1 g ,..r.t..,,.,,..,rBfM!i. f.,..,., j. rl. ri r.r,.ir ---r 1 rl--T n m m in iniiiMi u PRECISION TRUCK DRIVER Morris "Moon" Mullins, above, took first place among 15 con testants Monday in the logging truck "roadeo" staged as a part of the annual Timber Days celebration at Sutheriin. Mullins completed the tricky obstacle course in one minute, 32 sec onds. Mullins operates his own truck on a haul west of Sutheriin. Democracy's Goal Told By Boy Who Won Elks' National Essay Contest ' , ,By JANE EADS WASHINGTON Seventeen-year-old Bill Johnson, son of a Presbyterian preacher out in Mc Alester, Okla., got a wire from the Elks on a Saturday not long ago. "Get to Washington, D. C, on Monday, be ready to see President Truman on Wednes day,',' was the gist of the wire. Bill guessed that his Ideas on "Why Democracy Works," enter ed In the Elks' national essay con test, had won him the trip to the capital. He didn't know until he got here though that he had won top prize worth $1,000. Things began to spin for young Bill. Bill saw Washington in a big way . . . Congress, Arlington National Cemetery, all the monuments. He met his congressmen at the Capi tol. BuJt highlight of his visit was going to the White House and meeting President Truman. "He's a very friendly person," said Bill. "We talked about the American Indians. The President said he thought they'd been given a raw deal. The President said he'd read volumes of books on the subject and was very interested." Bill said he thought the govern ment was "run about as good as it could be." He said he was "neutral" as far as politics was concerned. Bill was neatly dressed in blue- gray slacks, a maroon jacket and HIGH IN QUALITY-LOW IN PR1C m CcMf.isstSingt-f cad ThriHs iwith Jferfi mm- .: II Q4M re UriflM Ml. 60" x 40" X J4. t CnUt r UriM M evailobto. It n. tort II n. hti Harder-FreM tnd mti pUm ninq ha1NliM end rush trip to th start or lockr pkwt. Mokts instonriy available tht yer around an abundant iup ply of garden frtih v9t blM and fruits, ehoico moats and poultry with original goodness and flavor froitn right In. Enables you to pro pare favorite dishes in quanti ties, even complete meab for servinf months later. i tu. tort 1 i ' 24 au. fti Redwood Forest 'Wild Man' Caught WILLITS, Calif., July 6 The red-headed "wild man" , nf the Redwood forests was run to earth vesterdav after six weeks of hide and seek with law en forcement officers. State Highway Patrolman Roy L. Burton captured the red-haired, red-bearded man, barefoot and clad only in overalls, in the Men docino mountains 35 miles north of here. The mystery man, who had been seen a score of times by travelers and farmers in the re gion but who always fled Into the hills, identified himself as Orby Kelsie Meeks, 38, "from Arkan sas." i Taken to Ikiah, he told Sheriff Beverly G. Broaddus that he had escaped from the Camarillo State Hospital in - Ventura County. Calif., and "I followed a deer all the way until I found myself in the mountains.". ' The fugitive lived fairly well, raiding cabins and feed bins at ranches, the sheriff said. For a month he had grown his own vegetables in the mountains end appeared in "good condition," Broaddus added. a fancy tie a local haberdashery shop had presented him. . He had a letter from his girl, Bette Hef ley, 17, a senior at the High School from which he was just graduated. "Democracy is an ideal, a way of life that is embedded in the heart of every American citizen, conversely every. American citi zen is democracy," wrote Bill in his prize-winning essay. "Our goal is to put laughter in the eyes of little children, hope in the hearts of youth, and con tentment on the faces of the aged, instead of leaving all these with the despair and the hopeless ness which is the universal and grim bequest to all who live in lands where democracy Is un known." Bill is going to the University of Tulsa next year. He's going to study business administration, or law, stay out of politics. 1 . .. f I . ! ,.. .ViSSKsi r YOUTHFUL LOG ROLLING CHAMP Jl mmy Lang, 19, Oakland, defending champion, is pictured above, at left, spilling a,n opponent in the preliminaries of the log rolling contest at Sutherlin's Timber Days celebration Monday. At right ha is shown starting a spin which dumped Ed Thirault (back to camera) in the final event. Research Program Set To Fight Spruce Budworm SALEM, July 6. W Three state and federal agencies will begin July 15 on a large-scale re search program to fight the spruce budworm, which already has infested more than a million acres of Oregon's forests. , George Spaur, deputy state for ester, said his department would be joined in the program by the Federal Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine, and the U. S. Forest Service. Spaur said the new program will be aimed at controling the Insect before damage is done.- "At present, we can only spray this vicious tree killer during a limited 10- to 15-day larval period and alter the damage has been done," Spaur said. "If this time can be extended from spring to mid-summer, it will materially Increase the for est acreage that can be sprayed and treated annually. We do not intend to stand idly by and allow the budworm armies to multiply." Spaur said that unless the in sect is controled, it could do 10 times as much damage as forest fires. i FRIENDS gather, look over that long bonnet and wish they had as much Fireball life as you have here. They size up the broad windshield and narrow corner posts and don't have to be told how these things step up "see-power.". They appraise the smart styling, the roomy interiors, the usability of luggage space and agree you've made a buy. t But don't stop, please, with letting them look. Invite them in and introduce them to some of the special pleasures you'll know as a Buick owner. Show them, (or instance, how completely different Dynaflow Drivet is, with every mile cushioned by flowing oil and none of the rigid harshness of direct-drive cars. Let them sample the matchless Buick ride, with all four wheels cradled on soft, coil springs and low-pressure tires made still easier-riding by extra-wide rims. Point out how solid this Buick feels. That's what you get from husky frames, low-swung weight, and power delivered through a torque -tube instead of the rear springs. For the truth is, this Buick's a bargain on much, much more than you can see. It's a big buy on the solid goodness a demonstration quickly makes plain. On increasingly favorable delivery dates. SAnarJ n RoADUAiren, tftitnat at txtrA ait n Surtu mtdtlh VOWIfty raj Gtuut vnut w Whrm It-ttrr nnlnmnhllrt mrm hnlll KI'II K trill hullil Ihrm II AtHS me On attractive price.' On the kind of "deal" your Buick dealer makes. That's why we keep saying "Better see your Buick dealer and get that order in promptly I" MWICMi nlonn haa nil these features S-imoolft OrNAnOW DRVI FUU-VflW VISION front nforptd gfati arto iWINQ-iASY DOORS and occmi "UVINO SMCf" INmtlOM with Omp Crtjdt cuthioai Buoyant. rrtfrtg QUADRUMX COIL mrnoiNO Unit hkibau srexoHT-noHr town win uir-unmo vaivi urrns piu hi-kiud moiNi MOUMINOt Crvlnr-tno VINTIPOHS low-praiwr lirai on Mnrr-SIDI SIMS DUUfX SMSINOS, noln and eonmcling rod, soar IT lltHm Slanrforo' on O0AlAjrt, oollOMl ol oilra coil Off SUf o(l. Tt" fn MfNPy 7AYf3 ABC Nthmti. tvry MWf evtriln. ROSEBURG REFRIGERATION IJ J 11IJ JU r ROSEBURG MOTOR CO. HrU end MiMred Hera 314 H. Jictten rKM 270 ROSE t WASHINGTON PHONI 141