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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1954)
2 Th News-Review, Roieburg, Ore. Wed. Jon. 13, 1954 Reservists Meet Slated In Seattle Eight members of the 9415th Air Force Reserve Squadron, which has headquarters at Roseburg, will go to Seattle Jan. 16 and 17 for a semi-annual conference of key reserve personnel. Lt. Col. Theodore H. Wirak. squadron commander, said the meeting would include a discus sion of the reserve program and its problems. Attending from the Roseburg , flight will be Wirak, Capt R. M. Beardsley (flight commander), , Capt. Nerval Eastin and Lt Fay ette Thompson. Also attending will be two men from the squadron's Coquille fiigM ami two from the Coos Bay flight. Five new sauadron assignees were listed today by T. Sgt. Law rence it. Patterson, sauadron li aison officer. Assigned to Rose- burg's flight are Capt Francis W. Raines of Yoncalln, A-3c Ro land E. Shelman of Roseburg and A-3c Eugene D. Wheeler of Myrtle Creek. Assigned to the Co quille flight was Major Rex Bru . dos. Assigned to the Coos Bay flight was A-ac Bugene R. Uoude. A-3C Herbert A. Woods of Rose . burg is pending assignment, the sergeant said. Polio Victim Funeral Set Funeral services for Doris Ann : White, 24, Gardiner, will be held at 1 p.m. Thursday at the Ungcr Funeral Home, Reednport. Inter ment will follow in the Gardiner Cemetery. Miss White, who died of polio in Eugene Sunday, was born Aug. , 28, 1929, in Marshficfld. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank White of Gardiner. She wis graduated from Gardin- er Grade School, Recdsport High School and the University of Red- lands in California. For the past wiree years sne was employed at the Thompson, Eppcrhai-t garage in Reeosport as a bookkeeper. Miss Whrte was very active In youta work m tne lower umpqua area, devoting much time to the Aainbow Girts and other groups Besides the parents, she is sup Beecher Offers Plan To Revamp United Fund (Continued from Page One) Sept. 15," Beecher stated, "the campaign chairman should be ap pointed not later than July 1." He went on to outline organiza tional steps, with emphasis on early planning and action iitb short drive culminating a year's bard work. Another point emphasired was that "under no condition should a solicitor have a responsibility of more than three contacts." In the current drive, some solicitors have more than 100. The report also emphasizes the need for all workers to strive for better coordination and that all should "know who is responsible for what." . Cooperation Nedtd It isn't enough to appoint a chairman and then say let "Gcorg Do It," he said. 'George can't do it alone. He needs the wholeheart ed cooperation of all concerned." Gen. Beecher noted that during the current campaign there have been notable examples of whole hearted cooperation on the part of workers. He especially praised the efforts of Mona Huh, Frank Norton, Robert Allen and Don Na. den. Speaking of the current cam paign, in which the $70,000 quota has not been reached. Gen. Beech er said "I aiwept a fuil measure of responsibility for the results at tained. The impact on the various organizations dependent on this campaign for funds is serious and will necessarily result in drastic curtailment of essential program; ana services." The chairman's report and rec ommendations met with general approval ot ute uf workers (nDou 25) at the meeting. James Shelton, Oregon Commu nity Chest worker, said, "A per sonal observation is mat if you (the board) will follow this letter to the word you will have one of the finest United Fund organiza tions in the state." vived by her grandmother. Mrs Ruth White of Roseburg: three . aunts, Alary nose vvnuie and Mrs. Lucy Takvidera, bolh of Roseburg, and Mrs. Martha Well- nouser of fortttand, and two un cles, Levi White and George White, both of Roseburg. RUMMAGE SALE The Zxl Tau of Beta Sigma Phi will hold a rummage sale Satur day, Jan. 16, at 8:00 a.m. at the Parish Hall. Water Heater Look si the Ttaturut cmputir MUHkt- I. OlMB, IHktlH hMtlai . BsMvilT lala anlM. Law aaaratlaa it. Employment Picture In County Brighter (Continued from Page One) ROSEBURG 228 N. Stephens Dial 3-5574 SUTHERLIN W. Central Ph. 2988 orations are re-opening and if the weather continues mild, more work opportunities should develop as me spring monms approacn. foster explained that employ. ment regularly falls off during the months of December, January and February, "it appears this year will be no exception. " he said. Continuing, he 3aid that although no extremely cold weather had set in to affect outside work, an abundance of rain has stopped op erations in some industries. Lumber Industry Slow fte said construction work Is moving along as usual for this time of year, but the lumber in dustry has been held back by weather. As mieht he exnaHpH Hi ri In unemployment has correlated with slacking business. Foster said retail and wholesale trade and service industries are going through their usual slack period following the holiday season. Hp revealed that with prospects of immediate employment being as dim as they are at present, buy ers are extremely selective. He said reports from various firms in the area indicate that "people arc buying only what is absolutely necessary." Summing up, he said it is generally felt this condition wild cinlinue until such time as employment be comes "more prevalont." Myrtle Creek Bonds Are Sold Foster and Marshall, Portland, were successful bidders Tuesday night on $13,000 in water Improve ment bonds put to auction by the Myrtle Creek city council. The bid was the same, 4 per cent, as one entered by Douglas County State Bank, but the Port land firm offered a premium of $100.20, according to City Record er G. D. Myllenbeck. ' The bonds actually were resold. Authorized in 1952 by Myrtle Creek voters, they were sold last fall. But after the sale, it was discov ered the adoption of a new city charter had invalidated them. Sub sequently, they were revoted. Foster and Marshall also bought the bonds last fall. The sale came in the first meet ing of the new city council. Myl lenbeck said no important busi ness was finished during the meet ing. Junior High School Schedules Open House An open house is scheduled at the Roseburg Junior High School Thursday night from 7:30 to 9:30. The open house is pointed to ward familiarizing parents and friends of students with classes and curriculum. They will have an opportunity to attend classes with the students and ask questions. Teachers will take the occasion to explain different phases of the school program to parents. "School" will begin with an assembly in the auditorium with the Junior High band and triple trio to entertain. After announce ments by R. R. Brand, the 10 minute classes will begin. , Kiwanis Club Officers Installed Tuesday Noon Willard Ward of Klamath Fells, lieutenant governor of the 15th dis trict of Kiwanis International, Tuesday installed Roseburg's. 1951 Kiwanis officers at the regular weekly meeting in the Hotel Ump qua. Officers installed were: Gordon Stewart, president; Kenneth Bush- ey vice president; w. M. camp bell, secretary; and E. G. Young, treasurer. Ward also praised the work of outgoing president George Neuner and presented him with a past president's pin. United' Fund Campaign To Continue To Feb. 25 (Continued from Page One) Glide and Umpqua are not com plete. Many Mills Nat Contacted James Shelton of Salem, an Oregon Chest worker, said 20 of SS mills in the Roseburg area have not been contacted as yet,. He believes the $30,000 needed to meet the quota can be collected in 30 days, if manpower can be ob tained to do the job. He suggested the workers "go about their jobs, and do them" without undue pub licity or commotion. Workers will be asked to report back to division chairmen by about Feb. 15, In preparation for the annual meeting of the UF organization, President Harry Brubaker appoint ed a committee to nominate of ficers for the new year. Named were Lyle Fenner, Don Naden and John Todd. The meeting will be held March 4. Mrs. R. E. Herman, Mrs. Don Nadan and Mrs. Oscar Amuodson are in charge of arrangements. A suggestion ' by Bruce Elliott that another committee be ap pointed io study the whole UF structure and work with the norm nating committee was taken under consideration. Several board members were of the opinion "new blood" is needed in the organiza tion leadership in preparation for next fall's drive. When the drive is completed, the total amount derived will be divided among the participating agencies on a pre-determined per centage basis. It was emphasized by Schmeer that there is not a dollar m any of the agency budg ets which is not justified. A ray of sunshine noted at the meeting was the fact that the total so far derived is larger than last year's Community Chest and Red Cross drive collections. MP IVE SERVICE SYSTEM, iARD llOOtf l - KlMsEra Korea Unity Difficult, Says Secretary Dulles (Continued from Page One) RELEASED ON BAIL Kenneth Gloason. 23. Sutherlin was reloased under $150 bail after arraignment Tuesday on a charge of non-support, according to Suth- orlin Justice of the I'oace Ward Watson. Gleason was returned here Irom Albany by a deputy sheriff. HERE'S THE CARNATION -ALBERS PROGRAM FOR RAISING CALVES INTO BETTER COWS ' The way a heifer calf is fed and managed for the first six months (and particularly for the first month) of her life determines largely how far she will go toward fulfilling her inherited possibilities Follow the Albers Calf Rearinq Plan Feed Albers SUCKLE ao cording lo directions packed in every big. It's a nursing feed. Start at once after the calf is born teaching the ani mal to eat dry CALF MANNA. Hold about a tablespoonful in your hand and let the calf luck your fingers and the pellets run into its mouth. As toon as the calf eats a pound of dry Calf Manna daily of its own accord, discontinue Suckle feeding. Any time after that, gradually change the calf to Albers CROWD (a mixture of Calf Manna and grains in just the right jdjj" proportion). ASK US FOR CARD TO HANG OVER CALF PEN TITLED "10 RULES FOR FEEDING CALVES FOR BEST RESULTS" BUY WHERE YOU SHARE IN THE SAVINGS Douglas County CAP Meets Thursday Night ThA TVtiiCfTfl Cmtnhv Civil A IV Dalml titill mnt m.....t.f t t.in p.m. in the Roseburg Senior High 11h nlaA Ka haon Mianaarl the Junior High School. ine second pnase ot tne CAf program will be launched at the raflulap maaiinif in Dsvnm 1 ftl 1 1 the Senior High, reports CAP cap- un, ut. w. uaner. a lie awvutsu piiam ui bl 01111115 nl Institute new classes including study in communications and inst uiu, vctnei. attiu. Harry Pargeter Named To League Committee H. O. Pargeter of Roseburg has been appointed to the accounting committee of the United States Savings & Loan League, accord ing to word received from Ralph R. Crosby, president. Pargeter, secretary-ihanager of Assn., will soon be contacted about work ot the committee, Crosby said. MINOR ACCIDENT A 76-year-old Canyonvi'Je man was cited for failure to yield tin right ot way Tuesday morning wncn ms car and another were in volved in a ti'afli" collision at th intersections of '.ss and Jackson Streets. He is I.cland Bailey An derson. Police said he was mak ing a left hand turn at the time of the wrei-k. The other driver was Robert Eugene Scott, 30, 1642 N. Stephens St. Both cars receiv ed superficial damage. land "don't look favorably on rela tions with Formosa," home of Na tionalist Chinese Leader Chiang Kai-Shek. And President Rhee of South Ko rea, he said, is skeptical about Japan. He s-aid too. the treaty does not mean that an attack on South Ko-! rea is an attack on the United I States. In this way, he said, the 1 defense treaty differs from NATO, I which spells out carefully that an j attack on any member is to be; considered an attack on all mem-. bers. t 1 e 1 n CALLED TO SERVICE the four men above are shown shortly after they were informed k mj,,ia ho tnrujnrAoA trr inHiirtinn intn the Armv to Portland Jan. 1 3. They are the first inductees from Roseburg Board 14. From leff, they are: Keith Orven Leighton, Myrtle Creek; Richard Lee Froman, Gordin;r; Charley Bardin Melton, Roseburg; and Harry Raymond Johnson, Reedsporr.. (Staff Picture). Cremation Of Boy's Body Scheduled At Crants Pass Cremation for an infant born to Mr. and Mrs. Frederic S. Rose borough Jr. .Myrtle Creek, on Jan. 11 will be held at Grants Pass Thursday. The boy was born dead. Ganz Mortuary is in charge of ar rangements. Besides the parents, the infant is survived by a brother. Freddy. maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Trimble of Seattle, and paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Fredric S. Roseborough Sr. of Los Angeles. CARS COLLIDE Two cars were damaged in a collision Tuesday morning, ac cording to Mrs. Paul Strahan, Canyonville correspondent. Mae Marie Welch, Days Creek, was smanen up when her ear was struck from the rear by one driv en by Samuel E. Marsh, Seattle. She was not hospitalized. WRECKED CAR FLAMES Koseourg rural tiremen were called out 10:20 p.m. Tuesday to pui out a Diaze which started in a storage ot of wrecked cars own. ed by Lyle Bucll, firemen report. Fire in upholstery in the back scat of a car was extinguished. FIRE HARMLESS A flue fire at the Kelly Beiv neH home. 711 E. Sixth St., caus ed no damage shortly alter noon Tuesday, firemen report. Huge Clobemaster Plane Crashes LARSON AIR FORCE BASE, Wash. I A big C124 Globe master collapsed onto its nose on a runway landing here early Wednesday, but the nine crew members aboard got out safely through the escape hatches. The information office of the base, outside Moses Lake, said fire broke out in the big troop carrier's interior, but it was qu'.ck- ly exunguisnea. The planes door, below the nose, was jammed badly as the big craft skidded several hundred yards on its nose, so the crew members had to escape through the emergency exits. The information officer said'thc I gia'r.t plane, capable of carrying ; 200 troops, flipped onto its I ise as it touched the runway at top j landing speed. Damage to the nose j section was extensive. I Eisenhower Says Atomic Talks Are Encouraging (Continued from Page One) gression b; relying primarily on instant massive retaliation. 2. Laughed off an effort to find out whether he intends to seek a second term. His political friends, Eisenhower added, have -advised him never to deal with that sub ject. 3. Expressed confidence that the United States is achieving better balance in its defense forces every day. 4. Said regarding the controver sial Bricker amendment on treaty making pjwers, that he never would subscribe to any treaty or agreement which in anyway con travened the Constitution. He indi cated, however, that he and Sen. Bricker (R-Ohio). chief sponsor of the proposed constitutional amend ment have not been able to agree on a compromise. Earthquake Hits California Area LOS ANGELES Wl California was shaken by an earthquakt and 'showered by rain, hail and snow yesterday in a spectacular combination of natural phenom ena. ' The quake, rated by seismolo gists as a major shock, jolted cit ies from the Mexican border to Sacramento, 500 miles north. There were no injuries, but elec tric wires were snapped and plas ter shattered in numerous build ings. A crack wa opened on the 24Wi floor of the City HaH here, and an Kwide wail of a bank building was cracked in Bakersfield. Tele phone lines weTe broken at Teha chapi, where 10 lives were lost in the destructive 1952 quake. A 12-inch gas line over the Tehachapi Mountains between Taft and the Ridge Route was broken. Portlanders Get Snow; None Here By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Wet snow fell in the Portland area early Wednesday and the .., it...- Dura,., cntH mnre poilld be expected at night and Thursday morning But o.i'.ier Western Oregon com- . - - fxnAAaitc rtt nin munrues nave and continued cola. Occasional the Cascade Mountains., m 1 L 4 V n r-rt SI til llVl Irttt fjkll 1ft Portland melted almost as fast as 4U- iiMimil Kut it ushitonm-t higher elevations or some time. Nearly au ureguu wcuicr am- .ahJaI Kalru-frPP7inff tAtn V1UIT3 iCVUiweu o peraturos Wednesday morning. JJUrnS WIUl HUUV .ow noo wi coWesl poini. uiner iuw ieauuK". r. i ,n T nl.Ai.iau, 11 tflamBth Falls 13, Ontario 22, Pendleton and n I...-- nA DalAm OT ITllcfonu 9Q Portland 30 and Newport 31. Snow, for the time being at least, has been ruled out in the Roseburg area, the weatherman ventured Wednesday morning. His 36-hour forecast reveal . a warming trend for the rest of Wednesday and Thursday. Temperature sunk to weM below freezing again last night for the seiccnd night in a row. Low was 26, two degrees warmer than the previous nigl.it. Reuther Shooting Witness Taken KITCHENER, Ont. I The five day hunt for Donald Ritchie, fugi tive key witness in the Reuther shooting case, ended early Wed nesday in nearby Preston, Police said Ritchie walked quietly up to a reporter in a downtown restaur ant and disclosed his identity. Two p'olUe from Detroit, where Ritchie eluded a police guard last Friday, were on their way to Pres. ton. to pick up both Ritchie and his common-law wife, Betty White. The woman had been arrested last night in Preston, about 150 miles northeast of Detroit. She told police Ritchie had planned to surrender after making contact with his attorney. RAIL WORKER HURT A Southern Pacific Railroad em ploye, Michael Luxford of Eugene, was treated at Community Hospi tal Wednesday night after a mis hap at work. Hs reportedly fell and cut his head v.hilo trying to fix an air hose which became disconnected. W. Wosh.' at S.P. Track! Roseburg, Oregon DIAL 2-2683 1 - FREE' PARKING AT THE FARM BUREAU (Sjin-i nr oao now if voii ----and HfE's CN LIT Me HAVE A SMAULOAy TUNClE wiLUE'S (t can swins TH&jr !rTlj.NUM8E t (down-rAVMewyjy 1951 KAISER $1195 1950 CHRYSLER Windsor 4-door . 1395 1949 DE SOTO 4-Door 1095 1949 FORD Tudor 595 1949 CHEVROLET 2-Door 895 SPECIAL 1946 FORD Coupe 175 1953 WILLYS Pickup 1695 1952 WILLYS Pickup 1495 1950 WILLYS Jeep, steel top 1095 1950 CHEVROLET Pickup 850 1946 DODGE Pickup 495 Come Out and Take Your Pick lV' JKII UHJ J'N i mi a a rr I ti t Announcing the Appointment of Ken Bailey Insurance Agency 220 S. 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