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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1954)
2 The Newt-Review, Rouburg, Ore. Thurt., Oct. 21 1954 spflwrjaiaii wpiiasHna buh wgm-QyHW .s'!?-w : 3n Jlie cJ&b ram : t ' ; ' ' . ' J f , 7rf iW-vM v-vr,4! CORN FOR SILAGE Don Auer operates Q tractor which pulls a field chopper Field v chopper propels the chopped corn into the truck box bed.. The silage will be hauled to the silo for storage. Corn was cut last week before rains set in. The Auer farm is located in the Green community. (Paul Jenkins Phco) Netherlands Youth Visits In Green By LAURA OLSON Staff Writer, Naws-Rtvlew The work of 4-H club members, organizations and leaders through out the United Statei is fairly well known. Its success in promoting good citizenship and building strong leadership Is well known. A stranger by comparison to many Americans is the interna tional facet of 4-H work. Through the work of the national 4-H foun dation and inter-nation exchange program, has been set up, enabling young people oi tnis country 10 live with families m other lands. Like all good programs the pro cedure may toe reversed. Thus, this month in Douglas County, a young man Irom The Netherlands is visiting the Don Auers who live In the Green are. Speaks Four Languages Frans de Boer stands 6 feet 4 inches. The tall, solidly built Neth erlander say he likes Douglas Douglas County and his tempor ary home here. He's had no trou ble with language. Frans speaks four: Dutch, English, German and French. He prefers the first two. For about a month now he has been helping Auer and his wife on their 78-acre dairy farm. While assisting, De Boer has been ob serving. He's in the United States to study farmine and carrv baric to his homeland methods which may be helptul. The Auers and their son Bwon (a freshman at Roseburg Senior stay is so short. They, - perhaps more than he, are aware of the worth of tne lmornauoniu rarm Youth Exchange program which makes his visit possmie. ine pro. gram, designed to inorease inter national understanding on a grass roots level, has done just that. De Boers has busily explored books about government and poli tics in the Auers" library. He's asked mem about history and cus toms and modern appliances, par. ticularly the home freezer. (More than anything else, ne wouia jikc to take a freezer home with him. It's an appliance not common in The Netherlands and he thinks -i would be a boon to housekeep ing.) The questioning procedure has also been reversed. The Auer fam ily and the many groups De Boer has appeared before have learned much about The Netherlands and its people. The friendly Netherlander has been in the USA nearly six months. He arrived In Hoboken, N.J., May 23 aboard the S.S. Rijnv dam. After a session iin Washing ton, D.C., De Boer traveled to up state New York. There- he spent three months on a dairy farm. Visits Fair, With some stons in between, he arrived in Oregon. He spent a weeK at tne Oregon state Fair, some time on a beef cattle ranch in the John Day area of Eastern Eastern Oregon before cominz to i we Auers, County. By bus to see more of the country, De Boer will return to the east coast. There he will board a shiD for his home. He will return to the province of Friesland in the northern nor tion of The Netherlands where his parents own a farm. His lather, Gerrit de Boer, is a bank er in the town ot beeuwaraan. Be sides his mother, there is o n e other member of the De Boer family Frans brother, Fokke. Fokke, 20, is attending a techni cal engineering school, What does Frans de Boer find most remarkable about the United States? He says the vastness. of the country is impresive, the fact one travels for eight days without once leaving the country and the fact there are no border inspections between states. Ana, finally, the matter of the same money and the same language in use for more than 3,000 miles. High School) regret that De Boer'ai Oct. 25 he will leave Douglas Federal Judge Rules For Reynolds Company TACOMA I Federal Judee George H. Boldt ruled Tuesday in favor of the Reynolds Metals Co. in actions brought bv a erouo of farmers suing for damages they contended resulted from fumes from aluminum plants at Trout dale, Ore., and Loneview. Wash, The judge held that fluorides from the plants have not been "an unreasonable interference with plaintiffs' use and enjoyment of ' tneir lands." i i.t-V' i& ..& 4 'M i- T TWO FARMERS EXCHANGE ideas while a farmer's wife listens to both. From left, Donald Auer, Mrs. Donald Auer and Frans deBoer. The Auers have a 78-ocre ranch in the Green community. DeBoer has been visiting on the Auer ranch fpr the past few weeks to learn more about dairy farming methods in the United States. He is an Inter national Foreign Youth Exchange student from The Nether lands (Paul Jenkins Photo) Yoncalla Asst. Postmaster Reports New Grandchild m LkJ is .. By MRS. GEORGE EOES Mrs. Bernice Radtke, assistant Yoncalla postmaster, reports the birth of "a son to Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Walker Oct 7. The new baby, Richard Huntington Walker, is the grandson ol Mrs. Radtke. His great grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Webb Hunting ton, of Hayhurst Valley. This is the Walker's first child.- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wheeler of Ukiah, Calif., and Mr. and Mrs Jack Hash of Taft, Calif, visited at the Les Morris home last week. Mr. and Mrs. Kirkelie and Mr. and Mrs. Berry spent several days last week visiting the redwoods in northern California. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Smith spent last weekend visiting relatives in Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Buruse were called to Walla Walla, Wash., Fri day due to the death of Mrs. Bur use's mother. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoagland, who have spent the summer in the East, returned to their home in West Park, Wednesday. Donna Churchill, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Emmitt Churchill, un derwent an appendicitis operation in Lanyonviiic Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Howard nf EddyviUe spent the weekend here visiting relatives and doing some deer hunting. Visitors at the Walter McKirdv home in Hayhurst last week were Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Wolf of Seattle, Wash. Mrs. Naomi Isgar, who has been By W, Associated 6. ROGERS Press Arts Editor visiting at the John Cook home in Grants Pass, returned to her home here last week. The Cook family lived in Elkhead for a number of years. They Will move to Rose burg this month. Mrs. ' Martha Allen has as her guest her. brother, Robert Jones, of Washington. After visiting here for a month, Jones will go to Cal ifornia to spend the winter. Guests at the Ray Morin home in Hayhurst Valley are their daughter Mrs. Melvin Hoetcher and baby, of Willamette. Mr. and Mrs, Hank Hubbell and daughter, Myrna, drove to West Kir Friday. From there they went to eastern Oregon, deer hunting, but returned home without seeing any deer with horns. The infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Van Dolan is in critical con dition in the Sacred Heart Hospital, lUgene. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Smith spent last week visiting in Idaho. (ADVANCE) NEW YORK, I Here, says Toynhee, is our great task: In a world -possessing the atom bomb, in a world reduced to two immense powers squared off against each other, it is "impera tive for man in process of civiliza tion to abolish war." To abolish war, he says the bomb must be placed under one single authority. He doubts the United Nations could do the job. He doubts Washington would let Moscow try it, or Moscow would let Washington. But given an interim of peace, or at least of nonwar. he thinks ' there is hope in a federal union: and lie is en couraged to think so by the fact that the United States and Russia both must be sympathetic to feder alism since there is federalism in both their governments. this is one of the timelier con clusions drawn in the four last volumes, published this week (Oxford), of Arnold J. Toynbee's monumental "A Study of History." It is a 10-volume work, pro jected 30 years ago, outlined in 1929. The notes essential for the last four books were deposited with the Council on Foreign Re lations, in New York, during the war years: Tovnbee sent i.nem here for safekeeping when, as ear ly as Munich, in 1938, he thought war was imminent. The first three volumes appear ed in 1934, the next three in 1939; and in 1947 there was a best-selling abridgement of the six by D. C. Somervell. This vast "Study" ranges around the world, and plunges deep into the era before Christ. When Toynbec speaks of 1952, for in stance, he writes "A.D. 1952," for however important the present is to lis, to the historian and phil osopher with Toynbee's vision it must be placed in its proper per spective as just another year. Everything has been grist to his mm. wnne ne araws nis principal thought and inspiration from Christianity, he nevertheless calls to witness the most disparate ma terialsour Plains Indians, the time it takes to walk from Sunium to Athens, "Kon-Tiki," the dismal Jersey meadows across from Hud son from here, Longfellow's "I shot an arrow into the air," the fact that Lord Bryce at 77 ran upstairs two steps at a time, and not only the ancient Troy of Hom er and Schliemann but also the Troy,. N.Y., where linen collars are made. In A.D. 19a2, he says, ' no one in the World could foreknow the outcome of the ordeal towards which the World was then mani-; festly moving." This was not being pessimistic, and definitely not determinist. like Oswald Spengler of "The Decline of the West." But tne aecune oi the west was definitely not ruled out by Toynbee. He is not sure catastrophe can oe avoiaeo, ana he notes that all universal states have expected they would last for ever and yet, present-day company excepted, have vanished. If obliged to choose, he .would much orefer the United States to Russia, but he wishes this choice I could be avoided. There would be I incalculably great benefits in the j spiritual realm if the United States-Russian conflict could be i settled without war, ne oeiieves; and our peril lies not in the pos session of atomic power, but in the "intolerant temper of the peo ple. He calls for a "sincere and ear nest attempt to recapture a lost spiritual harmony." The two Christian virtuesmost necessary today, he says, are "a contrite humility" and "an in domitable endurance." Man must now "hold on his course and trust in God's grace." (jjm? BEWARE Of milATlOHS LOOK . FOR TMI HAPPY UJTU 008 TOPS IN QUALITY! LOW IN PRICE IF YOUR PAPER HAS NOT ARRIVED BY 6:15 P. M. 111 ELKTON HOMECOMING The Elkton High School Letter Girls, with Peg Price as presi dent and Miss Janet Strader as ad visor, met last week and made plans for their homecoming cele bration fnday which fetes Elkton vs. Camas Valley in a football game. The girls have elected Nancy Fisher, Doris Moore, Ann Binder, Esla Brooks and Carol Allen as princesses. The members of the football team will elect a queen (or this group and also provide an escort. I JOHN R. 1 i MARQIWWD'S ; great now novl A new book by Marquand is aJwayn greeted with en thusiasm by the public. First m the Journal . . . hi new est novel, "Sincerely, Willis Wayde. Read how a mod ern executive's climb to sac ere affected his childhood sweetheart, his wife and family. Itcpin it in the No vember Ladies' Home Jotir ntA. 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