2 The News-Review, Roseburg,
-imk ... -
DEAR DEER Happy Clarence Mablev nears his eool in
this scene Wednesday ot southwest corner of Oak and Step
hens Street. He toted eight-point buck eight blocks to win
bet from friends who ovowed the R.oseburg man "couldn't
do it." (Mindolovich picture).
Man Packs Deer Eight Blocks
Irs City Center
"I knew I had it whipped when
I made Cass!"
Speaker Clarence Mahley, Art,
was slightly exhausted when he
made the comment Thursday aft
ernoon, after he'd packed a near
2M-pound deer eight blocks in
downtown Hose burg to win a bet.
I he Koselniri! resident, who
weighed less than his deer pack, i
attracted considerable attention j
during his feat. Traffic halted
along Stephens Street to watch j
him grimly plod on to hit goal,
the Monogram Cirgar Store, 22H
N. Jackson St.
Mahler had started from the!
store, walked with the deer adorn-1
ing his back to a block past Steph
ens on Cass, and then headed back.
As he neared the bark door of
the cigar store, he had picked up
an entourage of several well wish
ers. He was paced all the way bv
the shooter of the deer Hobby Snf-
fer. Softer ; downed the eight-pmnl ;
"r.,'! 0n
As Mahley deposited the animal
m uie rr.ii snai in a car pamrn,
brhind the store, some 10 men of-;
fered comments and cheers from
the rear of the building. Soon a !
l ui n.cn, aum.i ,u, m... Kun -
. ; ;
Portland Author
On Wildlife Dies
PORTLAND mi A man whose
Interest m animals led him out tiff
a bookkeeping office lo prominence !
fs a wildlife authority died Wed-
nesday.
He was Dr. Stanley 0. Jewel t,
70, known throughout thu West for
his work in conservation and wild
life resources. Stricken by a heart
attack at his home here five days
ago, ho died in a hospital.
Pee Wee Program Will
Bo Continued This Year
(Continued from Page One
Mhe atmospherepart of the stuff
CD Junior hi school tackle that makes dawns and dusks.
football should be a part of the
program in District 4 and football 1 A LLU... a.,im!m
cieais should be part of the equip-1 Arinur nammersiein,
(4) Spikes in track should he ' Ex-Producer, Dies
pari of ihi rqiiipmrnl for scv-
cnlh and oihth Kiailos. i T.ANTAX, Kla. I Arthur
(li) Parts of these standard arc llammrrstrin. a member of one
runlinilii-tciry and iinworkalilo with- of Ihc world's loading Ihpatrlcal
rait serious modifii-allon to fit lo-i families, died yesterday, appar
cal I'onditions and that in a district 1 entlv of a heart attack. He was
where lis per cent of the pupils 82.
are transported, a strictly intra- Me was the producer of famous
mural program does not meet the ' Naiiehtv Marietta" and 29 other
needs of the district " musicals in annul 40 years in show
.Nupl. Holler said he hclleyed e- business,
cry school district should work ;
Tll';ZTu, ';;Cehi.rtUn Giant P,e,
situation dilfer
with Hie executive hoard of the
iinuglas I dimly Medic al Assn. to
learn its opinion ri.arlini; the nth
let ic prmir.iin. Similarly, he will
contact parents ami I'TA groups
Hoard member Dudley Walton ;
termed the dneelive -nhnoMous '
He opined that it was another slop
s i.ikiiii: local control from
school hoards and relocating. Iliein '
lo a poMhon ol being only a group
concerned with raising nionev to ,
meet new stale standards. He
icniifil standards as "creeping"
The board ileall uuh many oth
er items of business. (See "story
Page 2.)
Richard S. Hutton, 80,
Former Rcsit'snt, Dies
Richard S. Hutton. So. rculcnt
of Roseburg since I'.lu9. died tins
moriiin : at ;..! Samaritan llo-ni-l.il
in Corvallis as the result of a
li".ul .iilinrii. M,. , j,,),.
21. lSTj. in Roinnev. Ind . and ias
primed to M..rv I'll,.,, i!oin in
Garnol. Colo.. July uxk). rs U.
ton died ,u Rosivinr in t!M:l Thev
moed to Itosehurg in plus and
pMicliase-l a !:ir:e ranch in Car
den Valley. Mr. Hutton was. never
ih in Ins life until iie sintered a
seere heir! attack last March
and was liosiol a li 'ed here foe in inv
woei,s. In July h- went lo Cor
v "' . to h- with his son. Hiu ion
Hutton. and family.
s iruxors in, Imle the son. Bur.
ton Ihitton. Corvallis; one grand-
d liter. K.llherine ll'ilto-l! I'm-
v'lis, and a brother, W. T Hul
lo'i. Orlando l-'hi
Hosoiuire, Funeral Home w,l
ill charge of iimer.il arraneenienls,
which will be announced later.
Ore. Thur. Oct. 13, 1953
-sra Mr
To Win Bet
Logger-rancher Mahley clutched
a bottle of soda pop in his hand
as he rested. And he had a final
comment: "Those rt kids, they
aon i Know noining about it."
Mahley says he's carried out
more deer Irom Douglas County
than anyone else he knows. He
hasn't killed his own yet thii year,,
but plans to.
Wednesday, as he counted his
winnings from the' betters who had
doubted his ability to tote the deer
through downtown streets, Mahley
uttered a lew sighs of relief. His
stunt had required probably 30
minutes. It paid him nearly $2 a
minute.
Firing Of Rocket
Complete Success,
Air Force Says
AI.A MOT. OH I)(V nm im
m,l-;RiRantic flame - colored "
ione-as
spe,,H, SUCWM lo ,Blpst Air Fon.e
' h(1 . imnor.ntmMnh0
probes of upper-atmosphere se-
rels.
Scientists describe last night's
,osli su(,imn emissi(m project,
as something never neiore seen -
l a complete success scientifically.
The spectacular orange - red
I plume, shaped by winds from 40 to
70 miles above earth into the al
j pha helical symbol, was clearly
! visible more than 300 miles away
shortly after its firing at dusk.
1,,e .Vil)or trail, foaming out of
a special Aerobee rocket from two
container of metallic sodium, was
visible, according to the Air Force
for 27 minutes.
Complete technical results of the
widely heralded test will not he
known for "at least two weeks and
perhaps longer,' said John F. Bed
inger of the Air Force Cambridge
Hesearch Center, whose officials
worked with llolloman Air Develop
ment Center persunnel in the test.
The Air Force, in the experi-
( ment, was seeking to determine
jthe origin, density, characteristics
land altitude of natural sodium in
After Short Illness
PORTLAND. Ore. -Clifford
Marshall Thompson, the 8-foot. 7-
ineh former circus giant who he-
came an attorney, died in a hospi-
tal yeslenlav, a week before his
list birthday.
His .S-foot. Rineh widow said
death was blamed on call stones
and a liver ailment, and had nn
connection with his height or
weigni, lliompson weighed 4fin
pounds before he became ill last
week.
A native of Rugby, N .!)., Tlinnip
son received his law degree from
Marquette University in 1914. He
practiced in lola. Wis., and Los
Anneles hetore coming here in
1919.
Argument Over Hunting
Trip Ends In Shooting
KLAMATH FAI LS i.fi -An argu
ment mer a deer-hunting trip led
to the fatal shooting of one man
and Ihe arrest of another, police
reported Thursday.
Jason Charles. M. farm worker,
was the man killed in the fracas
at Long Pine. 40 miles northeast
of Klamath Falls Wednesday.
George I'.iiillonl. SI. was jailed
Slate policeman Dick Finnell and
sheriff's ileputv Alvie Ynunshlood
said Diimont told this story:
They wore alone in this house
when Charles proposed a deer
hunting trip When Dumont refused
to go. Charles tried to shoot him
with a rille A scuffle followed in
which Dumont wrested awav the
rifle Charles was wounded in the
slomach,- and died several hours
later in a hospital here.
Microwave Relay Antennae
To Boost Television Uses
Four huge microwave relay an-1 Sweeney of Portland, telephone i (letting the antennae to King
tennae thrust their shapes some j company coordinator for Oregon's ! Mountain was a tough job. It is
4.860 feet into the sky for the first I part of the new system. some 80 miles to the construction
time Saturday at King Mountain,! Krection of a steel tower the site. Hardest part of the jourriey
about 80 miles southeast of Kose-lsame height as the one at King was the 17 miles eastward from
burg. j Mountain was scheduled to get ; Mt. Sexton trading post on High-
First of their type in the Pa j under way this week at Mt. Nebo. ! way 99, along Josephine County
cific northwest, the 22-feet tall an-: Antennae are slated to be install-: and forest sefvice roads. Trees
tennae were placed atop a sturdy . ed at Nebo early in February. closely lining the latter part of the
37-foot structural steel tower, part Erection of the cornucopia-shap- route brought several close calls,
of Pacific Telephone Company's ed antennae at King Mountain was! Work on completing the new sys
new television relay station being under supervision of Sweeney and tern for its Aug. 1 in-service date
built on the 4,800-foot high moun-, (leorge Amslein, district construe- will continue through the winter
tain. ' tion superintendent for the phone months. Installation of electronic
A simitar station is under con- company from Kugene. equipment at all nine sites in Ob
struction on Mt. Nebo, ridge near A mobile crane with a fiS-foot 1 gon is scheduled to begin about
Roseburg, according to local man-; boom, owned by Flegel Trans i Dec. 27.
ager Jack McGuire. . fer and Storage Co., and operated j Prior to installation of electronic
Both stations will be linked in a by Rex Quinten, 240 Sweetbriei ! equipment " after Christmas, con
high quality transmission system: Ave., Roseburg, was used to lift struction of one - story concrete
to provide microwave channels for: the antennae atop the tower where buildings must be completed at the
three network television programs, j they were bolted in place. two sites near Roseburg. That;
plus a standby channel for emer- Although lifting the antennae 'should be done by Dec. 1, tele-;
gency use. The new system will each weighs a tun was accom-1 phone company officials say. t
be used to carry hundreds of tele- j plished without mishap, weather By that lime private telephone
phone conversations, in addition to conditions were not ideal. Winds 'lines and power lines, for use at j
TV. ion the lonely mountain top blew, the two PT&T installations, should j
Goal Nine Stations j in guests of 50 miles an hour. j be installed.
Nine such stations are now un-i Winds, sometimes blowing at es Overall cost of building the sys-
der construction. They will fit into 1 timalcd strength of 70 miles an 1 tern in Oregon is estimated at I
a network stretching from Port- hour, and driving rain showers about S3. 000.000. Cost of building
land to the San Francisco Bay, have several times put a stop to I the stations at King Mountain and!
area.
When the system is placed in ;
service Aug. 1, 1956, the present
coaxial cable will be used to boost Moore Co., contractors on the job.
existing long distance telephone fa-1 Withstands Wind Guiti
cilities. The towers, however, have been
Work at both locations near built to withstand 150-mile-an-hour
Roseburg is going along about as 1 winds and extreme icing condi
planned, according to R. Patrick tions.
. li'S telSr -
t-i--- - -i--V V-triiim - i .ri Vim i am -iV'- VHtf til
HIGH IN THE SKY Microwave antennae to provide channels for transmission of
network television programs are being insta Med atop King Mountain, some 80 miles south
east of Roseburg. Delicate apparatus stands 22-feet tall and is placed on 37-foot tower on
the 4,800-foot mountain.
CDUF Reaches
18 Per Cent Of
Campaign Goal
A report released Wednesday by
Central Douglas fnited Fund cam-,
paiKn Chairman James Kiehmonrif
reveals that receipts have reached
18 per cent of the $:2.2a9 I K goal.
j Richmond .said the figure was $9,-'
j 333. I
"Coverage has been slow." stal
led Richmond, who added that the
workers have been soliciting but
that rolled Mns in many cases
have not heen completed and turn
ed in to the CIM'K office at ihe Ho
, lei I'mpqua for processing and
J hanking. He expressed hope that
t workers would holster receipts I
considerably by the weekend bv
I turning in what collections they
have made lo that time.
' The section and division chair
I men met Wednesday m,nnii's and
( numerous favorable reports were (
i given, Itichmond said. ' However, 1
lit is our policy not to make a pub-
lie report of total receipts cover
; ins anything other than cash de-
Rositjd in the bank," commented
ichmond. He urged that all work-'
lers complete their solicitations at
jthe earliest possible date and turn1
(in their collections al Ihe VF of
fice. Central llouglas Vnited Fund '
residential planners will discuss
j their phase of the current drive
Friday at a 2:15 p m. "coffee horn-" :
; at Rose School. It has been plan-:
; ned bv chairmen Mrs l.eda Wim
berly and M. C. Deller.
i The actual drive will start later.
Deller said, hut the session will
allow discussion for drive proce
dure. 1 The chairmen have announced
the following appointments of dis
trict chairmen: .Mrs Wayne Crooch
' and Mrs. Clifford Norfiv No 1.
Hucrest; Frank Dixon. Kd t.ilden
land William Reinhard, No. 2. west
I Roseburg; Mrs. B. A, Young and
! Mrs. Cordon Smith. No. 3. I.aurel
wood; Mrs. Bjarney Paulson, No.
4, Riverside,
j Mrs. Stephen Ferche and Mrs. R
Snyder. No. 5. Newton Creek and
Cloverdale; No. 6. Benson area,
not appointed; Mrs. Alfred Mey
ers and Mrs John Hoynar. No
7. east Roseburg: Miss Helen
Casey and Mrs. Ceorce T.uoma.
, No. 8. Rose area: .No. , area be
tween Jackson Street and the I'mp
i qua River, not appointed.
construction work, according to
l,ew Weston of Salem, construction
foreman for the Malarkey and
Swiss Yodeler, Lecturer
Entertains Local Folks
(Continued from Pae One)
wealth in Switzerland we have one '
raw material more valuable than
Sold and silver we have free- j
(loin," he asserted.
In 1818 the Swiss partly adopted,
the 1'. S. form of government with :
a congress but no president who
has any actual authority or power. '
There is a president of the Swiss' I
seven-member "cabinet."
"But he has no body guard. . . i
We would not want to have a presi-j
dent that anyone would want to
shoot." Swiss congressmen are
paid 512 a day and if a congress!
man is not in session by 8 a.m.
he gets no pay for that day. j
The speaker summarized Switz
erland's position as a rich country j
as the result of hard work, free
dom and thrift. Switzerland buys
many finished products from the I
1'. S. and Americans spend great
sums of money in tourist-trade.
One difference between the Vnit
ed States and Switzerland is that
"we have radio and TV without
commercials in Switze viand."
"But I think people of the world
have more in common than differ
ent." he injected.
Try as he might, (la tier could
not get around the characteristic
that Americans associate with his
country yodchng. He described
the impression of "cowhevders in
the hills as they shout their happi
ness in very primitive sounds, giv
ing exuberance lo their feelings."
State Representative John Am
acher, a native countryman of
Gauer's, introduced the speaker.
FOR RENT
POWER
LAWN
ROLLER
CAN BE USED FOR
PAVING BLACKTOP
LANSING-OLIVER
847 S. Stephen!, OR 3 6636
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Mt. Nebo is set at about $250,000
; each.
Maintenance of these two sta
tions, once the system is in oper
ation, will be handled by telephone
company employees in Roseburg.
Heading up that operation will be
K. D. Pruitt. chief transmission
man.
Tacoma Man Stricken,
Dies Of Heart Attack
Roy James Carson. 62, Tacoma,
dropped dead of a heart attack this
morning here, according to Cor
oner I,. L. Powers.
Carson, a boilermaker, was em
ployed temporarily at the Douglas
County Lumber Co., where the
Mc.Manama Co., Seattle, was in
stalling a boiler. He was born Aug.
18. 18it2. in Iowa. His wife died
only last August.
Survivors include a daughter.
Mrs. Carole Halkum, Tacoma, and
two grandchildren. He was a mem
ber of a Portland boilermakers'
union and the Masonic Lodge in
Tacoma.
The body is to be sent to Ta
coma for funeral services and in
terment. SERVICES ANNOUNCED
Funeral services for Issac Lyon,
who died Tuesday, will be held Sat
urday at 2 pm. at the House of
Praver Church east nf Sutherlin.
Interment wilt follow at Fair Oaks
Cemetery.
INVESTIGATE
BEFORE
INVESTING
Regulation Size
Adult Grave Markers
EASTERN GREY OR
COLORED GRANITE
Regularly $60 to $70
Now Only
$49.50
Ltttfrtd and itt complctf at grv
in any cvmcttny where letting,
chareet don't exceed $10.00.
CALL PHONE WRITI
Harry G. Rapp
814 South foit Flint Street
ROSEBURG, OREGON
Phone OR 3.5434
Repreientetive tor
L. L. JONES t SON, Monument!
Board Awards
The Coast Construction Co.,
Roseburg, was awarded i contract
to provide the filter bed, sewer and
manholes at Hucrest School by
Roseburg School Board members
Wednesday.
The company's low bid of $10.
018.65 won out over bids entered
by J. R. McCallister and W. R.
Casebeer. both of Roseburg.
A lengthy list of minor business
items confront the board.
It authorized Supt. M. C. Deller
to continue the present administra
tive policy concerning granting of
excuses for outside activity during
school hours. The Superintendent
says school policy does not allow
this, and that state policy states
youngsters must spend a required
length of time in school.
The board learned that a revers
al of the state department of edu
cation's policy Mates that teachers
are entitled to sick leave, starling
with the first day of school. This
has been the local policy.
The board heard several reports.
Supt. Deller noted that enrollment
in district schools Sept. 30 was 5,-
Bernarr Mcfadden Dies,
Ending Colorful Career
(Continued from Page One)
A son was with him when he died.
He observed his 83rd birthday by
parachuting 2,500 feet into the Hud
son River.
While in his early 80s, he still
piloted his own plane and enjoyed
fast games of tennis. He spurned
medicines, whisky, tobacco and
white bread, and avoided doctors.
It was his regular habit to go
without food tor one day a week,
frequently fasting as long as two
weeks but drinking a lot of water
during these periods.
A native of Missouri, he launched
his career by teaching physical
culture at the age of 18. He started
publishing a health booklet on a
regular basis, which grew into
Physical Culture magazine. Then
he branched out in the publishing
field with other magazines far re
moved from physical culture.
His first and second marriages,
lo Marguerite Kelly and Mary Wil
liamson, respectively, ended in di
vorce. He was estranged from his
third and last wife, Mrs. Jonnie
Lee.
Macfadden came to New Jersey,
where he lived in a modest Jersey
City hotel, when a New York court
held him in contempt for failure to
pay alimony and counsel fees to
his third wife.
A public relations man said his
estate would be less than $5,000.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday in New York City.
Many Bulbs
Not Advertised
Also Lillies
q Here! Now! Imported
Si DUTCH
t&?3 BULBS!
rn't w
Use Our Christmas Lay-Away Plan
1 .00 Deposit will hold your selection til Dec 23
Reg. 4.98
Creyhound Wagon
30 x 13Vi x 3'V Box
All iteel Rubber tires
2.98
Special
Carton
Tudor Tru-Action
Football Game
22 men plus patter
Tru-action Electric
6.98
Reg. 4.98
All Rubber Doll
Wothable rooted hair
17" walking doll.
3.88
Reg. 3.69 Value
Tractor & Gun
Wind-up. Climbing tank
1.89
Store Hours
Daily
9 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Sunday
9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Plenty or Free
Parking
Hucrest School Work Contract
247, and the end was not in sight,
i He added the board should reach
a decision in the next few months
1 concerning need for school sites
and additions to several elemen
tary schools. He said the Roseburg
High School gymnasium floor was
being put into shape with a me
i chanical draft.
i In a new policy of familiarizing
j board members with school pro
grams, special edusation Director
Dick Gates talked for several
I Former Resident
Dies In Portland
A onetime resident of the Rose
;burg area. Joseph M. Bloberger,
died Monday in Portland.
Funeral services were held
Thursday at St. Mary Magdalene
Church, Portland, where requiem
mass was offered at 9:30 a.m. Con
cluding services were at Mt. Cal
vary. .
He is survived by his wife,
Mary L.: three children: Louisa
M., Michael and Francis E. Blo
berger: two brothers: Nick and
Leon Bloberger; and two sisters,
Mrs. Clara Ream and Mrs. Mamie
Feltl.
He had made his home at 1415
NE Failing St., Portland.
Zeller Chapel of the Roses was
in care of arrangements.
Edward F. Swanson
Dies Wednesday Night
! Edward Ferdinand Swanson, 68,
I died at a Roseburg hospital early
Wednesday evening.
He was horn at Dunker, Sweden.
'Aug. 17, 1887. He came to this
country in May, 1922, and had liv
! ed in the Sutherlin area for about j
I seven years. He leaves no known i
I survivors.
The body has ben removed lo .
1 Stearns and Uttle Mortuary where j
I funeral arrangements are pending.
; Guilty Plea Entered
To Larceny Charge
i Frank Lee Jones, 21, Roseburg
I Hotel, pleaded guilty today to Det
1 ty larceny, but Dist. Judge War
1 ren A. Woodruff set over sentenc
i ing until Friday morning,
i Jones admitted stealing a S69
wrist watch from a pinsetter, Billy
(Gene Yarbrough, 127 I'arrott St.,
at the Roseburg Bowling Alleys,
Tuesday night. Roseburg police
I arrested him Wednesday aflernoon.
Judge Woodruff set bail at $"00.
Tulip Bulbs Mi
Daffodils King Alfred
Darwin Tulias tod ;
NarCISSUS c.i.
Hyacinth Bulbs
iTlisattes are
EVERYDAY NEEDS
6" Stove Pipe - -
Pipe Elbows Ad,u.t.bi.
Stove Pipe Dampers -
Stove Pipe Collar
4-pc. Canister Set
Roaster Large Six ..
1 0-qt. Pails Golanix.d
Ironing Board Pad . Cover Set 98c
Cookie or Cake Tins - 39c & 49c
FlOOr MatS Foam Rubber 1 .49
HALLOWEEN SUPPLIES
Matkt
Crept Pane;
Costumes
Hats
Across the Parking Area from
PARK - N -
SOUTH STEPHENS ST !
minutes about the district's read
ing program.
Another report from Guy Davis,
; superintendent of buildings and
i grounds, concerned possible pur
chase of building mater
! iais suitable for school construc
tion. Clerk of the works George White
announced that construction on Hu-
crest School and the Joseph Lane
'Addition was continuing on sched
ule. The hoard also okayed changes
in construction at Joseph Lane
which would insure a one hour fire
protection; approved recommenda
tion that principals and teachers
select inside colors at Hucrest and
Joseph Lane "within specifica
tions"; and learned the high school
-made a net profit of S174.69 from
ithe student book exchange,
i Members Wavne Crooch and Bob
jBashford and Guy Davis -were au
thorized lo inspect a possible 20
I acre school site near Newton
Creek. The board moved to pro
i vide a meeting place for the PTA's
(County Council each month, voted
; to attend a county school board
j association meeting in Myrtle
Creek Oct. 31; authorized purchase
j of gravel for the Green School
: grounds and named Dudley Wal
ton and Harold Hoyt as those to at
tend a school building conference
in Eugene Oct. 27-29.
The school board accepted an
invitation from Central Junior High
PTA to hold its next regular meet
with the parent - teacher group.
Board policy limits such meetings
to one each year.
Truman Scores Legion's
Stand Against Unesco
(Continued from Page One;
a gesture to Murphy, the 109-man
Iowa delegation voted against the
resolution to take this country out
of UNESCO.
"I'm sorry to see them (the
Legion) get into politics," Tru
man said. "Thev had no business
doing so. There's a bunch of new
fellows in charge. They haven't
read the (Legion) constitution. But
they're nice fellows, and they'll get
over it soon."
Opposition to the UNESCO reso
lution was vapid and futile. .
Withdrawal of the United States
from the organization would take
some of this country's outstand
ing educational and scientific ta
lent from UNESCO. Forty govern
ment representatives would re
main, but 60 delegates of national
organizations would withdraw.
The Legionnaires also called for
8,000 rescue teams, formed, trained
and equipped for use in civil de
fense. on 59c
Dor. 49C & 98C
D0n 98c
,
Price ,m 329c
.. 339c
. 49c
. 59c
59c
.. 13c
. 98c
1.89
- 79c
Noise Makers
Pumpkins
Nielsen's Market
SHQP
Di.l OR 3-8423
o
v