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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1956)
2 Th News-Review, Roieburg, On. Sat. Jon. 21,' 1956 lodt c-UlO CALINDAR OF EVENTS SUNDAY, JAN. 22 otnorroiu $ p.m., of' Sunnydslt Grange, ficer instruction. Riveridale Sunday School show film, "Souls in Conflict, a.m. Douglas County Cliapcr ol Coun cil of the Blind. 1:30 p.m., home of Harold Baxter on SE Templin Street, KoseburR. Rivorsdala Grangt, officers, and committees, p.m. for county tjranse conference. Bring cookies or sandwiches. Bonofit dance at Lindy's Sports mans Center to benefit Neal Chil dren's Fund. MONDAY, JAN. 23 Missionary Circle, First Chris tian Church, home of Mrs. Creed CanfiU, 1207 SE Pine St., Kose bur Fifty Plus Club at 1:30 p.m. at Roseburg Woman's Clubhouse. Sutherlln Jay-C-Ettos at home of Nadine Bennett, 1005 E. Third Ave., 8 p.m. Veterans Hospital dance 7:45 m . Moating of residents of East ! Myrtle to discuss annexation plans, Hugh Hudson, 63, Yoncalla, Dies Hugh E. Hudson of Route 1, Yoncalla, died Friday at the age of 63. He was born in Arkansas March 1. 1892, and was married there May 5, 1911, to Dora Maye Dun lap, who preceded him in death in November 1H54. The couple came to Oregon 22 years ago from Long Beach, Calif. Hudson was a retired minister and ..... mnmhar n( Ih. Virmt Ran. ing, 8 p.m., Douglas High School. Usl Cnurcn at Drain. Roieburg Chamber of C o m- Surviving him are two sons. C. merce forum luncheon, noon, ho- D. Hudson of Yoncalla and Hugh tel Umuaua. E. Jr. of Cherry Grove: three Myrtle Creek budget board daughters, Mrs. Marion Weaver of meeting. 7:30 o.m.. Super-Y Market District Hi School board and Ul 10 liens' Advisory Committee meet- (Drain, Mrs. Emma Wallace of Henry Whipple, Ralph W. Whipple, I Ex-Drain Man Dies, At Montana Home Word has been received at Drain of the death of a son of Lloyd and Allie Whipple, early Drain settlers, and former county offi cer in Montapa Ralph W Straus Whipple, 71. He died Jan. 11 at Stillwater Community Hospital near his home at Fishtail, Mont. Death followed a long illness due to cancer, re ports correspondent Maud Deaver oi Drain. A direct descendant of William meeting, 8 p.m. 10 p.m. sponsored by the Veterans of Foreign wars vlted tn attend. Pine Grove Church to show film, "Souls In Conflict," at 7:30 p.m. Jn.eph Lane PTA, 7:30 p.m. at the school. Mrs. Adair's and Mr. Hucson's room will serve refresh ments. Garden Valley Community Church fellowship meeting. Serv ices will begin at 2:30 p.m. and 7:45 p.m. An evening meal will be served. Business and Professional Wom an's Club, business and social, at home of Mrs. James E. Judd, 1368 Sfel Overlook. Hostesses, Ada Jane Dick and Mrs. Myrtle Baker. All members requested to be present. Glendale PTA at high school. 7:30 p.m. Glendale School Band will play. Samples of band uni forms on display. Film on TB. Umpqua Valley Farm Bureau, Klkton lOOF Hall, 6:30 p.m. pol itick dinner and business meeting. Rucst speaker. Hostesses, Mrs. Frances Hcdden and Rose Bow man. Oakland Garden Club at home of Mrs Floyd Ross, 1 p.m. Mrs. Acnes Wilcox, co-hostess. M r s. Homer Noble to speak. Riddle School Board meeting. Roseburg Town and Country Gar den Club lo meet at home of Mrs. M. W. Schneider, 421 W. Harrison St., 7:30 p.m. Csntral Junior High School PTA, 7:30 p.m., open house. Roieburg City Council, 7:30 p.m., council chambers. Women of the Me.se business-Ukiah Calif Mrs- Miry iz grandcniidren; two sisters, .Mrs. Walter Adams of Hot Springs, Ark., and Mrs. Bess Dunn of Cui- lendale. Ark COP Salutes Eisenhower; Hsrrimirt Hurls Barbs (Continued From Page One) signer of the Declaration ot Independence, Ralph Whipple waa one of 10 chil dren born to Lloyd and Allie Whipple. Five are still sine. He was born at Nevinville, Iowa, Oct. 21, 1877, and moved to Ore- Funeral services are scheduled ' with hi. mmni, . arlv al tha Ranltit rhnrph in nillnl... ... . K ..u V. j -p - . iaRe. tie went lo aioniana in ioo, jiiwiuny, vdii. o, al iv .!!. vault interment will follow in the Sky line Memorial Gardens in Port land. Mills Funeral Service in Drain is m charge of arrange- loosed his sharpest criticism at a news conference. "Eisenhower is the biggest dodg- menu. er of any President we've ever ; had in my memory," ne saia, con- Wdndrleri File. ,jiomesteading at Fishtail. He was married there In 1906 to iveine Flanagan, who died in 1932. They had one daughter, Mrs. James Bates of Los Angeles. Mr. Vi nipple was married in 1937 to Martha Walker. A daughter, Sharon Kay, was born to that marriage. Whipple once served as a county lan.lini, lfi PrKirtint "nflRIIPK the buck to his associates rather than For Circuit (Judge Post take the responsibility." j m, ,uL,n i the Eisen- 'Continued from Pass Onei adies Auxiliary : (,.,.' Ji,., Pmhasized the , of Myrtle Creek. All ladies are in- ,hem(J tnat Eisenhower has "kept Od, th. bachelor of n. ,t ,w the country out of war tor of jurisprudence degrees from '. T. V . Za h. n Baltimore; former uov. i nom- thlt schoo. -., on of Roseburg, Mrs. Charles Mc SKI REPORT Creek Contralto i Charms Audience In Concert Here By L. A. I. Greek contralto Elena Nikolaidi charmed her near capacity audi ence in central Junior High school auditorium Friday night, singing a well-rounded program of difficult elections. The leading contralto of the Met ropolitan Opera Co., appearing here under Roseburg Community Concert Assn. sponsorship, left lit tle doubt in the minds of her at tentive listeners of the ability for which she has been acclaimed not only in this country but in Europe and Australia as well. The finely executed program in cluded selections from Handel,' Hayden, cicnumann and Richard Strauss, as well as Greek folk songs. The singer was best in the ever popular aria, "My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice," from Camille Saint Seans "Samson and Delilah," and then thoioughly entertained her audience with an encore selection, "Habanera," from the opera "Car men," which offered excellent op portunity for dramatic presenta tion. Also, especially commendable was her rendition of the aria. Bel Raggio Lushinghier (A Ray of commissioner ana as a aepuiy , r Devine) from Rossini's "Se. sheriff He retired from active life mframde... A concluding encore in 1946 He was a member of the election was Brahm's "Lullaby." Miss Nikolaidi was accompanied Methodist Church and of Stillwa ter Lodge 62, AF lc AM. Besides nts wile ana two daugn- as E. Dewey of New York said tnat Ju(l,,c Woodrlch is a member of the aggressor knows, at last, inai (he Ajr Force Rc,erve 8crving a, If hn t.-irtK a ennouest he will be opposed by overwhelming force." vice rrcsiucni maim wi same tack in Chicago. Against this backdrop, Sen. Sparkman (D-Ala) Saturday aimed new criticism at administration foreign policy. In a Washington in terview, Sparkman said the ad ministration has "bluffed and blustered" without "liberating a single nation from the Commun ists or even holding the contain ment line." Tn nnet,n Knn Kefauver (D- Tenn) said 'Saturday the United States has been put in a position where "the trump cards' of its diplomacy "are all threats of atom ic wsr In a talk prepared for the New England Weekly Press Assn., he referred lo the controversial Life Maeazine article on Secretary of State Dulles' policies. Kefauver, who seeks the Demo cralic presidential nomination, said a "few more blunders" like Dul les' "brink of war" interview and he "will have outlived his useful- neNixon, in his Chicago talk, re plied to Adlai Stevenson's recent v. . . .. lA..lt nnmoH will. statement mm w " ing to play "Russian roulette with America's fate through a "brink n, ..." ili,.v He said Stevenson, iieiiiucimn. , presidential aspirant, offers noth ing except a return to the Tru-man-Acheson policy (that) got us Into war." Fair skiing conditions on Tattl Foreign policy was the main sun lit, trails were predicted for Sal-jcct, too, of a "salute to fciscn ttrdoy and early Sunday, accord-. hower" talk it Palm Beach, Ha., ing to Rkl instructor iron wenor. i hy Senate Kopuinicnii icmiu. Ski conditions will Improve with .land of California.! . legal officer. He served In the Army Air Forces during World War II from 1043 to 1946. - Judge Woodrich lives just west of Roseburg on Garden Valley Road. He is married and has two children whose ages are 3 and 1. Besides the Air Force Reserve, ho Is a member of the State Bar Assn., Douglas County Bar Assn., American Bar Assn., American Judicature Society. Circuit Judges Assn., Oregon Judicial Council a:.u Elks Lodge. The judge said he will "unfail ingly uphold the mandate of our Constitution" that: "No court shall he secret, but justice shall be administered open ly and without purchase, complete ly and without delay, and every man shall have remedy by due course of law for injury done him in his person, property or reputa tion." His slogan will be "Present Cir cuit Judge; will continue impartial, progressive, administration of jus tice." At 32, Judge Woodrlch is second youngest circuit judge in Oregon. Elhinnv of Salem. Ernest and Hugh Whipple of Drain and Lloyd Whipple of Roseburg; and two grandchildren, Beverly and Jim mv Bates. Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Whipple. Hugh Whipple, Lloyd Whipple and Mrs. McElhinny attended funeral services, held Jan. 14 at the Con gregational Church in Columbus, Mont. The Stillwater Masonic lodge held committal services at Absarokee, Mont. by Robert K. Evans, who played three piano selections. Five Slate Search On For Convicted Murderer EVANSVILLE, Ind. 11 Trails Bombay Rioting Now Threatening To Hit New Areas BOMBAY, India m Rioting erupted anew in Bombay State to day and threatened to spread to other parts of the country aa pro tests mounted against Prime Min ister Nehru's plan to redraw the map of India. Angry demonstrators battled po lice and put the torch to big cot ton warehouses in the scarred city of Bombay. Reports of fresh vio lence came from other parts of the state in the sixth straight day of disorder. Word ot disturbances also came from the States of West Bengal, Orissa and Bihar where demon strators, apparently aroused by the Bombay riots, began staging their own protests against Nehru's reorganization plans. The Bombay crisis stemmed from the government's intent to split the state into three parts: The Marathi-speaking south, the Gujarati-speaking north and bilin gual Bombay City under federal control. Nehru's ruling Congress oirlv faces 1 dilemma over Maratha demands for including of Bombay City in the Marathi-speaking state. About half the city's three million people are Marathas. Some observers believe the party will lose its long-time stronghold of Bombay unless Nehru yields to the demands. Fuel Truck Drivers Return To Their Jobs NEW YORK m-Fuel truck driv ers were back at work today after a five-day strike that Mayor Rob ert Wagner said had threatened to become a midwinter "catastro phe." Fuel deliveries were resumed Friday at 4 p.m. after the drivers, members of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, voted to accept an increase of 30 cents an hour in wagesand other benefits. SIX KILLED FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. Ml led In many directions Saturday""? Persons were Kuica sauiraay i, ih mi nH nii fi i when the automobile in which they as the FBI and police of five states sought to trace Leslie Irvin, Indi ana s cleverest escapee since des-j perado John Dillinger. The 31-year-old Evansville pipe fitter, under sentence to die June 12 for murder and indicted for five others, slipped out of Gibson Coun ty Jail at nearby Princeton Wed nesday night, Left behind were a fearful cellmate, four unlocked doors and a cardboard key. The most likely trail led West ward. State police said Irvin mail ed three letters early Thursday morning, before his escape had been discovered, at Mount Carmel, 111. A cardboard key, reinforced with tinfoil, was regarded by police as one of the most ingenious escape devices since the wooden gun carved by angster John Dillinger in 1934. Dillinger used the gun to escape from the Lake County Jail at Crown Point, Ind. :were riding smashed into the rear of a truck loaded with lumber, state trooper James Cox report ed. The victims, all negroes, includ ed two men, two women and two children. Freshman Class Slates Projects For Polio Fund Th Xfnrrh nf Dimpn will be sid ed by three project! by members Red Cross Chapter Aided 39 Families Damaged By Floods The Douglas County Chapter of ot Koseourg senior nisii ' ,i.a American Red Cross has giv- freshman, announced tne cnair- assjstance to 39 families in man, Ted Sohn. ,ue area who sufiered effects from The first project will be a rag ih. recent floods. drive." which will begin Jan. 25.. The ort WSJ made lt tne AU persons not contacted and hav-1 cha ,s montnly meeting in ing clean cotton, light Roseburg Friday night by Miss sheet-weight rags, are asked to ; shepard, special casework caU OR 3-4031 Jan. 27 after 3:30n,m StJ Ftcis.0. she said P-m- ... the assistance cost the Red Cross me iresnmn nasi ""?"' , 55,500. Some $1,000 of this was do a car wash Jan 28 at the high fo(. food cU)MBg and ,odg. school and at Robertson s snen j.: ,1.. .m.ra,nn nnri Service Station, Union Oil Station mainder was for repair of corner of Stephens c,.,i Tik flood-damaged homes, medical and and Spike's Richfield Station T ck- d housenold ,ur. ets will be on sale beginning Wed-1" nesd.y, Jan. 25 The car. wiU be ''nt, doe, ot mclude . washed jan. 28 between 9 a.m. sistance m tne Reedsport area. ani3 J?-m: , w m. ..... That was handled out of the Co- The third nroiect by tne class . wiU lie a "mile of lettuce" project ing h-iH i.n n hetween 9 a.m. and 4 . -I,'s.?".1'r. t it,. p.m. mt th Jflrkcnn trtane'.e and at the three lights on Stephens Street. burg today to work in the Cres cent City, uaiu., aied. 111 nci it- port, she complimented the vari ous agencies such as Civil De fense, sheriff's office and Red Cross for their handling of t h e emergency situation. She also praised the general attitude of in dependence and self sufficiency of local citizens. Kh aUo reoorted that 8,709 fam- The First Presbvterian Church ilies in CaLloruia, uregon, iuano of Roseburg will hold its father and Nevada , have made applies- nervations for the event, been committed to pate. 11 is an- which is open to the public, mav ticipated over 8 million doUar, will h made bv calling me cnurcn ui-ut H Presbyterian Church Plans Father-Son Affair fice, OR 3-5048. The dinner will be orepared by tne laaies 01 me mai mer's class. Guest speaker will be state po n.a nffiwr .Tosenh A. C. Hav- stead. He will discuss juvenile nroblems. As a law enforcement ATTEND DINNER MEET Several teachers from the Elk ton schools attended the North Douglas Oregon Education Assn. dinner meeting at Yoncalla recenl- P.r2iem i. " h hie Tlong'ly. A vocal group ind nana irom oiiii-o, !" ivonca a school llirnisnea cnier- interes ed in youth work. . . Aaent for the evening. A busi ..ML JTS STling followed the pro- leader uien L,eunuig. gram. EXAMINER DUE A Drivers License Examiner will be on duty Thursday and Fri day at 612 SE Kane St. between the hours of 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., according to an announcement re ceived from the Secretary of State's office. PEOPLE DO READ SPOT ADS rhit I whit you ara rcadlni now DO YOU KNOW THAT FIRE LOSSES ARE UP.' DO YOU WANT FIRE PR0TECTIGN? Give lerioui thought to these Important questioni We ore fire protection engineers. We lell fire equipment that will meet your specific require ment! and will also PERFORM during an emergency Look to ui for advice, help and service. FIRE EQUIPMENT CO. ?h. OR 3-7134 JOHN H. GAREY 1442 S.E. Stephen! t lie use of the slope, Conditions are poor off the trail. Three inches of heavy and wot snow Itavo fallen since last week end, bringing the total to 29 Incnes at the mountain. The weather forecast is for oc casional rain through Saturday with tho freezing level above 6,000 feet. Southerly to southwesterly winds will hit exposed places. The outlook through Sunday is for part ly cloudy skies. Road conditions are clear and if no snow falls they will continue to ho open without necessity of chains. Chains are not required in the Willamette Pass and skiing is reporled good with snow depth of 110 inches after 10 additional inch es this week. Tows and trails are open. At Sanliam Pass skiing is fair with 81 inches tolal snow and pack ed snow on Ihe highway. All facilit ies operating and chains should be carried. Snow, occasionally mixed with rain, is expected at both Sanliam atttl Willamette through Saturday. Partly clotulv outlook for Sunday. Knnwlnnd, a uxeiy pieaiui-mui. candidate If Eisenhower doesn t run, did not refer to the President directly during his speech. He m.iniu mnnUn nf the record of the "Eisenhower Republican adminis tration. PHOTO FINISHING In at 5. out at 9 We give S&H Green Stamps CLARK'S STUDIO 10J S. Jackion OR 3-8514 13-Year-Old Cirl Leads Gang In Holdup Of Man BIRMINGHAM, Ala. in A 13-year-old runaway girl led a gang of Birmingham boys in the rob bery of an automobile driver Fri day night and was captured later. Det. Lt. O. B. Wilson said the girl told officers she came to Birmingham from Indiana. She is dark - haired and blue - eyed and looks much older. She was identi fied as Hazel Mario Gentry, Ham mond, Ind. Wilson said the gang was or ganized al a downtown cafe where the girl met five teen-age hoys. Wayne S. Guston. 21, said the group held him up afler he gave the girl and boys a ride to West Birmingham. He said the girl nulled a knife and one of the bovs menaced him with a pistol. He said the teen agers took his billfold which contained abont $36. The girl was captured later at a service station, but the boys scattered. They appeared to be between 13 and 15 years old. o MONDAY NOON UMPQUA CIVIC ROOM HOTEL WE'RE LOADED? WITH NEW CAR TRADE-INS! TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE Following Cars Carry 30-Day Written Guarantee mi ROSEIURC Chamber of Commerce Membership Forum SUIJECT 'Tax Issues - 1956 Model" Speaker Mrs. Louise Humphery, Assistant Manager, Oregon Business & Ton Research Thit arWunctrMtnt sponiortd by Douglas County Taxpayers League oi a Jtrvict of good will ro h community vvii mi 1954 CHEVROLET Convertible mmmm t ym0& ? r Radio & htattr. 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