2 The Newi-Rtview, Roicburg, Ore Wtd., Mor. 21, 1956
Citizens, Budget Members
Voice Opinions Regarding
Education. Other Matters
Citizens and ichool budget board
members had lots to say about
budgets, education, policiei and
even more irrelevant matters
Tuesday night in Roseburg. The
District 4 budget board met to
take some action on the 1958-57 pro
posed budget, defeated by voters
March .
They moved to recommend re
submission of it fsee other story),
but not before a host of men and
women threw, in comments.
How diri Ihe budget members
feel about their budget? Those
nresent screed it was well trim
med, then offered some other
Ihougms:
Mrs. Mary Roberts: "We work
ed hard to get a budget to meet
needs."
Robert Bashford: "Apparently
the people who were interested in
the budget voted no. I feel the
board is onen to suggestions.
Wayne Crooch: "If we could get
half of the registered voters to
turn out and it tne midget were
then defeated, I would feel it was
a representative vote; then I feel
we should work to cut it."
A. G. McLain: "I feel there was
conscientious work on the budget
and that it fits the needs of the
dislrlct. The vole was light and the
remarks and criticisms I've heard
are minor. , .$500 or less."
Walter Dage: I disagree with
brother Bashford that the light
vole indicalca interest. I'm better
satisfied that a smaller vote gets
only dissenters out. . .I've found
this in other organizations. I'm
Kresently opposed to cutting the
udgct until it has been resubmit
ted as is. The responsibility to get
voters nut is on each of us."
Ray Dotrner: "Apparently In
the last two years wo haven't heal
ed any sores in understanding the
budget. I feel the defeat is a lack
of confidence."
Dorncr suggested a plan of ac
tion: ,
Eisenhower Hints At Veto
Of Farm Support Bill
(Continued From Page One)
legilsation moved to the front as
a factor in the major parties' cam
paigns for the rural vote in the
November election.
Thus far, the timing would ap
pear to favor the Democrats. Ana
there appear to be no signs of a
speedup which, some GOP strate
gists think, might help the Republicans.
Republicans are pinning their
hopes for farmers' votes largely
on benefits they say would accrue
through a soil bank plan. This
contemplates that payments up to
$1,200,000,000 would bo made this
summer to farmers for taking un
needed crop land out of produc
tion and putting it to soil conser
vation uses.
Democrats, on tho other hand.
are pinning their hopes largely on
larmer dissatisiacnon witn price
and income declines under t h e
Kisenhower administration and
with party promises of higher price
supports.
The administration's soil bank
filan will provide little help to
armors this year unless it can he
set up before planting time. Farm
ers in the South already are plant
ing their crops and seeding will
get into full swing in other parts
of the country next month.
The Agriculture Department has
said that if tho soil bank plan is
not enacted before April 15, it
would be virtually impossible to
set it up this year.
The Senate approved tho soil
bank in a many-faceted farm bill
which it passed Monday night. Nut
(hat bill must he compromised
wilh a vastly different measure
passed by tho House last year
a thorny and probably lengthy procedure.
Adult Education Classes
Start Sessions Tonight
Adult education classes in tailor
ing in the home, bookkeeping, prac
tical nursing and advanced weld
ing start tonight, according to AE
Director Richard Ross.
Itrgistralinn may be made at the
class or by calling OR 3-M.S2.
Classes start at 7 p.m. tonight,
Boss said.
The practical nursing sessions
will be held at Mercy llosnita
Welding classes will l.e held at the
high school shop. Others will meet
in classrooms. Registrants should
report to the AK office in tho so
cial arts building.
Classes in typing and know your
car will start Thursday evening.
1. Cut the budget; 2. Figure how
much; 3. Decide what to cut.
Before any of the three he pro
posed: (1) Evaluation of what the dis
trict is doing that is required;
(21 Evaluation of what is not
required that is being done; and
(3) Taking the proposed cuts
from the list not required, "enough
to satisfy voters."
Doerner believes the evaluation
should be prepared by Supt. M.
C. Deller. He said he thought the
defeat came because of several
reasons: The light vote; a public
hearing set too late for voter par
ticipation; too large an increase in
that the budget was not equitably
cut the last two years; too large
a bond issue; too much discussion
of the school budget in the class
rooms "which should be correct
ed."
The vice chairman of the budget
board said he believed an evalu
ation would partially satisfy the
negative vote, build confidence
and put the people "who want
things" into the position where
they have to vote. Doerner be
lieves some such system will have
to come later "if not now."
Several private citizens ex
pressed opinions also. '
Rotcot Lackey. 3167 NE Hughes
St.: He believes the budget story
should be told better. He suggest
ed "cultivating the local editor"
and eliminating headlines like
"budget for millions." He noted
"a lawyer ODnosing the budget had
twice as much space as a school
board rebullal."
Mrs. Ed Lindell: She said par
ents have supported the hudget
and asked why people criticizing
budgets dinn I attend preparation
sessions. She endorsed the band
and shop programs in the schools.
Ralph Patterson, 2033 SE Doug
las Ave.; He noted he always vot
ed for budgets because he favored
education, but added that many
people did not see how taxes could
continue to increase every year.
He noted with disfavor a board
trend to try to squeeze out every
thing each year. Patterson sug
gested a long range 10 year pro
gram.
Leo Boyle, 7J nr. inou Ave.:
Hn said id did not think a system
had to be sold but should be one
desired."
B. W. Kleiner: Suggested that
$1000 be spent to help tell the budg
et siory lo rcsiuenis oi ine ui&uttu
Cypriots Bomb
Military Auto;
Soldier Killed '
NICOSIA. Cvorus i Pro-
Greek CynrlotB bombed a mili
tary car in i amaeusia weunos-
day. Kinit.it one unusn uiu.er
and wouncllnB two othrrs.
The death broueht to 22 the
number of Hrit.sh Dersonnel killed
since AuKU.it, when Cypriol ren
els launched their campaign of vi
olence to win union with Greece.
British paratroopers clamped a
curfew on a lanje section of Ni
cosia while they searched for arms
and hunted rebel suspects.
At the vmaiin of l'Mti, eight
masked men brandishing arms
overpowered police Tuesday niRht
in the police station. I ncy set
fire to furniture and books, then
fled.
Hundreds of Turkish Cypriots
stoned and looted Greek shops in
Nicosia Tuesday despite barrages
nf police tear as. They rioted
for three hours in reprisals of
anti-lurkish noting at vasuia vil
la Re.
Finally nr. Fazil Kuchuk. lead
er of the Turkish community, quiet
ed the rioters.
Kucuk told correspondents he
would protest to the United Na
tion. Britain and Greece against
what he termed the barbarity of
the (.reeks in Vasuia. lie said the
leader of the Greek community
there urged his men in their brawl
with the Turks to "kill the men
and rape the women.
More than 30 persons were in
jurcd at Vasilia, including at least
15 Jurkish women. But there was
no report of rape.
Kucuk warned that if another
incident erupted, "a wholesale
massacre will follow.
Sen. Case Requests
Rejection Of Plan
To Alter Electorate
WASHINGTON UB-Sen. Clifford
P. Case (R-N'J) appealed to his
GOP colleagues today to reject i
proposed constitutional amend
ment that would revise the ivi-
cidence of paralytic polio is 2 to ! tem f ''"' presidents and vice
Salk Vaccine Safe,
Effective, Potent,
States Evaluator
ANN ARBOR, Mich. W The
man who evaluated the Salk polio
vaccine says a year of widespread
use has proved the vaccine to be
safe, potent and effective.
Dr. Thomas Francis Jr. said rec
ords for the period show the in
to times greater among persons
who did not receive the vaccine
developed by Dr. Jonas Salk in
delivering the Gudakunst Memor
ial Lecture at the University of
Michigan yesterday. The vaccine
was evaluated originally at the
university.
Most of the setbacks which fol
lowed release of the vaccine for
public use last April 12 have been
eliminated, he said.
Difficulties, he said, stemmed
from variations in the potency of
individual lots of vaccine and
were caused by use of merthio-
late as a preservative lor the vaccine.
"It is interesting to note," he
said, "that no laboratory - con
firmed paralytic cases of polio
occurred after vaccination with a
vaccine which was more than 70
to 75 per cent potent."
P
Security Council
Emergency Meet
To Study Crisis
By WILLIAM N. OATIS
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. im
The U. N. Security Council is ex
pected to meet in emergency ses
sion late this week or early next
in answer to a U. S. call for ur
gent action on the current Israeli
Arab crisis.
The U. S. delegation called on
the 11-nation Security Council for
"urgent and early action." the
same words President Eisenhower
used in his March 7 news conference.
The prospect was raised that
U. N. Secretary General Dag Ham
marskiold might be sent on a new
peace mission to the Israeli area.
U. S. Chief Delegate Henry Cab
ot Lodge Jr. reported a buildup of
armed forces near the Israeli Bord
ers by both sides. He said shooting
incidents were "recurring at a
dangerous rate."
Border clashes have erupted fre
quently between Israel and the
neighboring Arab states of Egypt,
Jordan and Syria.
Lodge said the border clashes
and armed buildups were viola
tions of the 1949 armistice nego
tiated with U. N. help.
"It is a matter of deep concern
to the government of the United
States," he said, "and it therefore
requests urgent and early action
hv the Security Council to consider
the situation now prevailing in the
Palestine area."
MEETING TONIGHT
The March nicotine of Ihe Douff
las County Planning Commission
will he held tonight instead of
Thursday night, according to Chair
man O. J. Kelt Jr. The commis
sion regularly meets on Ihe fourth
Thursday of each month in the
planning offices in tho courthouse
presidents.
Although 30 Republican senators
are listed as sponsors of the pro
posed amendment, Case contended
its "adverse effect on the Repub
lican party for the indefinite fu
ture cannot be questioned."
He also maintained in a mem
orandum sent to his fellow Re
publican senators that the propos
al would esuse what he termed
"great and permanent injury to
our society and our form of gov
ernment and to the American two
party system."
Senate debate on the legislation
got under way yesterday. Almost
immediately there were sharply
coniucting interpretations ox its
possible effect. Party lines were
mixed on the question.
The proposal would do away
with the present "winner - take-
all system under which a state s
entire electoral vote goes to the
candidate receiving the most pop
ular votes, no matter how slim his
margin.
The proposed amendment, as or
iginally approved by the Senate
Judiciary Committee, would divide
each state's electoral votes for
president in proportion to the pop'
ular votes received by the candl
date.
A substitute amendment, worked
out by Senators Daniel (D-Tex),
Mundt (R-SD1 and Thurmond D-
SO, would let each state decide
whether to cast its electoral vote
in that manner, or to choose prest
dential electors as they now se
lect their senators and represen
tatives in Congress.
Engineers To End
Portland Session
Ellsworth Holds Our !
For Access Road Funds
WASHINGTON ifl Rep. Ells-
worth (K-Ore) Tuesday said he
hoped the Senate would reinstate
a two-million dollar access road
project in the appropriation lor
forest activities.
He also urRcd the House Ap
propriations Committee to recon
sider $2:0,000 for timber inventor
ies. Both projects, which were
planned for O&C timberlands,
were eliminated by the commit
tee. Ellsworth did not propose an
amendment to reinstate the items.
He said his remarks were aimed
at stressing the importance of the
projects. He then expressed his
hope that the items will be rein
stated by the Senate and accept
ed later by the House.
Ellsworth said that the two mil
lion dollars will so to and be di
vided up by Oregon's 18 O&C
counties if it is not appropriated.
ENTERS CAR
Arthur Moore of 1759 SE Mill
St. reported to city police in Rose
burs today that someone had en
tered his garage and broken open
a wing window of his car to steal
four blankets. Police are also in
vestigating a report from Ernest
Peterson at 1003 SE Pine St. that
two hubcaps were stolen from his
car.
DRIVER JAILED
Lester John Ilarnden. 39, Band-
on, was fined $150 and given a 10
day jail sentence Tuesday after he
pleaded guilty before District
Judge Warren A. Woodruff to a
charge of driving while intoxica
ted. Ilarnden was arrested Mon
day by state police.
GUILT DENIED
Harold Bellows pleaded innocent
and was released on payment of
$25 batl Tuesday at arraignment
in district court on a charge of
permitting livestock to run at
large. Complainant J. M.
PORTLAND W) The final ses
sion of the three-day meeting of
the American Society of Mechan
ical Engineers was held here
Wednesday with the highlight a
talk by Joseph W. Barker, AS ME
president, to the Professional En
gineers of Oregon.
technical papers were read by
Norman D. Thompson, executive
of Gerling Carrier Co., Dallas,
Ore., and S. K. carpenter, ot um
vair, San Diego.
Thompson described modern
equipment for use in mills and
logging camps. Carpenter told of
the growing use of titanium in
aircraft construction. He said the
aircraft speeds are reaching the
point where aluminum alloys can
no longer be used efficiently.
The meeting will close Thurs
day with inspection trips to Co
lumbia River hydroelectric proj
ects and to the Weyerhaeuser
Timber Co. plant at Long view.
Tuesday night s banquet speak
er was W. F. McCulloch. dean of
the Ore son State College school of
forestry, wno discussed tne devel
opment of longing equipment in
the racuic Aortrnvest
Jumps N. Land is. vice ores!
dent of Bechtel Corp., San Fran
cisco, told the day session mat
the Pacific Northwest was to be
commended for formation of the
Governors' Power Policy Commit
tee to study the region's power
problems.
City-Rocking Blast
Kills Two. Injures 1 1
SCHENECTADY. N.Y. (fl A
city-rocking blast and towering
flames Wednesday killed
two workers, injured 11 others and
destroyed a chemical materials
building at the General Electric
olant here.
The company said It had not
identified the two bodies found in
the ruins.
The big blast, followed by sev
eral minor ones, was so fierce
that it broke windows and dishes
in surrounding homes and was
heard five miles away. Many per
sons telephoned police and news
papers to ask whether a bomb had
been dropped.
The four-story, concrete build
ing was at the company's main
plant in downtown Schenectady.
The cause of the explosion was
not determined immediately. It
occurred at about 1 a.m.
Large barrels of resin and varn
ish were reported stored in the
building, a concrete structure.
It took firemen about six hours
to control the flames.
COLLEGIATE SONGSTERS The 48-voice University of
Oregon- chorus, University Singers, will present concert at
Roseburg High School Friday at 8:30 p.m., immediately
following torchlight parade. RHS a capella choir will join I
chorus members in two numbers. Proceeds from concert
go to help purchase skirts ond blouses for RHS girls glee
club. Concert tickets are on sale at Ott and Ricketts and
Harmony House. They may be purchased at door.
Polish Purge r
To Succeed
Boleslaw Bierut
VIENNA (A Edward Ochab.
who purged Polish farm trade un
ion and army ranks, has been
named to succeed Boleslaw Bierut
boss of Poland s Communist
party.
Warsaw radio today announced
the election of Ochab as first sec
retary of the Communist United
Workers' party. Bierut died in
Moscow March 12.
Ochab, now 50 and a long-time
Red, rose through the ranks to
such key posts as boss of the peas
ant cooperatives, head of the trade
unions, political chief of the army
and Politburo member.
Sources in Vienna have predict
ed that the new secretary will
share a "collective leadership of
Communist Poland along with
Premier Josef Cyrankiewicz and
President Alexander Zawadski.
with Moscow exercising even clos
er supervision than in the past.
Ochab has been a frequent par
ty critic and whip. At the party's
second Congress in 1954, he crit
icized it for bad political organi
zation and policy and called for a
tight to "purity ' tne ranns.
A native of Krakow, in southern I
Poland, he joined the old Polish i
Communist party in 1929. no was
jailed frequently during the next!
10 years tor nis party activities in
Warsaw, the textile center of Lodz
and mining areas of Lower Silesia.
He fought in defense of War
saw against the Germans in 1939.
Later he went to Russia and help
ed organize the first Polish army
division founded there.
Time Bomb Found
In British Ruler's
Bedroom In Cyprus
NICOSIA, Cyprus m A time
bomb was found in the bedroom
of Governor Sir John Harding at
Government House Wednesday.
Harding, who ordered the re
cent deportation of Archbishop
Makarios, Greek Orthodox church
leader of the union-with-Greece
movement in this British-ruled
isle, was away in Famagusta at
the time.
The bomb was removed and was
exploded without doing anyone any
harm.
A Cypriot servant who joined
the Government House staff six
months ago, was discovered to be
missing.
Harding, in deporting Makarios,
accused him of abetting a cam
paign of terrorism which has tak
en the lives of 22 British service
men, including a soldier killed
Wednesday.
The soldier was killed, and two
others wounded when pro-Greek
Cypriots bombed a military car
in Famagusta.
Hitchcock Says
U. S. Spends Too
Little On Peace
MILTON-FREEWATER ifl
The United States "spends too
little to wage the peace in com
parison with what we spend in
preparation to wage war," Philip
Hitchcock said Tuesday.
He told the annual meeting of
the Oregon Council of Churches
that "if we build our security at
the expense of making other peo
ple feel insecure, we will have no
security." He urged that the
United States do more of its inter
national aid work through the
United Nations.
Hitchcock, -vho is immediate
past president of the council, said
that one of the chief causes of
war is "the deprived and de
praved conditions of three-fourths
of the peoples in the world," in
cluding the non-whites who are
"resentful of Ideas of white su
premacy." Hitchcock came here in the
course of his campaign for Re
publican nomination to the U. S.
Senate.
School Budget Will B
Resubmitted To Voters
(Continued From Page One)
VAGRANT LODGED
George Edward Kanary, 30. Eu
gene, was lodged in the county jail
Tuesday in lieu of payment of $30
fine imposed by Justice of the
Ware I Peace Robert H. Goodwin. Reeds-
charges Rellows allowed sheep to; port, for vagrancy, according to
run at large on March 18. 'Sheriff Ira C. Byrd.
MAID MARION
Mates MeiiMeny-
ITS RAINING IN THE RDREStX1 I
AND ROBINS MEN ARE SAD,
U
V
Y FERHAPS THE
MELLOW PAGES ,
) WILL HELP ME I
I MAKE THEM GLAD )
n lyyTTdTVTTrfi
I i-'V'l V M I II '
FOR. TELEVISION RENTALS
IT PAyS TO LOOK
IN THE "CLASSIFIED PART
OF YOUR TELEPHONE BOOK.
'n
Used by 9 out of 10 people as guide to
those who sell or -serve k Pacific Telephone
if
V
III n 1
Ill " (Jl l!l
1 : -f'
(biggest crowd of the current sea-1
son) crammed the board's meeting I
room in Central Junior High!
School at S p.m. Many took pains
1 to state they were ordinary citi-!
zens with no school connections
other than an interest in the pro
l gram.
The board's move lo resubmit
quest from Merrill Young. Young,
long an advocate of careful budget
preparation, requested the board
make the "next election stand for
your program." He urged them
to explain what the money was
being spent for. He said he be
lieved emphasis should be "educa
tion first, social living second."
Another ell known friendly
budget critic. Jay Conn of Mel
rose, was among the crowd. Conn
said it appeared to hi m thai peo
i Die in the district were "merely
I tolerating schools. ' He noted the I
I problem had existed for three i
j years and that the board had ie-
fused to settle it."
j Conn said he talked to 1.800 pco
; pic within the past school year
who sougni a solution, tie cauea j
for equity and said the budget de-
feat was not a matter of dollars or
cents but indicated that people
had lost faith in the operation.
Not present was George Luoma,
Roseburg. who unleashed a harsh
school critique one day before the
first budget election. Luoma's ab
sence drew comment from several
audience members, following the
session.
Many plann for possible budget
procedure, ciliien planning and
better explanation of the budget
were advanced by residents and
board members. (See other story).
Meanwhile, budget planners an
nounced thev were going to tell
evervonf whv they nclieved the
budget is r.ow as trim as it can
be cut.
SPRAINS BACK
Mrs. Vander Garrett, 37, resi
dent of 511 W. Maple St., Rose
burg. sprained her back earlier
this week while loading laundry on
a carrier at the Grand Hotel
where she is employed. She is re
ported by personnel at Douglas
Community Hospital as in "good"
condition.
Mrs. Anna Janko
Dies At Days Creek
Mrs. Anna Janko, 86, Days
Creek, died at her home Tuesday
morning. She was born in Czecho
slovakia Dec. 8, 1869, and had
lived in Medford, Wis., prior to
moving to the Days Creek area 21
years ago.
surlvivon include one son, Al
bert of Days Creek; three daugh
ters, Mrs. William Abiti of Med-
fortl. Wis.; Mrs. Mary Dickinson
of BeUingham, Wash., and M r s.
Frank Ver Haih of St. P a u 1,
Minn., and 12 grandchildren. Her
husband preceded her in death.
Funeral services will be at 2
p.m. Saturday in the chapel of
i,anz .Mortuary in Myrtle Creek.
Elder Fred Howe of the Mvrtle
Creek Jehovah's Witnesses will of
ficiate. Interment will follow ir. the
Masonic Cemetery at Canyonville.
CITIZENS TO REPORT
The tirst of two citizen commit
tee reports on various phases of
education wil be given in Rose-
Committee members from through
out Douglas County will report,
starting at 7:30 p m. The reports
are the groundwork of activity of
me bcnooi uoard convention called
last fall at the direction of the
state, according to County Supt.
Kenneth F. Barneburg.
Three Roseburg Residents
Attend Medford Meet
Three Roseburg residents were
in Medford Tuesday attending the
first meeting of the Southern Ore
gon District, American. Camping
Assn.
Making the trip were Mrs. O. E.
Amundson, executive secretary of
Camp Fire Girls, Inc; and Earl
Ladd and Bill Scarth, Boy Scout
executives.
Mrs. Amundson was one of five
members of the first acting dis
trict committee. Purpose of the
formation of the district is to help
camp planners. Membership in the
association is open to individuals
who adhere to objectives of the
national association.
CABOOSE ENTERED
Matthew J. Bowen of Eugene, an
employe of Southern Pacific Co. re
ported to city police today that
several items were stolen from the
caboose of a train this week. He
said entry was apparently made
by unlocking a door with a key,
which is available to several em
ployes. He said a zipper bag, cigars, a
crescent wrench and power glass
were taken.
Unseasonable Cold
Hits Northwest
Following Blizzard
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
busy digging out from the costly
"u uiuMery storms oi tne week
end, and the Deep South, were hit
by unseasonable cold Wednesday.
Frigid air extended over New
England, New York and Pennsyl
vania. Temperatures below 20 de
grees were general and were near
tero in some northern areas.
Clear skies and the mountainous
drifts of snow kept readings far
below early spring levels.
In the Southeast, temperatures
were near or below freezing in the
Carolinas and Georgia and in the
40s In Florida. It was as cold in
Macon, Ga., early Wednesday as
in Chicago Parh nilv rannwtlntt 11
above. The 34 mark at Fargo,
11. li., compared to a chilly 39 at
Jacksonville, Fla.
Most of the area west of the
storm-stricken Northeast reported
neany normal weatper. There
was a little cooling in the plateau
and Rnckv Mountain K..f
temperatures were above freezing
in most sections and in the middle
60s in parts of Arizona.
In the Pacific coastal areas,
rPariinHS .vara mnE(l,. .1.. in.
e,u .,. utu.,,, lllc ws
from Washington to Northern Cal-
uunua ana in,me ws jn southern .
California.
No precipitation was in prospect
Ohio to Maine struck by the late
winter season s worst snow storm.
The death toll was 166 while the
mnnetarv Inac In hitcinac. indi
viduals and property was hun
dreds ot millions of dollars. In
New York City business loss alone
was estimated at 150 millions, and
the cost of removing the tons of
snow was put at 2i millions.
Schools and colleges in New
York City, closed since Friday,
area's 1,400,000 students. The her-
ruiean task ot clearing the street
vas expected to keep busy all
uwL a rrour nf 10IW1 man anH
2,300 pieces of equipment.
DINNER SLATED TONIGHT
The Camas Valley Toastmistress
Club will hold a dinner-meeting on
Wednesday in the Bart's Cafe din
ing room. The dinner will be held
at 7:30 p.m.
JUDGE IN EUGENE
Circuit Judge Charles S. Wood
rich is due back in Roseburg
Thursday night from Eugene,
where he is now presiding over
cases. The judge began hearing a
Lane County case Tuesday.
FAMILY CLOTHING ROOM
OPEN 1 to 5 P.M.
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY
509 N. E. Winchester St.
POSSE TO MEET
Members of the Douglas County
Mounted Sheriffs Posse will meet
at the fairitrounds Thursday at
7:30 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. George
Jameson and Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Lemke will be in charge.
WATCH
FOR THI OPINING O'
"THI STORI WITH A
THOUSAND BARGAINS"
Roidburg Surplus Sales
2? S. I. CASS
HOUSE FOR SALE
TO BE MOVED OR RAZED
FOR SALVAGE
Four bedroom house with hardwood floors and new kitchen.
Located at 827 S. E. Pine will be sold to highest cash bidder.
BIDS CLOSE 5 P.M. TUESDAY, MARCH 27
For Information See
LONG ond ORR MORTUARY
OR CALL ORchard 2-2611
'Oh