2 The Newt-Review, Roseburg,
Christmus Party Slated
For Oakland Children Toniaht
By EDITH DUNN 'still wishing la enter are to run-
The annual Christmas parly for tact Mri. L. F. Stearns or Mr.
Oakland children will be held this ' Haul Schulze by tonivht. Judging
evening when treat! will be given: will be held Sunday at 7 p.m.
out by the American Lcaion. Later I The Oakland Garden Club is sell
a Christmas partv of the Amen- in? wrcslhs and swaits this week
can Lesion and Auxiliary will be at the .Sanitary Market and Oak
held at th Vpterani Memorial land Sllnnoinc Center.
Budding. Membera are to take,
canned food for the Chriilmas bas
ket. rnnlHl End.
The Christmas lighting contest
in Oakland closes today. Those
Integration Begins
Without Violence
In Montgomery
Montgomery, Ala. i
Racial integration on buses start
ed smoothly in .Montgomery Fri
day, bringing to a dramatic close
a tradition in public transportation
dating back for dcadcs.
Negroes, some of whom had re
fused to ride segregated city buses
for more than a year as part of
a mass boycott movement, board
ed the buses calmly, taking seats
where they chose,
Under the segregated pattern,
Negroes were required to sit in the
rear, white passengers occupied
seats toward the front. Segrega
tion laws were knocked out by a
I S. Supreme Court decision
which went Into effect here
Thursday in this deep south city
of 120.000.
Some Negroes took front Seats l
Friday and whit passengers sat Commissioner Stanley Earl pro
behind them. I posed Thursday that the city in-
There were no reports of vio-1 v,te ,ucn a hearing and it was
lence, but four carloads of white unanimously adopted. He said the
men and others in pickup truck Teamster publication had report
stayed close to a downtown bus I ed various city officials had "corn
stop with the occupants paying i mitted ccrtain illegal acta," and
close attention to the historic added "I am one of those Der-
transition to integration
One unidentified white man,
watching a Negro board a bus,
shouted to photographers, "Go
ahead and get that black
a picture. Negroes standing
i i -rl i 7m 8 iincnai.
Irnged. They had heen coached by
their leaders to refrain from vio
lence and to ignore auch incidents.
Negro ministers rode the buses,
too, to set an example for their
people. Three of the clergymen
the Rev. M. L. Kind Jr., the Rev.
Ralph D. Abrrnathy and the Itev.
W. J. Powell said bus drivers
were "exceptionally" courteous.
Flossie Donelan
Passes Dec. 20
Flossie Fern Donelan, 56. died
Dec. 20 at t':e home of ber daugh
ter, Mrs. E. F. Pearson, in Myrtle
Creek, following an illness of sev
eral months. Mrs. Pearson was
taking care of her mother at time
of death.
Mrs. Donelan was born June 20,
1900, in Woodburn, Iowa, and mov
ed to Oakland in 1941. In 1949 she
moved to the Myrtle Creek area.
She was a member of the Metho
dist Church in Iowa.
Survivors include her husband,
Clem Donalen, who had recently
moved to Roseburg with Mrs. Don
elan: two daughters, Mrs. Pearson
of Myrtle Creek and Mrs. Roy I).
Johnson of Nashville City, Calif.;
two sons, William D. Whitehead,
I'S Navy, and Harold S. White
head of Roanoke, Va.; and seven
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at
JO a.m. Monday in the chapel of
Ganz Mortuarv, Mvrtle Creek, with
the Rev. J. Elbert Nash of the Tri
City Presbyterian Church, officiat
ing. Interment will follow in the
IOOF cemetery in Oakland. Gam
Slortuary it in charge of arrange-
nients. I
X Era-.-
'Vr,:'
V.'";..iy-'
I ataalafeaaaaaaMaaa
SEMI-ANNUAL INSPECTION of Naval Reserve Electron
ics Division 13-7 of Roseburg wos conducted bv the Dis
trict reserve electronics program officer, Cmdr. P. L. Dice
of Seattle, pictured here addressing a member of the unit.
He was accompanied on the inspection tour by Cmdr.
Lewis, commanding officer of the U. S. Naval Rerseve and
Marine Corps Troining Center, Eugene, extreme right, and
Lt. (j. g ) Ward, not pictured, aide to Cmdr. Dice Com
manding officer of the local unit is Lt. Cmdr. John J.
Bingham of Canyonville The inspection party thoroughly
examined personnel, equipment and training facilities
through M-nday ond Tuesday of this week.
IN A RUSH?
CLEANING IN By 10 A.M.
WILL BE READY AT 5 P.M.
On Your Request
NO EXTRA CHARCE FOR THIS SERVICE
HONN'S CLEANERS
l-rl Plant at Fin Pailtiaf "th. Cx.'t House It Ju t
10H II. Dowalai fk. OR M2t Acres Tl-t il,r,l fnvn Monn'i
Or. Fri., Dtc. 21, 1956
Oakland FTA members met last
Monday in trie nisn acoooi norary.
A film was shown on duties of the
school board. Supt. C.uy Luti ex-
, nlained the outies oi me ooara.
; He announced the rating of the
school as being one oi tne two
schools accented as members in
the Northwest Assn. of Higher Ed
ucation this year. The other school
is in Alaska. Refreshments .were
served bv sixth grade mothers.
Oakland Chanter 91, Order of
Eastern Star, will meet Dec. 27 at
the Masonic Hall.
The Stellar Club meeting has
heen postooned until Jan 28. when
Mrs. ISadme Stearns and Mrs. Met
en Stuwe will be hostesses.
Portland Council
Wants Teamster
Union Probed
PORTLAND 11 Portland's
city Council wants the U. S. Sen
ate s Permanent Subcommittee
on Investigations to come here
and hold a public hearing into ac
tivities of the Teamsters Union.
Clyde C. Crosby, international
representative here for the Team
sters, promptly said he'd like that
too so some oi tne activities oi a
- .tv commissioner miffht he aired
sons." The people, he said, were
entitled to a hearing on this.
Earl added that the Teamster
i Union members also were entitled
to know "how their organization
operated in certain fields outside
the scope of labor.
The Senate subcommittee re
cently subpenaed records of the
Teamsters and also subpenaed
Crosby. This followed field inves
tigators' studies of last summer's
grand jury probe of vice and cor
ruption charges here. Crosby was
one of more than a score of per
sons indicted by the grand jury.
He and Earl, once a high offi
cial in the Oregon CIO, have been
at odds for some time.
Crosby said one of the reasons
he'd like to have the Senate hear
ing was to air what he railed the
relationship between Earl and
James B. Elkins.
Crosby said Elkins had monop
oly control of the pinball industry
here until the Teamsters organ
ized It. Pinhalls now are outlawed
under an ordinance for which Earl
was one of the leaders.
Pine Crove Sets
Two Yule Events
The Pine Grove Chapel has plan
ned two events this weekend.
Young people of Pine Grove
Chapel aro to go caroling in Dix
onville, Saturday evening, begin
ning about 8:45. Mr. and Mrs. El
word Smith will be in charge. Fol
lowing refreshments, they plan to
attend a program at South Deer
Creek Gange hall.
A Christina program will be
presented at Pine Grove Chapel in ;
Dixonville Sunday at 7:30 p.m. with
all Sunday school classes planning
participate. Treats are planned
for the youngsters.
"'V-v,
19 Sheep Killed
The killing of 19 sheep on the
Jack Denley ranch east of Sulher
lia was investigated Thursday by
Denley and b ' Douglas County dog
control officer Robert Hall.
A nephew of Denley discovered
tiie dead sheep Wednesday morn
ing, Denley said, whins he and bia
family were in Portland. Nine of
the sheep were killed in a barn and
the other 10 were run down at var
ioua points on hia acreage. Five of
the sheep were found in and around
a small stream that runs through
the property.
The Denley farm is located on
Plat "1" Road, two to three miles
east of Sutherlin.
The killing was definitely done
by dogs. Hall stated. Several of the
sheep were missing flesh off limhs
and one had a hind leg that had
been eaten down to the bone.
Denley could not estimate his fi
nancial loss. He indicated that the
sheep were ewe lambs intended
for breeding purposes.
All the killing was not done in
one night. Denley said that he had
lost a few sheep a few weeka ago
and the bodies of the 19 showed
that some had been dead longer
than others. Several other sheep
were attacked and wounded.
There were neither traces nor
leads as to the dogs that were re
sponsible. Adventists Slate
Missions Offering
Climaxing a three-month mis
sions project at the Roseburg Seventh-day
Adventist Church, a spec
ial offering will be received Sat
urday to further the denomina
tion's mission work in South Africa.
Mrs. R. W. Pearson, Sabbath
School superintendent, in announc
ing the close of the project, said
that a missions-emphasis program
will be given during the early ser
vice at the church Saturday. Chil
dren from the junior and primary
departments will be featured.
Each of the six departments of
the Sabbath school has had spec
ial goal to work toward and the
amounts brought in to date total
$1060.
Visit Of Nixon Bolsters
Refugees; Cost High
(Continued From Page One)
enhower and Congress in dealing
u,ilk Ik. .nrm. ,k f .k. u .
ian revolution "-..
Although Nixon and members
of his small party declined to dis
cuss the meeting with the Aus
trian leaders, authoritative
sources have disclosed that the
Austrian federal government will
have spent more than seven mil
lion dollars caring for refugees by
Jan. 1. This does not include
spending by provincial and local
governments or private donations.
The Austrians hope the United
States will help them pay the bill,
as well as take more of the refu
gees off their hands.
As Nixon started the second day
of his study, newly arrived refu
gees reported that they had ex
perienced "great difficulties" in
reaching the border area.
into Austria during the St.
Only 688 Hungarians crossed
compared with 1,000 or more
nightly earlier this week. The ref
ugees said that strict checks were
being made on Hungarian trains
and that most of those who sought
to quit the country had to hitch
hike or walk to the border.
Nixon was to leave for Salzburg
Friday night for a look at refugee
camps in that area and then pro
reed to Munich Saturday. There
he will visit the 'safe haven" op
erations base from which the V.S.
Air Force is flying refugees to the;
United States. I
The vice president Is expected
to start his own flight hack to the
United States Sunday morning.
he is collecting. Nixon with his
visit Is boosting the morale of
many refugees who were hecom -
ing afraid they were about to be
In addition to the information
forgotten by the West.
CHOIR SERVICE SET
The choir or the Days Creek
Community .Methodist Church will
present a cantata. "Chimes of the
Holy Night," Sunday evening, Dec.
23, at 8 at the church. The choir
has recently purchased choir robes
which will he in use for the first
time, on this occasion. The choir
is under the direction of Ralph
Martin. The community is invited
to attend.
nYj- - -- a
r -cct ......
Ralph L. Russell
HOME LOANS, INSURANCE, BONDS
RsX)m 202, Doi'os County State Bank Bldg.
". . . .
-i'Ji fi 7S,
OWNER JACK DENLEY (left) end Douglas County Dog
inspect some of the 19 sheep killed on Denley's property
few days. (Jenkins).
MC Councilman Injured
When Train Hits Pickup
(Continued from Page One)
280 feet before the freight could
be stopped.
Peterson was still in the vehicle
as it burst into flame.
A California Oregon Power Co.
crew happened to be nearby, and
can probably be credited with
saving the man from burning toi
death on the spot, according to i
correspondent Evans.
The truck chassis had Peterson I
pinned, ao the Copco crew lifted it
off with one of its trucks. Peter
son was taken immediately to the
Myrtle Creek Hospital by Ganz
Ambulance.
The special freight train was
engineered by Frank Woolvcrton
of Eugene. His fireman, V. H.
Perry of Roseburg. was a witness
to the accident. Other witnesses
' v-upvu cicw aim
from Southern Pacific station per-1
According to Chief Haun, Peter-1
son had just driven away from the I
depot after loading his feed truck. I
The train hit the car at about 8:25
a.m.
Witnesses told police they yelled
to try to warn Peterson, and Engi
neer Woolverton said he blew the
train whistle twice. Haun said
Peterson apparently didn't hear ;
any of the warnings. The collision
occurred at a point about a block
away from the depot in Myrtle
Creek.
The Myrtle Creek Fire Dept.
was called to the scene to put out
the blazing which had destroyed
the truck.
As a sidelight to the accident,
two people were cited by city
&J ?"J.M'Jle
They are G. D. Perry and Alvin
Goff of Myrtle Creek.
Grange Schedules Yule
Program Saturday Night
The South Deer Creek Grange Is
sponsoring a Christmas program
Saturday at 8 p in. in the grange
hall, according to Dixonville cor-
rnvnnnflnnt M ra Pharlo fnrract
The hall is located 2'i miles south'
of the Dixonville store.
The program will feature an en
tertainment series presented by
Mrs. rreta Karcher. Santa Clans
I "n d' ndh l'
, f "(?a1"nged- Th"1 wl" be pub"
j
'
.
tiruiTs isi wrganixina;
Oregon Senate Stalled
PORTLAND un Efforts to
ward organizing the deadlocked
Oregon Senate are stalled. Repub
lican Sen. Rudie Wilhelm of Port
land said Thursday, and he added
it would take an offer by Demo
crats to get things rolling again.
Wilhelm heads the GOP com
mittee working with a similar
Democratic group in an attempt
to find some way to break the
1 15-15 deadlock.
4f v" Si" ' '''
Our Yuletini base m til our friend
...for a leaiot fMcktal with all the
wonslcrful thines that Christmas means!
Near
s
t ' - v r
, -
si"
? 'V " :. i.at.
" 4.-
Eight Persons Die
In Plane Accidents
Over United States
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Eight persons perished yester
day in six air crashes from Cali
fornia to Pennsylvania. A seventh
plane carrying two men disap
peared. A U. S. Steel Corp. twin-engine
plane exploded and smashed to
bits on a bleak mountainside ne:ir
Tyrone, Pa., killing a steel execu
tive and two crewmen. U. S. Steel
identified the executive as Ai-kn
Roach, 55, of San Francisco, pres
ident of the Columbia - Geneva
Steel Division of U. S. Steel
The corporation identified the
dead crewmen as pilot Ray Hullo
of Los Angeles and copilot L. T.
Williams of Sunland. Calif. The
plane had taken off at Greater
Pittsburgl. (Pa.) Airport for Idle
wild Airport, N. Y.
In San Francisco, Robert Wa'k
er, 27, of San Leandro. Calif.,
drowned when his helicopter
turned upside down as it was
making a turn and plunged into
an francisco Bay. I
At Mays Landing, .V. J., an F8U1
Crusader, one of the Navy's fast
est new supersonic jet fighters
crashed within five minutes aiter
takeoff from the Atlantic City
Naval Air Station.
The Navy said the pilot. U Rob
ert D. Roth. 28, Linwood, N. J.,
perished in the crash.
In Monterev. Calif., Navy pilot
I.t. (j.g.) Wiliiam Otis Herring, of
Santa Clara. Calif., was killed
when his F9F8 Cougar jet plane
crashed and exploded 2f miles east
of the city. I
In Owosso, Mich., Thomas War
ren, 40, a used car dealer from
Columbus, Ohio, was killed when
his small plane crashed moments
after he had taken off from the
Owosso airport.
A TO jet trainer disappeared
somewhere between Shaw Air
Force Base, S C., and Eglin Air
Force Base. Fla., causing a four
state search.
A Shaw Air Force spokesman
identified the pilot as Lt. Cornelius
D. VanV'lymen, 25, Parma. Ohio,
and the passenger as W. O. Wil
liam L. Rae, 42, Los Altos, Cilif.
----- -1'-' L;j
ARBUCKLE'S CONTINUE
THIS SALE
MEN'
EVERY PAIR IN STOCK
REDUCED
DONT MISS THIS SALE
OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. THIS WEEK
Sutherlin
IS
V ssVC
V'.U'.H
Control Officer Robert Holl
east of Sutherlin in the post
Girl Missing;
Mistaken Belief
Sister Is Dead
NEW YORK I A 14-year-old
girl was missing Friday feared
a possible suicide in the mistaken
belief she let her infant sister die
while baby-sitting.
Margaret Julie Mizzi ran awav
.from her Queens home Monday,
leaving this note:
! "I was washing the dishes. I
j went over to look at the baby.
The pillow was on her face. I took
! it off. I shook her but she did not
! move. I think she is dead. I get
scared. I am running away.
"Daddy will kill me when he
1 finds out. I want to save him the
I job. By the time you read this I
, will be dead. I will always love
all of you."
But when Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Mizzi returned home after spend
ing an hour out shopping for a
I Christmas tree they 'found
j -month-old Carol sleeping sound
ly and healthily in her crib.
I Julie, as the older girl is known
to the family, was gone.
Nehru Ends Visit
With Speeches
NEW YORK on - India's Prime
Minister Nehru ends his six day
American visit today as he began
it still con -inced that collective
security pacts will not preserve
world peace.
Tonight a Royal Canadian Air
Force plane will fly Nehru to Ot
tawa for weekend conferences with
Prime Minister Louis St. Laurent.
Nehru made the most of his
brief New York visit yesterdav
with a triple barreled round of
speeches. All of them were woven
around the '.heme that a positive
but peaceful approach could solve
the problems of Hungary and the
Middle East hostilities "without
too great difficulties."
In a speech last night at an In
formal gathering of United Nations
General Assembly delegates and
in a speech before the private, non
partisan American Assn. for the
United Nations, Nehru lashed out
at the concept of military pacts
and alliances.
aV7
. a lii j u j';k i
Three Hospitalized In Car
Accidents; Other Crashes
Over County Are Reported
Two men were taken to Forest i Manuel Joseph Gomes, was not
Glen -Hospital, Canyonville, after injured, state police said, when his
an accident at 10:30 a.m. Thurs-, truck and the car collided, sending
day in which their car collided the car mto ditch
with a logging truck on the South I Mrs. Viva Wright, Box 2, Win
Umpqui Road five inilea east of,ston, wis taken to Douglaa Com
Tiller Imunity Hospital early Friday
n-u. :j it,. f .iv ! morning after her auto hit a bridge
." ..r.: .-j n..h,,r.!
r , i .
police during the day ana cany
Fndav.
Frederick Dwight Ortloff, Vene
ta, driver of the car, was treated
for lacerations of the face and a
broken cheek bone, state police
said. Willard Henderson, Tiller, a
fiassenger, was treated for facial
acerations and then released.
The driver of the logging truck.
Porter Withdraws
Bid For Interior
Committee Post
WASHINGTON UH Rep.-elect
Charles O. Porter (D-Ore) said
Friday he is withdrawing hia bid
for assignment to the House In
terior Committee in favor of an
other newly elected Oregon col
league. He said he will support Rep.
Ullman for a place on the com
mittee because of the interest in
Ulman's Eastern Oregon district
in Hells Canyon Dam legislation.
Porter said he originally asked
to be assigned to either Interior
or Appropriations as his major
committee, with either moiic
Works or Banking and Currency
as his second committee
Porter said he now is asking ; two cars in a Roseburg inter
assignment to the Foreign Affairs . section accident at 11:55 a m.
I Committee in line with what he I Thursday. Elliott Lee Motschenba
! said was his sole campaign pledge i cher, 1152 NE Fremont Ave., Rose-
to spend one-third of his time i burg, was driving north on South
: working for peace. i east Pine Street when his car col-
I Because members of the House lided with a car driven by Ernest
Appropriations Committee are Theodore Unrath. 523 NE Clover
usually limited to that one com- Lane, Roseburg. Unrath was going
mittee. Porter said he is consider- west on Washington Avenue.
ing withdrawing his request for ;
that committee in favor of Judi- D J a.
ciary in view of his legal back-1 FOntier KeSIOent
ground. ' . ,
While making his requests DlPS In COOS D3V
known to House leaders. Porter I ,M Ma7
h'UmhP.PeC)a,,hS. 'm,.! ! JP Pemberton, 5. for
Lr,C.'hf,1 r?" "L;.?T' mer Roseburg resident, died in a
....i s ""jCoos Bay Hospital Dec. 16, fol
actual assignments.
The Oregon Democrat, who de
feated Rep. Ellsworth (R-Ore)
has net nn ' temnorarv office, in
the Senate suite of Sen. Neuber
ger (D-Ore).
When he moves into his own
quarters in the old House Office
Building, probably after the first
of the year, he will find himself
right around the corner from Ore
gon's two other Democratic House
members, Ullman and Rep. Edith
Green.
Heltzel Suspends Rat
Increase Pending Hearing
SALEM I Public Utilities
Commissioner Charles H. Heltzel
Thursday suspended a proposed
4 per cent increase in Railway
Express rates within Oregon,
pending a public hearing.
Earlier in the day the Inter
state Commerce Commission
granted the firm an increase ia
that amount for interstate ship
ments effective Dec. 27.
The new rates for shipments
within Oregon were to have gone
into effect Dec. 27 also. Date for
the PUC hearing was not set immediately.
I THIS CHRISTMAS 7V
GIVE THE
ALL NEW
stingjiouse
TRANSISTOR
abutment on U. S. Highway M
i aA VL' in itAn
near Winston. State police I i d
Mrs. Wright, driving south on the
highway, apparently drove into the
left side of the bridge at its north
end causing heavy damage to th
left front of her automobile.
The third and fourth accidents
concerned vehicles that were driv
en off the road and abandoned by
their drivers.
A pickup truck was reported at
Rice Hill on U.S. W with its front
end resting in the ditch. The pickup
was registered to a Roseburg man,
but he informed state police that
he had recently sold it.
A car was reported in a ditch hid
den by underbrush 34 miles east
of Roseburg on the North Umpqua
Hijhwar. Flovd Collins, owner of
Collins 'Market, said two boys ran
in to his store and reported the
car. It was registered to Ronald
C. Edwards, Elmira.
An unidentified car which pulled
out into a line of traffic on U.S. M
in Winston was blamed for a col
lision at 11:55 p.m. Thursday.
The two cars involved were both
going south on the highway when
both were forced to brake sudden
ly with the second car in line col
liding into the rear end of the first.
The front car was driven by F.i
leen Thelma DeHart, Box 482, Win
ston, the second was driven bv
I.eitrice Joy Davis, 1033 NE Post
St.. Roseburg.
Heavv damage was reported to
lowing a short illness.
Funeral services were held Dec.
19 in the chapel of Mills Funeral
nuuic in Day. interment ioi-
lowed at the Ocean View Memory
Garden in Empire.
Pemberton was born Sept. 3,
1891, at Huntington. W. Va. His
parents. William and Elizabeth
Pemberton. were long-time Doug
las County residents.
On June 2, 1914, Pemberton was
married to Lillian De Grof in Mo
line, 111. Survivors include his wid
ow: two sons, William and Elmer,
both of Empire; two brothers, Wil
liam (Bill) of Roseburg and Ed
ward of Tenmile; and one aunt,
Sadie Pemberton of Roseburg.
Roseburg Stores
J T0NITE
Tell Your Store You
Sow It In The Newspaper
.mm
RADIO
Sise, anlr t
ky i inches.
assail ,4 ,wm
S SMART COLORS
NO VACUUM TUBES
NO CORDS OR WIRES
LONG LIFE BATTERY
LARGE SET PERFORMANCE
PERFECT ClFTS FOR
THI SPORTS FAN
0
P 0
0
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0 CD
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