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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1957)
4 TWe Ne f.eies. Ore. Thurs.. Feb. 21, 1957 Irrigation Marks Sharp Differences Between Seats Of 2 So. Oregon Counties Yoncalla Missionary Croup Selects Committee Member By MRS. GE0R6C EDES The Missionary Society of the YoncalU Methodut Church met in the social room of the church re cently, with II n. J. M. Sparkt, president, presiding. During the business part of the afternoon, Mrs. Cabanesa wai elec- EDITORS NOTE: Ttut is another the principal resourcei. But ib aenr ef artxiee eosoeoMd there are aharp difference!, and iumairjl troai report! bv Ooe of these several differ- J. W. Forrester Jr . editor of the escee ia assurance now of enough -..a. . i,r M 'aai. mtrr It. eriitor of lii Pendleton i ted Christian social relations inf economx coediuoos aid East Oregonian, who studied the trends. economy of a score of Oregon counties on a recent swing r THE ASSOCIATED PRESS through the state chairman fur the remainder of the year. Mrs. Beulah Johnston, Mra. Grant Pasa and Medford are i This ia the war ha found the Southern Oregon cities, the ceo-. situation: tral points in counties which share i Jackson County, of which timber, agriculture and touruta jftdford ia the county seat, the i Talent irrigation project ia put- iting supplementary water on land and work in progress on the proj ect will ortng water to i.ouo new acres and additional water to 11, 000 more. The county's water supply can be expanded beyond any agricul tural need now in tight. But in Josephine County, of which Grants Past it the center, talk of tapping the Rogue Hiver Yoncalla Auxiliary To Order Poppies By MRS. CECRSE EOES The Yoncalla American Legion Auxiliary tnit 174 hat voted to or der MO poppies to sell on the week end before Memorial Day, May 24 , run, , ,le ,trongest kind of od- ... . . . .u . . -i 'PO''1"" from fishermen and other . ' outdoort enthusiasts. Failure I. ut ia a bid for the junior-senior the neoole of the r. in ..r.. nauet at Yoncalla High School. I haa h Iwa i u...k:...; It wat announced at the meeting n C. th. - J that Mrt Leroy F Gerard, dis-;pt irrigation plant. irici presineni ram ouinenra, wiu , i , intervlew witn Frank visil llie loucan. win mmtKU o. Plant were alto made for a pot- luck dinner Feb. 26 at 7 p.m. The Streeler, veteran Granta Pass newspaperman, Forrester waa told that Josephine County dairvmen i Yoncalla Methodists Host Exchange Student By MRS. GEORGE EOES Albert Amarty, a atudent at the University of Oregon, who comet from the Gold Coast in Western Africa was guest tpeaker at the monthly meeting and potluck din ner of the Yoncalla Methodist Church Sunday evening. The mother of the speaker it tending him to college, where he is taking architecture. He atated that he had been in nearly all the states of the union, but he pre fers Oregon to any of them, lie talked on churches, school govern ment, exports and imports of Af rica. A Sunday school and church board meeting wat held during the afternoon. Before the talk by Amarty, a slide picture wat shown. nexi (justness uieciujK will uv him h... .1 ........ ...... : i 12.t?,.7:?,I'-,S- i?01" venU!'" repeal of the .utTmilk con will be at the t.ly Hall. i trol law. Hops growing hat de viating Daughter tmtd in this county at in others Mrs. Charlie Hummel ia visiting Even the growing of gladiolus her daughter in Coot Bay for bulbs haa been falling off couple of weeks. Jackson County agriculture hat Mrs. Paul Flury spent last week , oted tome falling off, too. espe vis.tng her ton, a ttudent at Klam- cUy ln dairying and poultry raiv ath rails. ..,,.. tog. However the great fruit in- air. ana mra. naruia rnii.ip. dustry near,v 3vi . have told their ranch in upper Skel- Lf ,, hirvMled ,t ly west of Yoncalla, to their tont, represents an income of about 19 llertchel and Wayne Phillips. m,nlon doll,rs Tne ,,,,.,,,,, K ait h ant Hnm.r UrKirHv mart , . . --".' u i. . ... ... 'u,urB iooks good, and will be even Sadie Lasswell and Mra. Parry Smith were elected at the nomin ating committee. A rummage and cooked food sale will be held ia the near fu ture, with Mrt. Olive Currier, Mrt. Esther Campbell and Mrt. Nellie Stenseth oa the commit!. Place and data will be announced. Mon- Record State Budgets Since EJS lfJ.I UImb 0 Clill nimlimn v i i .v.-.ci-.i World War 2 Still Climbing; Inflation Principal Reason y DAVID C. BEEOEft Th Atscitl Prs California budget proposal to the "inexorable demand of growth." Knight'a budget request exceeds the state' previous budget by mora than lis million douars. It' costing record sums of mon ey to oil the wheels of state gov ernment and lawmakeri are cast ing around for new tax sources. Record budgets are nothing ...... Tk.B'ti. hjn ineraif!0 ey derived from the .ale will gol.te.dily ..nee th. end of World Cndedb y inigh? Inward fnlarffin. th intehn nt ti- . n . ' the church. increased government activity Jin. Jeannie Lee had charge of It one reason, but inflation u the Market Year Start April 1 the program. Mrt. Richard Walk er gave a talk oa Chicago' Jane Adamt. World' Day of Prayer will be observed March S at the Yoncalla Church of Christ, with other churches in Yoncalla participating. Mrt, Lee gave a report on the recent atudy group, which the con ducted on "youth in responsible to ciety." Anna Kingery reported on increase in juvenile delinquency. Mrt. Lea also reported on t b a new Yoncalla Youth Center. She stated that the center it open maia factor. With ttate govern ment trying to do more thing for more people, the biggest prob lem facing lawmakeri is where to end the tax bill. An Associated Pres survey show higher talariet for teachen and ttate employes, highway pro grams and welfare projects are the major reasons behind increas ed ttate spending. In all of these cases, the mounting cost of living ia in the background. Highest ttate budget are those proposed in heavily populated 11- five night a week during football I N or nd California, season and three nighta during L Illinois is expected to pass a the basketbaU season. The center P".?' 'lln 'or s,Pnd'ng of ,w0 is badly in need of table game. bl"10n dolli" ,or .L97,?,9- . , The ancietv voieH to civ. in. Two years ago. the Illinois Leg- Provisions of th wool incentive! program for th marketing year starting April t, mi, wui oa me same a for the current marketing year. I This assurance by Robert T. Lit ter, chairman, of the Oregon Agri cultural Stabilization and conser vation Committee, it based on a' Seventy million, of the increase, rjVn.rtment rf Tn w0l wmtat rata i to be used for additional .chool f s,i"' Vi based on SO per cent of the aver- .'A f,T,inrc.,,.C iSSS ihorn wool marketed during and beer tax increase recom- ir ,flim. 1 --t cntnh ivmiim at in rew nampsnira, uov. anei cent, per pound. "?., Kj"i7.."k. Utter explained that . the pay- also 1 dcUrminad the same a in 1S5S, The lamb must oe owneo oy the pplicnt for at leart 30 day and payment wiU be bated oa th weight increase of the lambs while under ech peroa' ownership. For th incentive payment pur pose the weight of wool i based I on aa average oi a pounua oi wooi for each 100 pounds oi unsnorn price jut ...,, .horn wool. Tha courage unusual shearing of lambs before daughter. Chairman Lister urge all pro ducer to keep their sales slip for I ment rate for horn wool will con- j wao lnd UmD ,ice these must unue IO De oasea oa ure yn.uv quest. Dwmell has asked for enactment m u neau i w i t .u. avraffe 1, 1 rm. t '" which individual grower eU. hit or an income tax. cU greJt wU1 hu ,. Soma big boosts in state budg-,Uve p,ynlent and the total return eta have been proposed in fast- for nij wooi growing Western states. i The first payment under th vtasnington state oinciais ut i i onn m4 tit inn. increases in the record Jl.106.769,-1 , for 195s CUD. The incentive a trip to Redmond last week to get a load of hay. Mr. and Mra. Kenneth McKirdy and ton, Jimmy, who have been spending the winter in Rosehurg, have moved back to Yoncalla to make their home. Mis Minerva and Ralph Wetten heiser of Vida spent several days last week visiting at tha Edgar Richards home. Mr. and Mrt Donald Leeper of Lisbon, North Dakota, visited at the home of Mr. Anna Abbott last week. They were en route to Se attle, Wash. Mr. and Mr. Avery Lasswell are enjoying a couple of week vaca tioning in California. Mr. and Mr. George F.de. left Sunday to spend a few days with Mra. Kdea't brother and family and ineir daughter in Eugene. Presbyterian Women Set Oakland Meetings By EDITH DUNN The Associated Women of Oak land Community Presbyterian Church will meet Friday at 2 p m. in the parish hall. English Settle ment Circle will he host. Esther Circle will meet Thurs day at 7:30 p m. at the home of Mrs. Vera Little. On March 3. a film-strip discus- sion class will begin for members oi the junior and senior high class es in the junior room in the church during 30 minutes of the Sunday scnool nour. ine course will be pre sented by Dr. Homer Noble, minis ter. The theme is "This ia My Church." Coffee hour will 'follow Sunday morning services. ward buying tome table garnet, and the Kev. Mr. Knight of the church, offered another $5 for thi work. Refreshment! were served by Mrt. J, N. Sparkt and Mrt. Perry Smith. islature appropriated a record SI 111 budget request are needed to meet higher pay demands of state employes and teachers and the requirements of a rapidly growing population. The proposed budget is up almost 39 million dollars. The cost of government would go up more than 120 million dot price then, also, wat 62 cent per pound. The payment rate for that clip wa 44.9 per cent, which meant that the payment to grow er wat 44.90 for each S100 pro ducers received from their wool sales. Payments on the 1957 clip will be made in the summer of 736,000,000. The increases are due lars in Oregon if a record atate lu wnen tabulation based on Drunter with added irrisatinn ln timber, Josephine County has seen curtailment of the small and medium - sized operator's work Bate Lumber Co., with a sawmill and a plywood plant at Merlin, is the biggest of the operators in the county. A comparative newcomer there. Bate has been a heavy buy er of government timber. Jackson County has teveral rel atively large operator and a few secondary processors, and aside from the general slowdown now in lumber has a promising out look. Full Utilization nf uuwwl I... made no appreciable strides in ' Perman- h" named either of these counties but tim-i,or ,ne cmlng year. ber growth it exceeding the cut. In the tourist trade, both coun I ties are tops. Both have incom parable mountain scenery. Jose- Clendale Women's Assn. Prexy Names Committees ? resident of the Women's the Olivet Presbyterian New Assn Church at Glendale. Crow, left SaMirdT, "?or MS IT' .J! 5! ' They returned home Sunday aod I iractjng them from all iart nt hrnnoht Me. W.A. -Ilk I '"""t "em "V" Part of jhV p,k." - E 7! tew Both counties are havena for people in retirement "a food place to live." Dulles Says Flier Probe Still Being; Pressed She haa named Mrs. J o v c a Mill to take charge of devotions and Mra. Mina Johnson for the missionary topics. At the last meeting, new offi cers took over their first meeting. Beside tra. opperman, they are: Mrs. Doris Waltman, vice presi dent; Mrs. Esther Perry, secre tary; and Mrs. Ula Losey, treas urer. Refreshments were served, according to corresDondent Mrs. G. B. Fox. College Speaker Featured At Sweetheart Banquet Canyonville Revival Services Set Next Week By VIRGINIA PROCTOR Miss Leon a Goodpasture of Long Beach, Calif., will conduct special revival services at the Assembly of God church in Canyonville from ' Feb 26 through March 3 with serv ices beginning at 7:30 p.m. Miss Goodpasture it the titter of Mrs. William Rost, CBA music teacher. The Women't Misssionary Socie ty of the church has named Feb. 24 as the day they will take charge of the evening services. CBA Officers Attend Banquet At Eugene By VIRGINIA PROCTOR The Rev. A. M. Shaffer and Mr. and .Mrs. Robert Shaffer were guest in a Canyonville ibla Aca demy directors' banquet last week Myrna Op- at the Eugene Hotel. committees After the banquet, the party at tended the district council meeting of the Oregon Assemblies of God at which a 30-voice CBA choir sang two numbers under the di rection of Mrs. William Ross and accompanied by Doroeruth Carmi-chael. her ls!to P'1 higher appropriations tor tchools, mental institutions and salary boosts for ttate em ployes. Increasei in Illinois and other states also result from the mas sive federal highway program. State must match part of the federal funds. Like many states, th hard facts on the Illinois budget are as yet unavailable. Republican Gov. Wil laim G. Stratum won't have it ready for presentation until April. A sales tax increase is expected. In New York, Gov. Averell Har riman already hat tent a record $1,617,400,000 budget to the Legis lature for the fiscal year. Schools, inflation and expanded state pro grams were cited by Harriman at reasons for the increase from last year's SS1.441. 800,000 budget. Gov. Goodwin J. Knight attri bute a record-high $1,947,964,933 budget of $741,654,533 is approved. L. - . ? i u.. .j ...... i,. growers nccuni iiiKii uuuscia uv Dieted ..... Ar.r.iA ku anioi-nnr in I v salet slips can be com- been advanced bv governors in Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Okla homa, Utah, Montana. Nevada and North and South Dakota.. Wisconsin's proposed 343-milIion-dollar budget need 47 million dol lars in new revenue before it will balance. Indiana's financial out look has been described by some observer! as a "crisis." Indiana Gov. Harold W. Hand ley, GOP factional foe of outgoing Gov. George N. Craig, has called "fantastic" Craig't proposed 790-million-dollar request. Both Indiana and Wisconsin are expected to enact increases in ttate income, tax. In most states the budget ttory it the tame: all-time high expen ditures are planned to meet stead ily increasing needs of government. accompany application lor pay. menu. Application for payments, with tha necessary tales slips, must be sent to the County Agri cultural Stabilization and Conser vation Office, Room 214 County Courthouse, Roseburg, before April 1, 1956. VOLCANO ERUPTS GUATEMALA, I The 10,700 foot volcano de Fuego erupted Tuesday night, showering a wide area with dust and pebble. There were no casualties reported but American tourists joined many Guatemalans in hurried flight. The navment on lambs that have I Souk el Khemis, never been shorn when marketed ' west of Tunit. EARTHQUAKE KILLS 11 TUNIS ( A sharp earthquake today killed 12 pertont and injured about 30 others near the town of about 100 mires '..I'JZ::..: tOO! vflgP Nell Carlson of Northwest Chris tian College was the featured speaker at the sweetheart banquet at the Sutherlin Christian Church last week. A tutal 24 young people were present for the event under the direction of Harvey and Bon nie Ruegsegger. The speaker told the young peo- WASH1NGTON I Secretary of State Dulles confirmed Tues day that the Justice Department is investigating U. S. angles of the disappearance in the Dominican Republic of an airlines pilot from uregon. i There hat been speculation that i tne mysterious lisanoearanre latt i .i k. i . .u i.ri . . ir - ' w am, ui imp iuc ill iiir nir. oi ' n . , Dec. 3 of Gerald Murphy of hu-, Bible Couples. He emphasized the j ?-p" ...T i. ' gene. Ore., a pilot employed bv ali.i...i. ....i. .i... .u...u i-..- Govern said it Dominican airline, might have a , ,:in Miir,iAt Mr. r.ri connection with th case of a I Term In Prison Ruled Too Severe By High Court NEW YORK 11 A judge says it's "cruel and inhuman" to keep a man in jail for 16 months for failure to make back alimony pay ments to his ex-wife. This brought freedom here to 52-year-old William Singer, who was jailed Oct. 25, 1955, on the com plaint of his former wife Anna. She obtained a contempt of court citation against him for $1,400 in alimony arrears. ln ordering Singer freed. Stale ustice Owen Mc- was pointless to keep a man in jail so long in such missing Columbia University pro-, ed ,he 'banquet in the church lessor Dr Jesus l.alindcz a , according to correspondent M r s Spanish exile who wrote a book attacking Generalissimo Rafael Trujillo of the Dominican Repub lic, disappeared earlier last year in New York City. Dulles said at a newt confer ence the State Department is pur suing its inquiry into the Murphy case and the Justice Department 1 1 looking into domestic angles that mav have figured in the pi lot t disappearance. Brittain Slack. gave the prayer. Douglas Sanders Dunn and Mrt. Ted Koa.lman serv-!? ' '"5,??! long been abhorrent to our toci ety." the judge declared. The judge told Singer he must start paying the original court-ordered payments of $12 weekly to his ex-wife. A nominal $4 pay- I ment, the judge ruled, will take care of the arrears because Singer 'already has paid the price in jad tune. SPIC 'N SPAN BAKERY 4S0 S. E. Jackson Street OR 2 3541 Across from Montgomery Words Arthur Towntend, Owner Friday-Saturday-Monday Specials Try Our WASHINGTON CHERRY CUP CAKES 45c Do Lemon Chiffon PIES 48c Genuine Potato Raise Donuts 49c Do, 12 kinds of your FAVORITE COOKIES 25c Dot. 5 t M.00 White or Wheat BREAD 25c Loot 4 tZ, 97c White or Wheat PAN ROLLS Ter 1 1 Do. 12c ,.. DAYLIGHT BAKING ONLY! Open From 8 AM to 7PM 1956 Set Record For Low Work Stoppages SAN' KRANCISOO 'f The president of the Pacific Maritime Assn.. reports that 1956 set a rec ord low for work stoppages of West (.'oast longshoremen if you discount the three-day "sympathy stoppage" at the time of the East Coast strike. J. Paul St. Sure, who was House Bill Increases Trucks' Speed Limit elected PMA president Wednesday said the loss was 343 man-days. involving onlv 2HA men. However, the "single brief hut glaring ex ception" of the sympathy strike eot 20.457 man-days, involving 14 SIS men. SI Sure said there wat opti mism for the future of the ship ping industry, 'reflected in part SAI.EM i The House Tues day passed and tent to the Senate re- legislation increasing tne maxi mum speed of trucks on Oregon highways from 45 to SO milet an hour. Log trucks and school busses are not affected. Their maximum speed remains at 4$ milet an hour. Rep. Joe Rogers D. Independ ence, said the hither speed is justified because of better and programs for adding to and safer equipment. Washington also making replacements in the pres- has a 50-mile top tpeed for trucks. ent West toast fleet ' he said IT S COMING! You've Read About It You've Heard About It The biggest advance in the last 50 YEARS: NOW SEE IT SAT. AND SUN. oi HARRYS "The WorVin, Man's Stare" 134S N.I. Stephens 2J.'--A , ''a0.1' 7 "n jaflkMMXiro. , o,irH ;i ' ' W'te Titrtrte, -t Cert !i I e iriTi'Vi...'. ."..iT.t.''.r;.t(il'i.- ' .a jttf i:'.V 'vs-i''.'b,Jj'. v'-Utv aSMeVt.'i r .ri . - .n tew sra lit -.. - i. i t W M . 7 - , tr.nnTI tin . tin .Ml...,, M ;'? J "1 fftJ&Z VtoHxtj y$i$s ;PFr-:;"H'- i;f& ' r. h aw ea t. f We1 a , ; ,..,,T.-,Ti I??? BACKGROUND FOR BETTER HOUSEKEEPING What do you do with useful but unneeded household items' Is your storage space cluttered up with things that are too good to throw away, but no longer needed' Why not sell them for cosh' It is really easy. Use a Want Ad. Just pick up your telephone and call the Wont Ad Deportment of the NEWS-REVIEW. A friendly ad-taker will help you word your ad, tell you how much it will cost, ond give you any other assistance you need How much will it cost' You con run a 10 word Want Ad for as little os 90c for 3 days' CALL OR 2-3321 NEWS-REVIEW CLASSIFIED DEPT.