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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1957)
e CUEO BOY ON MEND MA.VORV1LLE. NY s.v, U belter and want, to goi,sh b.Bh' "id h" tors he U need another weer or 10 davi to rtjk. df ver,l re.pir.tory5 Ul, Benny was trapped almost 24 in 1 tbUOm 0f D"T0" well m his back yard. Rescuers pulled ta-Mtam the M.foo, pit ay IRIS SALE 1100 different varieties CUTHRIE'S IRIS CARDENS Garden Volley, Box 875 Look for Sign RunOut ofHotler? Frigidaire Electric Water Heaters ivt plenty when yw need it! EImmH prtdc kerf wtf CtwliMhf fUctrkfty tioM i Mm work n. stew sMthod ko ROSEBURG 448 S. E. Rot. Phont OR 3-5574 SUTH ERLIN -Wtit Central Phont 2980 One Convention Position Still To Be Filled The list of Douglas County rep resentative! to the National Edu cation Assn. convention at Phila delphia, Pa., this summer, has al most been completed, according to Douglas County Oregon Education Assn. President Marlen Yoder of Days Creek. One position is still open. Those attending the convention will be: Mrs. Mary Monson. sixth grade teacher at Pioneer School, Reedsport; Mrs. Beatrice Church ill, commercial teacher at Glide High School; Mrs. Thelma Flesh man, fourth grade teacher, River side School, Roseburg; Mrs. Geor gene Clark, homemaking teacher, Roseburg High School; W. M. Campbell, county deputy school su perintendent, county at large; Lau ra Grubbs, english-drama teacher at Douglas High School. Dillard. Misses Monson and Grubbs com pleted the slate. Other delegates were named earlier. According to Yoder, delegates represent Douglas County as a whole, and plan to present the views of the county on education, to the best of their ability. He also stated, the county is allowed seven delegates and one position is still open, with the northeast section of the county having the power of appointment. This is the centennial year of the NEA and the representative as sembly, of which the delegates are a part, will meet June 30 through July 5 in Philadelphia Last year's assembly was held in Port land. Yoder reported that OEA-NEA membership in Douglas county was highest in its history, with 84.4 per cent of the teachers being members. He credited the leader ship of past president. Anton Bry ant, principal of Myrtle Creek El ementary School, and membership chairman Dale Skewis, principal of Drain Union High School, for the rise in membership, reports corre spondent Jean Yoder. Camas Yalley Couple Visits In Washington By MRS. WILLIAM BANKS Mr. and Mrs. William Cunning, ham of Camas Valley spent the weekend in Vancouver, Wash., re cently at the home of their daugh-. ter. Mrs. James Campbell, ajidj family. Another daughter. M r s. Russell Anderson, and family, of Tacoina. Wash., were also guests, at the Campbell home for the j Mother s Day reunion. i Washington Visitor Mrs. Susan Mitchell left for Se attle, V ash., recently after visit ing at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Schaffer, and with her daughter, Charmaine Mitchell. She spent a day with the Bart Neelys while here. She traveled to and from Seattle by air. Weekend visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Dahl were Mrs. Dahl's daughter, Mrs. Stan ley Dancer, and family from Gren ada, Calif. Mr. and Mrs. Dancer were also guests at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray- ! mond Dancer. I Mrs. Carl Dahl. Mrs. Phillip Standley, Mrs. William McClellan and Mrs. Lloyd Pope attended the Toastmistresses Regional Confer ence recently in Eugene. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Dancer have moved into the Robert Ellis home. Ellis' have moved to John Day. The Dancer's have just recently returned from California where he was employed for the winter. Rains To Open Shop At Riddle By MRS. ARTHUR SELBY ! Bob Rains, who has operated the Lone Rock Barber Shop, is open ing a barber shop at Riddle June 1. He is moving his family to the new location this week. Rains drives one of the Glide school buses and will join his fam ily at the close of school. Jim Welch, owner of the Glide build ing, said he is arranging for Roseburg barber to take over the business. Teacher Studies In Germany A letter received from David White, former eighth grade teach er at Glide Junior High, states he and his family have returned from a two weeks vacation at Cefalu, Sicily. White was awarded a Fulbright scholarship last year and has been studying at the Uni versity of Munich. Germany. The White's have been living in a sub urb of Munich, where their sons, Johnny and David, have been at tending school and are proud of their ability to speak two lan guages. White writes, "In spite of the excitement of our adventure and the degree to which we are prof iting from it. we miss our many friends in Glide, also the sur rounding countryside. Our present plans call for our return to Ore gon this fall." P.tluck Scheduled The Blue Star Mothers, chap- I ter 6. wiU hold the last meeting ol the season June 19 at 11 a.m. at the home of Mrs. Oscar Stedman on Little River. There will be a potluck dinner served and mem bers are requested to bring do nations for the next layette. Andy Lewis reported he caught a 34-pound Chinook salmon this week, the largest reported to date, game warden for the district, land ed a 15-pound Chinook. Blax From Kerosene) Srovt Kills 2 Infants SACRAMENTO i A small kerosene stove is blamed for a fire that awept through a cropworker's tent on the edge of a pea field, fatally burning two infant brothers and critically injuring their young sister. David Hakes Jr., 2, and his brother, Lewis, 1. died Sunday night, four hours after being rush ed to a Sacramento hospital from a farm labor camp near Hood, about 20 miles Southwest of here. Their sister. Sharon, 4, was re ported in critical condition with burns over most of her body. Rotary Schedules Suit Sale May 25 A men's suit sale, sponsored by the Roseburg Rotary Club, will be held May 23, beginning at S a.m., on Southeast Oak Avenue in the new addition of the Umpqua Hotel. There will be a wide selection of suits, topcoats, sports jackets and slacks. The clothes have all been cleaned and pressed. Proceed, will be used for schol arships am' youth service projects of the club. SAWDUST WOOD FUEL Peeler Cora Oak Slob Planer Ends Dry or Green Roseburg Lumber Co. OSbom 9 8741 Tues., May 21, 1957 The, News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. S If you've always thought of bourbon 99 as "too strong ...fry the fighter, mitdir 86 proof Old Crawl If $ usf as mild os your prMnl brand of whis key... and its distinctive foire hat started a nationwide trend to light, mild bourbon TRY OLD CROV V,? 86 PROOF mW 4J i. OLD CROW DISTILLERY CO., FRANKFORT, KY., DISTRIBUTED BY NATIONAL DISTILLERS fROOUCTS CORPORATION KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY "S OlDCROi Canyonville Accordion, Piano Pupils In Recital Twenty-five pupils took part in a recital last week at the Canyon ville Youth Center. They were ac cordion and piano pupils of Mrs. William Mandich. Taking part were: Betty Moodie, Mary Ann Peters, Mark Cadman, Oarlene Hughes, Alice Peters, Dorothy Stokes, Linda Ware, Lois Pollack, Mike Lee. Lert King, Brenda Pollack. Wayne O r e y. Robyn McCoy, Margerie Long and Barbara Kverson. Ralph Grunst, Charlotte Gray. Sharon Olson. Kay Ferguson, Penny Anlauf, Sandra Shurti, Dean Halvoron, Terry Reiber, Mary Pankey and Lucille Street. i Baccalaureate Sunday (For Reedsport School Baccaluareate for Reedsport Un ion High School is scheduled this I Sunday in the high school auditor ! ium. Speaker at the S p.m. services will be the Rev. James White of the Reedsport Community Church. A total 67 graduates are sched uled to participate in these serv ices and the commencement exer cises Wednesday May 29. Featured speaker at commencement will be W. C. Jones of the University of Oregon. Benediction and invoca tion at the commencement serv ices will be Father Wallace Brad ley of the Reedsport Episcopal Church. Report Recommends Wider Reforestation PORTLAND Some 75.000 acres of Northwest logged-off tim berland are being re-seeded each year at an annual cost of 2V4 million dollars, the U.S. Forest Service said here. In an annual report the agency said the scope of the reforestation program must be broadened to permit the area to keep up with the 300.000 acres of timber cut each year. It said much of the newly-logged land will be seeded naturally but that the planting must be stepped up there and on 2'i million dol lars of cut-over and burned areas. Vlw tMi be. worth if&m. Sad ? Granted, you ore doing a good job for your employer ond thus ore "worth your salt," os they soy. Our question is: What kind of a job are you doing for yourself? Pick any dote m the future. Will your financial worth then be com mensurate wl'n ,n money thof you will earn in the years between' To get "Yes" for onswer, "salt ooy" port of every pay check in your savings occount here. Your Savings Account Earns Vi Interest ot . . . Douglas County State Bank Your FnentsUy Hm Owtj Hm Ofrmfi lank SUTHERLIN ROSEBURG OAKLAND . Kill mini limit mmiKf esirtittiw JACK FARISS ' SON HARDWARE AND FURNITURE 1 2 BIG AUCTIONS DAILY! 2 P.M. and 7:30 P.M. FOR 6 DAYS ONLY! ROSEBURG, OREGON rv LKJ $40,000 INVENTORY OF HARDWARE AND FURNITURE We Are Faced With The Fact Thai We SELL OUT HALF! CREDITORS DEMAND THEIR MONEY IN ORDER TO LIQUIDATE or MORE OF OUR INVENTORY, WE ARE ANNOUNCING MERGENCY AUCTION To Reduce Our Inventory and Adjust Our Business to Meet Present Day Conditions! This Is Our Loss, Your Cain. Here Is Your Opportunity to Buy Cood Furniture and Hardware at Unheard-of-Prices! ftlore Big Days Remaining! STARTS DAILY AT 2 P.M., AGAIN AT 7:30 IN THE EVENING AND CONTINUING DAILY AT 2 P.M. AND 7:30 P.M. EACH EVENING--POSITIVELY ENDS SATURDAY NIGHT, MAY 25! Only 4 DUE TO PRESENT DAY BUSINESS CONDITIONS AND THE FACT THAT OUR STORE IS OVERFLOWING WITH MER CHANDISE WE HAD NO ALTERNATIVE BUT TO ADOPT THIS DRASTIC MEDIUM. HERE IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO BUY FINE FURNITURE AND HARDWARE AT PRICES THE PUBLIC IS WILLING TO PAY! YOU PICK OUT YOUR OWN ARTICLES TO BE SOLD! A PARTIAL LIST TO BE SOLD -ENTIRE STOCK TO PICK FROM! 0 Refrigerators 0 Freeters f) Ranges t) Washers 0 Dryers f) Bedroom Sets Living Room Sets Davenoa Platform Rockers Roll-Away Beds End Tables Coffee Tables Unfinished Chests Lamps Occasional Chairs Chroma Sets Mattresses Box Springs f) Hoover Vacuums 0 Small Appliances t) Extra Chroma Chairs f) Guns f) Ravarewara Oven.are Aluminumwaro Some Tools Step Ladders Adj. Steel Ironing Boards Lawn t Garden Tools Miscellaneous FREE GIFTS GIVEN AT EACH AUCTION 2 BIG AUCTIONS DAILY 2 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. 7:30 ta 10 P.M. Each Evening TERMS MAY BE ARRANGED... MARSHALL-WELLS Store JACK FARISS & SON Remember, It Begins Monday, 2 PM ROSEBURG, OREGON STORE IS NOT COINGOUT OF BUSINESS Every article sold at Auction is Gjaranteed same as though you bought It privately at our store.