10 Th Newi-Review, Roseburg, Ore. Thurs. July 18, 1957 elrose Man Sees Cousin After 50 Years Separation By NETTIE WOODRUFF Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Conn of Mel rose recently spent several day in Everett, Wash., with his cousin, Alex Conn, whom they hadn't seen in 50 years. Alex was a former lo cal resident and a son of the late Harmon Conn. Resident Moves Wallace Murdock left Saturday for Portland to reside with his niece. Mrs. Fred Miller, and fam ily, who were here for several days Circuit Court Divorct Decraet JURESII Nellie M. vs. Jo seph Jurcsh. Divorce granted. WHINSHIP Mary B. vs. Le Roy Winship. Divorce and title to car granted to plaintiff; de fendant to pay a certain bill. Divorce Complaints BERTUCCI Betty Mao vs. Charles H. Bertucci. Married in Reno, Nev., July 8, 1953. Charges cruelty and asks return of former name, Collins. MORAN Patrick J. vs. Ann Helen Morgan. Married at Scaview, Wash., June 15, 1941; two children. Charges cruelty. Asks for cus tody of children and full title in real property and logging equip ment. Decree Ulah R. Winston vs. Winston Davidson and Martha E. McNabb. Plaintiff's title in real property cleared and defendants barred from any claim. Judgment Goldie V. Blondell, conservator, vs. Oscar Wroe. Plaintiff awarded $5,131.18 upon default of defendant. Dismissal Stanley Anderson by guardian vs. Joseph M. llcidrick. Complaint Martin Suksdorf vs. Delmar H. and Mary Anne Reeves. Asks for foreclosuro of contract for real property and recovery of $470.52. Subcommittee Okays Cowboy Hall Of Fame WASHINGTON Wl A House Interior subcommittee approved this week a Senate-passed bill ex pressing congressional recognition of a national cowboy hall of fame and museum as a memorial to Western pioneers. The proposed hall of fame is planned for Oklahoma City, where a 37-acre site has been provided by Oklahomans. The project is jointly sponsored by 17 Western states. The committee was told that no federal funds will be neoded and that the project, estimated to cost about five million dollars, will be built by popular subscription by citizens of Western stales. Reps. Albert and Morris, Okla homa Democrats, and Berry, South Dakota Republican, testi fied in support of the bill. Other members of the Oklahoma dele gation, along with Rep. Dempsey (D-NM), submitted statements fa voring the legislation. assisting him in moving. Also as sisting in moving were Mr. and Mrs. Don Prather of Portland. Mur dock recently sold his home to the Elmer Pierces after having resided in it for 68 years. He came here with his parents in 1889. The Pierces are doing some remodel ing on the house; enlarging the liv ing room, building a bedroom and bathroom. They are being assist ed by their son, Cecil Pierce, and Woodrow Nielsen, a son-in-law from Grants Pass. Mrs. Ivar Lindstrom is in Doug las Community Hospital recovering from back injuries suffered when her car went out of control on Mel rose Road Friday night. Airs. Bob Tjumsland, Mrs. J. S. Stidham and Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Conn were among local residents going to Eugene Saturday to at tend the wedding of John Marvin Robertson. Mr. and Mrs. 0. 0. Matthews vis ited the Lou Holtzmans in Reeds- port Sunday and with other friends in coos Bay. Sunday guests at the George snowers noma included his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Rosen hall, Rcedsport; His sister, Mrs. Bessie Hortlund and two grand daughters, of Bellingham, Wash ; Mrs. Marvin Radder and four chil dren of Forks, Wash. Roland Check fished Thursday at Miamond Lake with the Rev. Kalnl: Branum of Olympia, Wash., who with his wife and family was en route to Texas to live, after a short visit here. Mr. and Mrs. Merle Davis and family of Newport are snending several days this week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. I. C. Smith Brian Pargeter is acting as jun ior counselor at YMLA Camp at Diamond Lake this week. Weekend guests at the Eli Sand ers home were Mr. and Mrs. Wal ter Harnett of Hlackwell, Okla Mrs. Sanders and Harnett are first cousins. The travelers had been in California. Mrs. K. L. Conn and Mrs. Leon ard Cooper drove to Keedsnort Fri day to get the latler's daughter, Lora Belle, who had spent the weeK Willi the Butler family. The Clarson Chitwood family camped and fished at Diamond Lake over the weekend. Their son, Andy, is spending this week at the YMCA Camp there. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Myers spent the weekend at coastal points. Seaman Ronnie Rogers, who is on leave from Navy duty aboard the u&s seadevil, ss 400, is visiting at the David Schrader home. Rog ers has been In Japan. Hong Kong and Manila. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bursik of Coos Bay spent the weekend here with his brothers, Tony and Emer-ik. MUESUM REVIVED CANYON CITY I Two East ern Oregon communities, with the aid or a prominent stockman. have revived the Grant County Historical Museum, closed last fall when voters rejected a tax levy to support one of this area's top visitor attractions. Northwest Sends To Korea All Lumber For US Forces Current shipments of lumber to Korea for use hy United States armed forces are being supplied entirely by Pacific Northwest pro ducers, according to a letter re ceived from the Department of the Armv by Jtep. Charles O. Porter (D-Ore). The letter from the office of the secretary of the Army, which was in answer to a request by Porter for information on such purchases, noted that "lumber purchase as signments are made on the basis of ultimate delivery point mid, due to Far East requirements, have re sulted in tho Portland purchasing office placing HO per cent of the total quantity principally with pro ducers in the Pacific Northwest." The letter goes on to say that "current Korean shipments are be ing supplied 100 per cent by Pa cilic Northwest producers." Porter had written to l.t. Col. Donald T. Kellett. chief of legisla tive liaison at the Army Depart ment, asking him specifically where the bulk of the 500 million board feet of lumber a year that the De partment of Defense uses is pur chased. He further asked where the Army Has purchasing the 10 to 15 million board feet per month for shipment to Korea which Col. Kel lett had earlier mentioned to Port- Porter had originally proposed to the Department of the Army, in view of the present low price of lumber on the market, that the Department of Defense set up a stuekpile program for lumber and lumber products. He noted that the stockpile could provide, not only for defense needs in this country, but could help to meet commitments overseas. In his reply, Colonel Kellett not ed that "the Department of De fense has stockpiled lumber during periods of emergency. However, experience proved that such a pro gram was not practical or economi cal for peacetime use because of storage costs, increased handling and shipping cosls, and losses due to deterioration while in storage." Kellett said the present policy of "maintaining a 00-day stock of lum ber at each using installation has been found to be the most economi cal method of meeting military re quirements." In response to a further request from Porter, tho letter from the Department of tho Army said that "it is questionable whether defense purchases in themselves would al leviate the depressed economic sit uation appreciably since our re quirements are minor when com pared to total overall lumber pro duction. " Two Teachers For Glide Area Sought By Superintendent By MRS. ARTHUR SELBY Hairy llarvie. superintendent of Glide schools, spent Friday and Saturday at the University of Ore-1 gon, Oregon State College, and the Oregon College of Education at Monmouth, seeking a special educa tion director for Glide and a teach er for the first through third grades at Toketee Falls. He was unsuc cessful. New Teachers Arrive Mr. and Mrs, Harry Harvie host ed Mr. and Mrs. John Bigelow Sunday, showing them the Glide schools and took them on a tour of the North Umpqua Area. Bige low has been signed as in strumental music instructor for Glide schools and Mrs. Bigelow will be high school librarian. Bige low was recently released from two years service in the Army, sta tioned at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., where he taught in the music school. Before entering the Army, he was band director at Oakland. Mrs. Bigelow was librarian at the same station. Both are attending summer school at University of Oregon. Major and Mrs. R. P. St. John and three sons of Santa Ana, Calif., left Saturday after a two day visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ar nold Dupont. Arriving at the home of Mrs. Elaine Ash for a week's visit were three nieces. Hose Strickland, Dol ly Piwarchuk, and Clodene Ham mond of Portland. Her sister, Airs. Alary Strickland, brought the girls down from Portland and spent the weekend. Air. and Airs. Theron Alorton and son, Donovan, of Roseburg, and their house guest, Aliss Virgin ia Pisco of Salinas, Calif., spent the weekend camping and fishing at Baker Park. S-P3 Alorton was discharged June 21 at Fort Ord, Lain., after three years service in the Army, 16 months of which was spent in Korea. Attend Game Glide residents attending the American Junior League game at Eugene Saturday were, Air. and Airs. W. F. Eswino, Airs. Carl Messing, Mr. and Airs. Elbert Oi lers, Air. and Airs. Dick Smith Sr. and Air. and Airs. Jack Forsythc. .Mr. and Mrs. Louis Pugh. .Mich ael and Patty, accompanied by Air. and Airs. Ralph Aloore of Mel rose, spent the weekend camping and fishing at Charleston. The maintenance men of Glide schools work all summer except for a two weeks vacation. They have finished painting the interior of the gym, varnished the seats, and re finished the gym floors. They have also painted the hails of the grade school and some of the classrooms and the concrete floors of the cafe teria and rooms in the basement. At present, the men are rebuilding the steps on the old grade school building. Superintendent Harry llarvie reports bids have been called on brush painting the exter ior of the gym. Conservation Reserve Program Is Available It's not too early for farmers to begin planning for their participa tion in the conservation reserve of the Soil Bank, according to J. F. Bonebrake, chairman of Douglas County Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Committee. Conservation reserve contracts to be come effective in 1958 are expected to be available to farm ers during the early fall. The conservation reserve offers farmers an opportunity to make a change in their farming operations and divert a part ot all of their cropland to adapted soil, water, forest or wildlife conservation use. Farmers who take part in the program sign contracts in which they agree to take a designated acreage out of crop production and devote that land to conservation uses. Since the land put in the re serve is taken out of production for a period of years and is not harvested or grazed, most farm ers want plenty of time to make their, plans. In return for putting land in the conservation reserve, a farmer re ceives two kinds of payments. One is to pay the major part of the cost of establishing locally ap proved conservation measures on the reserve land. The other pay ment is an annual payment for each year of the contract. I Handicapped Brothers Make Living By Blending Talents TB Hospital Studies Commitee Appointed SALEM W The slate Board of Conlrol Tuesday appointed a five-member advisory committee to study the question of whether Oregon should close one of its three tuberculosis hospitals. The hospitals are located in Salem, Portland and The Dalles. It has been proposed that the hospital at The Dalles be con verted to some other use. Members of the committee arc: Ed Kaen, Oregon City publisher; Circuit Judge Donald E. Long, Portland; Turn Humphrey, editor at large of The Oregon Journal, Portland; Airs. I. E. lletvin, Port land; and former state Hep. Rus sell Hudson. The Dalles. The board also approved expen diture of $2,500 to build a canteen at the Alael.aren School for Boys at Wood burn. ARMORY SITE OKAYED SALEM Wl Permission to lo cate the new Salem armory on the State Fairgrounds was grained Monday by the state Fair Hoard. The National Guard Armory, authorized hy the 1957 Legislature, would bo available for fair pur poses. MISSION LEAVES JAKARTA i.fl A government mission left for the North Celebes capital of .Meuado Wednesday to try to bring the rebellious East Indonesian area back under the conlrol of the central government in Jakarta. WAREHOUSE SALE SAVE NOW WAREHOUSE SALE SAVE AREHOUSE SAL STILL GOING ON!! NEW AND USED APPLIANCES SAMPLE SAVINGS! NEW 1957 AUTOMATIC WASHERS Reg. 350.00, now . . . $250 NEW 1957 AUTOMATIC DRYERS Reg. 300.00, now ... . $230 USED AUTOMATIC WASHERS As low as $20 RANGES Many Makes and models now as low as $20 REFRIGERATORS As low as $25 Flocd H Z Ave. 1 HURRY WHILE SELECTION l a VII I A A AMII Cocn Supply O 5 1 ILL OUUU!! Budgtf ttrma arranged. Sorry, no ttchangci r rttundt, all taltt final at fhtta dtep cut pricai. HOURS: 12 Noon to 9 P.M.' Daily V M 3 O . t a Park on Mill St., walk in to tale. Judge Misses The Humor In 'Need A Light' Joke EXMOUTH, England Wi -Charles Woolacott, 49, was fined 25 pounds (S70) -Monday for giv ing a lighted match to a zoo ba boon. Witnesses testified the baboon snatched an unlighted cigaret from Woolacott, who then lit a match and handed it to the ani mal, saying: "You'd better have a light, too." The baboon was burned on the knuckles. Woolacott was convicted of "causing an animal unnecessary suffering. " SPOKANE, Wash Vfi Richard .McCollim has lost his sight and Darrell Brown can't use his legs, but hand in hand they do pretty well together. The sightless McCollira operates a radio and television repair shop. Brown, who gets around in a ; wheel chair, paints signs next J door. . A reporter who checked up to jday on word of their cooperative i setup found McCollim, 26, finger ling the parts of a broken car radio. Brown, 44, was out painting signs. Blend Talents," Handicaps They blend talents with handi caps as normal routine. "I provide the beef and brawn in the sign painting," McCollim said. "I can't see and he's not strong. He tells me where to move the signs and I do it. I also do the carpentry work and round up a little business." For his part, the crippled Brown drives the sightless McCollim around town to do on-the-spot re pair work, wheels off on an oc casional neighborhood errand and keeps track of his misplaced tools. They figure they come out about even. Brown was stricken with polio at the age of 40. He has an ice cream shop on Spokane's North Side but sign painting is his long suit. When McCollim moved in next door, the boys got together. McCollim started going blind in the fifth grade. A severe case of arthritis was responsible. Now he is totally blind in one eve, can distinguish only light from dark in the other. Unwilling To Retire Unwilling to retire from a norm al life, he took up radio and tele vision, learned to play the saxo phone and accordian. After the grades, he attended a vocational school and was able to absorb enough of the teacher's notes and textbook material to get hy before darkness finaly closed in. Now he has transcribed techni cal data from the books to Braille dots on plastic cards, j McCollim lives with his parents I six blocks down the street from ! his shop. Six days a .week he i shuffles along the sidewalks to and from work without benefit of cane or guide dog. "They're too much trouble," he said. "I know where' all the ob stacles are. There are bicycles around the barber shop and I know about where to expect the tricy cles. Four families along the way have 'em., My biggest trouwe is tne lawn sprinklers that reach to the side walk. I often come home soak ing wet. Walk right into the water. McCollim has become as skilled walking home in the dark as he is repairing his sets. Once at a clinic sponsored by a manufactur er he won a speed contest from sighted rivals assembling a T-V. His biggest on-the-job problem is checking picture tubes in home calls. He has to bring along his mother, his girl friend or Brown to check the visual quality. Reporter Watches The reporter watched him use a soldering iron on a high fidelity set he was overhauling. The work manship was precise and neat, the soldered joints Solid. "I got a lot of burned fingers at first but I mastered it," he said. "Now I dampen the metal, lay the solder in place and put the soldering gun underneath. When 1 hear the sizzle, I know I've got it." Under terms of the cooperative setup, McCollim hustles business for Brown who wants to quit the !ice cream shop to paint full time : McCollim helps install the signs, calls clients and has picked up jobs for Brown from realtors ; and cafes. Mrs. Brown, a mother of two children, said she is constantly amazed at how their talents mesh. 1 "It's a wonderful partnership." THIRD ON COAST PORTLAND W Portland ranked 26th in the nation and i third on the Pacific Coast in com I mercial airiine passenger opera tions last year, the Port of Port : land reports. j Some 320.000 persons boarded ! planes and there were 23,041 com i mercial airline takeoffs at the : Portland International Airport in ! 1956. NAMED FOREMAN PORTLAND Wl Victor Bacon, Portland, has been named fore man of the Pellon Hydroelectric Project by the Portland General j Electric Co. j The 25-mi!lion-dollar dam on the i Deschutes River in Central Ore gon is more than half finished. Rosehurg's Exclusive WEEK-END SPECIALS FRESH CAUGHT WHOLE REX SOLE LING COD ib. 35 ib. 25c afDADC Small, Medium Qflr LKAO Cooked In Roseburg Large, Jumbo Ib. OUC SMOKED SALMON - FRESH SALMON STEAKS STORE HOURS Mon.-Fri. 9-6; Sat. 9-9; Closed Sundays Hls'B S3 BP & P1K NEW OWNERS Lee and Alice Wilkins 1531 N. E. Stephens St Ph. OR 3-5012 E Erf I ft? M WHY DO YOU READ THE NEWSPAPER : COPNhGHr 18i, BUKr.AU Of ADVERTISES OF THE AM!3:C.N NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION, INC A n m p -vtt3"A v te.&? w .' '-via Xhu t-w v 7 I ,,,, "Vh V) s 1 J '""N 7 sit down with the paper every day to read it and look for ads on things I need.. ." Morn in j, noon or nii;ht. rtiiv tl.iv of the neck, in the house or out. t lie newspaper re mains to be rc.nl -anil shopped nt the reader's convenience. Some folks like to read their newspapen before bed. Others relish them with the morning coffee. 1 his is one of the great pluses for an ad crtiscr as so m.tnv advertisers well know. An ad is read bv newspaper readers xclien lite readers feci like it. I here is no intrusion upon the readers' time and i lieu-lot c no re sentment bv the piospcciivc customers. I he conv enience appeal of newspapers is one reason why people pay oer 000,000 a day for the privilege of reading and shop ping from more than 57,000.000 newspapers daily. People like to ponder over a potential purchase . . . and the best place to ponder is in the newspaper. Whatever yon sell, wherever you sell it -nationally regionally or locally - you'll get mot e help selling it through the daily news paper . . . where people find time to listen 10 vour storv. - j'!.,-1 imns ,,f t -s ,; ( f.tr Their ; rri i." (i tiiil conducted feir neieijh:piis bv Vuiu Research, Inc. PuMM-nl in the interest i-vf ninf r'Ttvtivc .idmtMne l WAREHOUSE SALE SAVE NOW WAREHOUSE SALE SAVE o