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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1957)
Circuit Court Judgments Alan Knudtson vs. Dave Moore. Plaintiff awarded $934. L'mpqua Plywood Corp. vs. Mvr tle Creek Building Supply, liic. Plaintiff awarded $2,017.07. Complaints P. L. Crooks and Co., Inc., vs. Al bert J. Firchau. Asks $2,626.52 al leged due on account. W. R. Cook and George B. Al len vs. Stanley, Wesley, and Or ville Denison and others. Suit to quiet title. FOR SALE RUG WASHING MACHINE Complete with Detergery and Advertising Mal arial Ph. OR 2-3956 Bokid Kthillwly WILLIAMS' under licenM by Nitloml Bikeil h $ioo cash m U IN : KATHY MMLOWeVI 4 PDf ing in BrS'" . r . "THE PAMMA m Mfe GAME" H M Warner Broi. - L' deduction Jm 11 BACil-TO-SCHOOL LAY-AWAY PLAN ON 3 TOTS TO TEENS 632 S. E. Jackson St. Free Delivery Phone OR 3-5056 Roy Clark has joined the Swing to Swept Wing! See Roy for a new Dodge, Plymouth or 1st Choice Used Car at Massive Rock Fall Kills 2, Injures 2 WOODLAND, Wash. W A massive fall of rock crashed down on workmen at Swift Creek Dam, 4U miles east ot nere. Killing two and injuring two others early Tuesday. Joe Hutchison, 46, Portland, and John Luker, 39, Cougar, Wash., were killed as 1,500 tons of rock broke loose above the main spill way at 12:30 a.m. They were in a rock drilling crew, which had been working suspended by safety ropes. As they finished their task and were coming down, the rock above started to let go, according to Jim .Margason, safety engineer for the project. A rock cut the rope of one of the men 'and he was plunged downward under the falling rock. Another of the victims had just taken off his belt and was ready , to leave when he was hit, Marga son said. The injured men were R. P. I Wilford, Cougar, arm Cuts, and j Rufus Moore, Cougar, head and ! side cuts. Neither was seriously , hurt. i .Margason said the rock fall might cause some delay in work i at the dam, but the extent was inot immediately determined. ' The victims were employed by Jonos-Tompkins Co., the dam con tractors. The deaths were the sixth and seventh in the course of construc tion of the dam, a project of Pacific Power & Light Co. Idea for tonight Hankering for iomethinn differ entfordinner tonight? Here'tian U)EA.-Holyvtood Special Form ula Bread. An original blend of 16 choice grain and vegetable floura, here's a wonderful flavor treat. Insist on the genuine. FREE! Hollywood Diet antf CHorte Guide. Authoritative. Profusely (Hut l rated. Send postcard to Eleanor Day, 100 W. Monroe SL. Chicago 3, Illinois ONLY ABOUT 46 CALORIIS IN AN 18 -OR AM SLICI y FO YOU by BAKERY Senrteti. Inc. Ctiicaio Mf!Zirftjk It J PACIFIC TRAIL JACEIEITS! Payment will hold any Pacific Trail Jacket until school starts Chooit ('on Surcotlt . . . Wiiif Ltnqtril . . Washiblai . . . . huq otiorimtnt off Back-to-School icktl In lK tilt nd color you'll wan. Ivda.tr Pricotl from 8.95135 SIZES 4 thru 14 BARCUS YOUR DODGE-PLYMOUTH DEALER N. Stephens at Garden Valley Rd. Phone OR 3-S566 Army Cutting Its Draft Call For September WASHINGTON I The Army announced Tuesday it is cutting its September draft call to 8,000 men, compared with a quota of 11.000 in August. A Defense Department an nouncement said "the lower level of calls reflects the decision to re duce the number of personnel in the armed forces, announced July 16 by the secretary of defense." Secretary Wilson said then that strength of the armed services would be cut by 100,000 over a six-month period. The Pentagon announcement emphasized that "draft calls for the army will not be eliminated in the near future because of the reduced strengths." The announcement added: "Some of the Army's 50,000 de cline in strength will be accom plished through stricter screening of its personnel, particularly those desiring to re-enlist. This tighten ing of standards is in line with the need for a higher quality force. The Army's highest priority needs are for the special skills of tech nical warfare. Also, the Army is anxious to prevent early fluctua tions in the training system." The 8.000-man call for Septem ber is the lowest since April 1958 From January through April of last year the monthly quotas re mained at 6,000. i A year ago, the September draft quota was 14,000. Bank Robberies Charged To Man SAN RAFAEL, Calif. I Wil liam Liebscher Jr., 39, well -groomed and prosperous appear ing used car salesman, was quiet ly arrested on a ear lot Monday night as a bandit who held up 14 California banks over the past 18 months. Harvey G. Foster, FBI special agent in charge, said Liebscher was identified as a bandit who took a, total of $28,465 in the 11 holdups, usually carried out after 4 p.m. on Friday afternoon. The FBI agent said Liebscher formerly worked as a bank teller in San Francisco and was well versed in bank procedures. Six of the holdups were in San Francisco, two in Los Angeles, and the others at Daly City, Fair field, Napa, Mountain View, Hav ward and Menlo Park, Foster said. San Francisco police said the holdup string, starting in San Francisco Feb. 23, 1956, was the longest series of bank robberies by one man in their memory. Bridge To Link Upper And Lower Michigan ST.'IGNACE, Mich. Ufi A giant triangle of steel was locked into place above the Straits, of Mack inac Monday night, linking the two main lowers of the bridge be tween the upper and lower penin sulas of Michigan. Ihe 130-ton truss was the final section needed to fill the gap over the deepest portion of the Straits, never before bridged. When 240-foot gaps between each of the two towers and shore are completed in two weeks, the five-mile link of the two sections of Michigan will touch both sides. The straits of Mackinac is lo cated between Lake Michigan and Lake Huron. The 100-million-dollar steel path way will reach 4.2 miles across the Straits when it opens for traf fic about Nov. 1. It is believed to he the World's longest total sus pension bridge. Reservists Temporarily Deferred From Draft Members of the military reserve branches who are serving satis factorily arc being temporarily de ferred by the Selective Service until new regulations are issued. The action is based on i proc lamation by the President. Draft ing of reservists registered under the draft laws are being "adminis tratively postponed until regula tions are received, provided that enlistment in the reserve com ponent is effected prior to receipt of orders to report for induction," states Francis W. Mason, deputy state director of selective service. Oregon Police Network Claims Statewide Scope SALEM i.fi Oregon's police teletype network became state wide in scope Monday with addi tion of stations in Baker, Bend, Pendleton and Klamath Falls. The network now has 35 stations and is used by 63 law enforcement agencies. The message center is in the state Motor Vehicle Department in Salem. 1 ,aT M li BACK HOME WHERE SHE'S MRS. Mrs. Mary Leoaa Gage Ennis, the deposed "Miss U. S. A." arrived home to the waiting arms of her husband, Air Force Sgt. Gene Ennis and their youngest son, Dovid, 2. They met her at Friendship International Airport at Baltimore along with about 100 others. If she had it to do over again, "No," she said she wouldn't again pose as a single girl. "I'm sorry, I didn't expect to win and if I had thought I had a chance I wouldn't have gone out there." She wouldn't talk to her local sponsors whom she says knew she was married and told her it was okay. (AP Wirephoto) Bulganin Sends England Letter Of Disarmament LONDON t Soviet Premier Bulganin has sent another long letter to Prime Minister' Macmil lan on the subject of disarma ment and other world problems. The letter is now being trans lated and studied, an official British source said. No details of the letter were disclosed immedi ately. The letter from the Soviet premier presumably was in reply to one from Macmillan a month ago urging agreement on a lim ited, first-stage disarmament pact to help prevent "the third and final tragedy of world war " Mac millan himself had been replying to a Bulganin letter. Despite concessions from bolh sides, the five-power disarmament talks in London have bogged down. One of the major poinis at issue is the conditions for sus pending nuclear tests while nego tiations for an agreement are worked out.' East and West are also opposed on just how long the suspension period should last. The U.N. disarmament subcom mittee, made up of the Uniled States, France, Britain. Canada and the Soviet Union, will resume its discussion Wednesday. Brewster Re-elected To Teamster Position SEATTLE Iff) Frank W. Brewster of Seattle was reflected president of Teamsters Union Joint Council No. 28. represent ing some 49.500 members in 45 locals in Washington and North Idaho here. He was unopposed and was named by acclamation. Brewster also heads the U-stale Western Conference of Teamsters, which earlier this month ordered the election. Among those elected to tho board of trustees were Bruce Lewis. Olympia; Charles Jewell, Wenatchee, and Harry Satterlee, Tacoma. Fred Bowen of Seattle, Frank Donovan of Everett and Verne Martin of Olympia were named to the policy committee. FUNERAL TODAY . Funeral services for Elsworth Robert Winters, Roseburg resi dent who died at a local hospital Saturday, were scheduled for 2 p.m. today. In an obituary in Monday's paper, Ihe name of a stepdaughter, Mrs. Vena Pearson of Oskalonsa, Iowa, was inadvertantly omitted. 4 DAYS TO GO-SANDERS SENSATIONAL SALE PRICES REDUCED DAILY! ONE GROUP Ladles Whit., b.is. Smooth Icoinan m tirl. Regular to 10.95 1 4 f?rA; ELKS' RULER Hobert U Blackledge was unanimously i elected Grand Exalted Ruler of the Benevolent and Protect tive Order of Elks at the or- : ganization's convention in San . Francisco. The 57 - year - old Kearney, Neb., lawyer, an Elk for 30 years, has pledged his organization to expand and con- ! tinue its welfare projects. i Climbing Party Scales Barren 12,000 Ft. Peak FORT WASHAKIE, Wyo. (A A seven-man climbing party has scaled a barren 12,000-fool peak in the Wind River mountains some 30 miles west of here. The feat was to establish a . timeless me morial to the men responsible for the oil industry in tho Rocky Mountain states. An advance parly came out of the rugged mountains Monday with word that the expedition, led by Walt Bailey, director of student personnel at Casper (Wyo.) Col lege and mountaineering instruc or, had claimed the unnamed mountain as "Petroleum Peak." Low Bid Is Submitted For Transmission Line j PORTLAND Wl A low bid of 322.713 was received for right-of-way surveys on the proposed 21 mile C'ougar-Lcahtirg .section of Ihe Cougar - Alvey transmission line. Allan & Hnltbuer, Inc., of Portland, made the low bid, the Bonneville Power Administration said Monday. The Cougar Dam power plant is expected to be completed in October, 11160, and the Cougar Alvey line is scheduled to go into operation then. ft w. 1 1 E ii li A, Y1 r -r i 1 1 tfk 4& So Heels J Pair Marines Injured Fighting Fire In New Jersey LAKEHURST. N.J. I Six Marines were injured fighting a roaring forest fire which threat-? ened a housing development and two factories before i t was I brought under control early Tues day. The hl:rR pntwnmpri 1 Hon imc of parched scrub pine and hard- wuuu. u was neciarea unaer con trol and almost out by Central Jersey Fire Warden Bernard C. Bartlett at 1:45 a.m. Three of the Marines, assigned to the Naval Air station here. imru negrec ourns. Thev were 1 laenuiied as Maj. E. E. Kaufer, commander of the Marine bar racks; Lt. Thomas F. Kelaher, executive officer; and Pfc. John Frederickson. No home towns were available. Three other Mnrinoc ,. treated at thp ha dismissfd. A wind shift saved the 500-unit Pine Lake Park housing develop ment near nere. ine Diaze also threatened, the Reid Manufactur ing Co. and tho Rnrratt A.-nhlt Co. A Navy fire truck was des- iroyeu. Two Roseburg Attorneys Taking Institute Course Two Roseburg attorneys, J. V. Long and Eldon Caley, are in New York attending a practicing law institute course. I.nnr' i Inlrinrf a ntia - uioaV course on estate planning and ad ministration. Caley will, attend two weeks, the first in studying meucai legal trial technique and the second in advanced study in the course. The two left here Saturday. Classes started Monday. FOR THE Well Dressed Window RAPERIES KIRSCH RODS AWNINGS WINDOW EBlILTTI k IlI NETIAN VERTICAL Bamboo & oer Wood Shades & Drcperies SCREENS AH Window Accessories Complete Measuring and Installation Service. FREE ESTIMATES BUDGET TERMS IF DESIRED ROSEBURG VENETIANS 214 S.E. Jackson Street Wi'n out to CLEAN HOUSE COMPLETELY that wo havo ihelf ipaco for our new and botttr lelection of tiioi and itylci to lorvo you better! Result . , . tolt merchandise RE DUCED STILL MORE to bring you the GREAT EST SHOE VALUES YOU'VE EVER SEEN! Space does not permit ut to list everything . t you'll find many other Items reduced com pararively. Don't mist thit great shoe tale. Be here when the doort open tomorrow , , only 4 days left! We reserve right to limit quantities. All items subject to prior sole. SHOE STORE 529 S.E. Jackson St. OR 2 Tuei. July 23, 1957 The Hard Labor Given In 'Sidewail' Case FL'CHIT. Janan A 9n.vaar. old American airman who object- eu io--geiiing a "white sidewail ' haircut has been convicted of dis obeying orders and sentenced to four months at hard labor. The airman, Donald Wheeler of Cortez, Colo., also was sentenced to lose $200 in pay and reduced to the rank of basic airman pri vate from airman third class. Wheeler contended that he had "challenged" an order to get a "white sidewail" haircut because he had received a regulation Air Force trim only the day before the order was given. A "white sidewail" strips the hair from the ears to the crown, leaving only a fringe on top. After the court - martial board returned its verdict, Wheeler ask ed: "Can you imagine anybody go ing to jail for not getting a hair cut?" The charges against Wheeler did not mention haircuts and the Air Force contended it was a "rou tine" matter of military discipline. Body Identified As That Of Missing Yakima Man REDDING, Calif, un The body of tlcne Burkeheimer was sent to Selah, Wash., Monday after rela tives identified it as that of the 28-year-old pilot who disappeared May 10 on a flight to Yakima, Wash. Coroner E. Duge Stanford said the identification was made by Berkhiemer's mother, and brot er. Glen, 23, both of Selah. Sheriff's deputies recovered the body from the wreckage of the flier's plane in heavy timber coun try about 45 miles northwest of here. He had taken off from the Hayward, Calif, airport. Custom-made at reasonable prices. Large selection of materials. Our price includes measuring and hanging. Traverse rods, cafe rods, curtain rods. All sizes for all types of installation. Flexalum best Guaranteed baked SHADES Complete 1)1 llllf Custom BLINDS BLINDS Featuring immr ONE GROUP LAUi" Wedges & Sandals for wtor ri9M Block - !-' ' Whitt Smooth loolhoii ana Regular to 8.95 COMPLETE LIQUIDATION ENTIRE MEN'S SHOE DEPARTMENT - 2532 Newi - Review, Roieburg, Ore. 3 Nasser Saluted For Three Hours With Russ Guns CAIRO un Egyptian President Nasser took the salute for three hours Tuesday while Soviet-built tanks and guns rolled past in a massive military parade on the fifth anniversary of the revolution which overthrew King Farouk. There were no great surprises in the arms display, although the proportion of Soviet-built equip ment was far greater than in last June's parade. Russian-supplied MIG fighters and Ilyushin jet bombers streaked across densely packed Republic Square at rooftop level. The air show was all Soviet. Unveiled for the first time in Egypt were Russian rocket launchers and rapid firing anti aircraft guns. Egyptian officers said the AA guns were used in the defense of Cairo against the British-French attack last fall. Missing from this year's parade were the big displays of French light tanks and British heavy tanks seen in previous years. Large numbers of these were casualties in the Israeli-British-French invasion last fall and are being replaced by Soviet weapons. Nasser reviewed the troops from a special platform with the army commander in chief and war min ister, Maj. Gen. Abdel Hakim Amer, at his side. On the main stand were Canadian Maj. Gen. E. L. M. Burns, commander of the U.N. Emergency Force, along with foreign diplomats and special Arab visitors invited to attend the four-day anniversary celebration. HEAT WAVE HITS NEW YORK W A heat wavs which hit New York several days ago sent the mercury up to 97 de grees at 3 p.m. Monday. It was one-tenth of a degree short of th all-time record set in 1926. quality aluminum enamel colors. stock, 4 prices ranges. - Made in our own shop " J the New Kirsch Vertical. Phone OR 3-5491 SAVINGS Pair 66 o