Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1957)
Glendale Residents Escape Serious Injury In Accident By MRS. GERALD FOX Mr. and Mrs. Dean Smith of Glendale escaped with minor bruises from an accident which completely wrecked their new car Thursday evening. The two were driving north ou Highway 99 at about 7:30 p.m. when they went into a skid on the bridge just above the Pleasant Valley-Merlin cut-off Road. The car spun into the opposite lane of traffic, striking the front of a south-bound car. The other car re ceived considerable damage, but the Smith vehicle, with only 19 miles on the speedometer, was a total loss. However, insurance will cover its replacement. Mrs. Smith received several se vere bruises. Her husband was not seriously hurt. Attends Junior Callage Doyle McCaslin of Glendale is attending the Yuba City Junior College in Marysville, Calif., study ing under the GI Bill. He is work ing toward a degree as junior draftsman. At the present, McCas lin is staying with his parents, the R. A. McCaslins in Marysville, and his wife is remaining for a time with her mother, Mrs. Fred Wil liamson in Glendale. Gladys Vincent of Glendale un derwent an appendectomy at the Forest Glen Hospital in Canyon - ville last week. Paul Carr, manager of the Hen ninger Store in Glendale, is re ported very much improved at the Forest Glen Hospital in Canyon ville. Carr recently underwent emergency surgeryfor perforated ulcers. Mrs. Irene Handley and her 2-year-old son were released from the Myrtle Creek hospital Friday. The two were hospitalized for 11 days following the accident at Tri City which took the life of her hus band, Arthur Handley. Mrs. Charlene Burke of Glendale has been ill at her home this week with flu. Drive To Medford Mr. and Mrs. Bill La Prath, Mrs. Henry La Prath, Mr. Henry Gaed ecke, and Mrs. Pete Smith, all of Glendale and Azalea, drove to Medford recently to attend the Friendship Night meeting of the Medford Eastern Star. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gosset of Glendale enjoyed a visit last week from her brother-in-law, Don Niel son of Cozad, Neb. He also visited cousins in Eugene. Among the successful hunting WANTED Walnut Drying 114 Per Pound HENRY & ROADMAN Umpqua, Oregon Sarties near Bly early in the unting season were Mr. and Mrs. Bill Winkleman of Grants Pass, Al Winkleman, Mr. and Mrs. Dutch Winkleman, and Bob Winkleman, all of Glendale. Bob and Dutch Winkleman were each successful. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Barton of Phoenix, Ariz., are spending a week with his brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Dutch Win kleman in Glendale enroute home after spending the summer at Port Orford. Elaine Monfils and Shirley Rass mussen, who graduated from Glendale High School last spring, left recently for St. Paul, Minn., where they will stay with Miss Monfils aunt for a time while they look for work. Hospital News FIRE! OR 2-2644 POLICE: OR30&633 MONEY: OR 3-6668 664 S. E. Stephens, Roseburg Mercy Hospital Admitted Surgery: Mrs. Marion Fortune, Roseburg; Mrs. William Lewellen, Yoncalla. Medical: Mrs. Jack Bright, Idle yld Park; Mrs. Stella Marr, Bar bara Davis, Wendy Rowland,' Kar en Martin, Mrs. Mabel Castle, Roseburg. Discharged Joseph Halford, Mrs. James La vin and baby, Nancy Mary; An drew Drager, William Carter, Wil liam Fummerton, Mrs. Gene Chas teen and baby, Michael Eugene; Mrs. Charles Neavoll and baby, Lora Ruth; Mrs. Ivan Sigfridson and baby, Lanny Karl, Roseburg; Mrs. Alva Stephens, Daniel Hold er, Sutherlin; Mrs. Clarence Gan gle, Winston; Mrs. Albert Haines and baby, Tony Ray, Dillard; Wil liam Fullmer, Oakland. Douglas Community Hospital Admitted Surgery: Mrs. Oral Harris, Ron ald Parr, Mrs. Joseph Sojka, Mrs. Ralph Steele, Roseburg. Medical: Mrs. Ralph Swinton, Mrs. Fred Walther, Mrs. Elbert Harvey, George Winterfcld, Rock Robinson, Mrs. William Chalmers, John McWhorter, Mrs. Robert Toews, Mrs. Donald Chasleen, Roseburg; Levern Campbell, Oak land; Mrs. Leonard Clifton, Can yonville; Mrs. Bruce Emert, Mrs. Roy House, Harry Bradshaw, Win ston. Discharged Edna Turner, Mrs. Richard Cal lis and baby, Andrea Bee; Trudy Esselstrom, Patricia Evans, Mary Farnsworth, Mrs. Gary Benson and baby, Gary Robert Jr.: Harvey uiDson, Mrs. Ural ' r reemyer, Stephen Bonebrake, Gary Bault, Mrs. Vernon Tracy, Mrs. Edward Pollack and baby, Patricia Ann; Mark Axtell, Roseburg; Tony Green, Mrs. Virgil Osborne and baby, Rita Marie; Diffie Helms, Winston; Carley Forney, Mrs. Thomas Bean and baby. Brock Mathew; Geraldine Robinson, Suth erlin; Men Langeberg, Seattle; Sharon Steele. Riddle: Mrs. Arne Wiljamen, Oakland; Mrs. Eugene Marshall, Mrs. Roy Stone, Myrtle Creek; Mrs. Roger GUlett, Glide. Siamese Twin Babies Pose Surgery Problem WELLINGTON, Tex. I Guad alupe and Raguel Estrada, Sia mese twin girls born here Satur day, were reported doing well at St. Joseph's Hospital on a diet of glucose water. The twins, who weighed T pounds 3 ounces together at birth, are joined at the chest and abdomen. Their mother, Mrs. Lina Estrada, 38, of Donna, Tex., is an itinerant farm worker. She has eight other children. Doctors are making tests to see if the twins can be safely separated. Forced-Down Flier Tells How Ice Coated His Plane GALVESTON, Tex. Texas flier William Wyatt told his em ployer by phone Saturday he made a aeaa suck lanaing auer the engine of his small plane quit near the coast of Spain. Wyatt received only minor bruises, he told Hal Rachel, whose firm made the Mooney Mark 20 plane at Kerrville, Tex. Wyatt said his plane began pick ing up ice over the coast of Spain. He climbed to 10,000 feet but the icing worsened and he began los ing altitude. He put on arctic gear and prepared to ditch. He spotted the fishing boat and was circling it when his engine quit. After landing he stood on a wing but the wake of the boat knocked him into the water. He was picked up in about IS minutes. The boat hooked onto the plane and towed it into Coruna where it was beached. He said the plane appeared to have only minor damage. Explosion Of Artillery Shells Routs Residents PIEDMONT, Ala. tfl Scores of artillery shells in a burning freight car exploded at intervals during the early morning hours here Monday with more noise than damage. No injuries were reported, but around 200 residents were evacu ated from their homes as a safety measure. Sixty tons of 105 millimeter shells were in the car, which caught fire as a Seaboard Airline freight eastbound from Birming ham pulled into Piedmont, about half way between Birmingham and Atlanta. Trainmen discovered the blaze quickly and risked their lives to detach the car from the other two ammunition-carrying cars next to it. Shells began exploding as the blaze progressed. Rachel said Wyatt would decide Monday whether the plane can be flown. If it is flyable he will take It to Paris and then to Galveston. He cannot remove anything from the plane until the salvage ques tion is settled. The British and U.S. consuls are working on tins, Wyatt said. Wyatt said he was only 850 miles from Rome with plenty of gaso line to make it when he was forced down. He bad altered his course to fly south instead of entering over Bordeaux, France, after a wind report from Gander, Newfound land, indicated this was a better route. Ants From Japan May Join Food Items In U. S. . TOKYO Wl Chocolate-coated ants may be catching on as a delicacy in the United States, but there's no market for them in Jap an. The "ant king" of Japan admits it. He's Taichi Ishikawa, head of the Alps Provision Co., ant export ers. The chocolate-coated insects are appearing in U. S. stores that stock such articles as rattlesnake meat and roasted bumblebees. Ishikawa says he thought it was pretty silly when he got the first inquiry about chocolate ants; up to then his market was largely in plain fried red ants. "We've managed to make them taste good," he says. "Americans like them." The processing is done in Ishi kawa's jam factory. The ants are fried first, then coated. The ants come from highlands around Nagano where they have plagued residents for years. FHA District Session Slated At Drain High Plans are under way this week to prepare for the South Coast District Conference of Future Homemakers of Amer ica at Drain High. The conference is scheduled at the school Saturday, Nov. 2. The all day meeting will start with 8:30 a.m. registra tion. The first session gels un der way at 9:30. Featured speaker at the noon lunch will be Jadwiga Cybulska, speak ing on her home life in Po land. The morning sessions will consist of buzz sessions and a panel discussion by slate offi cers. Skits will be presented in the afternoon by different chap ters. They will portray some phases of FHA. Girls of all chapters will then present a style show, modeling clothes they have made. Attending will be girls from Coos, Douglas and Curry Counties. 12 From Douglas High Attend FTA Sessions Twelve delegates from the Doug las High chapter of Future Teach ers of America attended the Ore gon FTA convention at Southern Oregon College in Ashland' Friday and Saturday. Ellis Vance, presi dent, and Judi Costelloe, vice-president, were the two voting dele gates. The other representatives were Ruby Ann Vance, Jo A n n Thicle, Claudia Garrison, Pamctla Laurance, Davila Nichols, Karen Owens, Ronnie Dowdy, Jack Mc Lennan. Marilyn Hull, Bonnie Ward, Miss Laura Grubbs, chapter adviser, and Mrs. Lauren Costel loe. , , SUBMITS LOW BID SALEM un Robert D. Morrow, Salem contractor, submitted a $96,229 low bid last week for con struction of a pre. school unit at the state School for the Deaf in Salem. There were seven bidders. Freshman Claims Title Of Homecoming Queen Terri Jones, petite, brunette freshmen, was Canyonvilie High School's homecoming queen over the weekend. The young daughter of Mrs. June Jones was crowned with the traditional helmet at a bon fire rally Thursday night by Jer ry Carson, football captain. The team then went en Friday to blast Elkton. The young girl resigned at the game and again at the annual homecoming ball Friday night in the Youth Center. Roseburg IR League Invited By Governor Roseburg High School's Inter national Relations League has received an invitation from Gov. Robert D. Holmes to attend the United Nations Day reception Oct. 23 in Salem; - The reception will be held in the Governor's office at 1:30 p.m. Roseburg Annual Staff Working On Book Theme The Roseburg annual has a staff of nine now, headed by Judy Mc Daniel, editor. The staffers now are working on the project of choosing a theme for the yearbooks. Despite the early stage of production, about 900 of the book3 have already been sold. The first deadline is early December. Recently speaking to the staff was a representative from the Tay lor Publishing Co. of Dallas, Tex as, who discussed themes and ideas for the production. WALLPAPER Colorcraft Paint and Wallpaper Sale on discontinued patterns 626 S. E. Con Ph. OR 2-2252 Vt Blk. Weit of Pait Otfice Mon. Oct. 21, 1957 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 3 Spokane Gas Line Repairs Progress SPOKANE (tf Spokane Natural Gas Co. employes continued their round-the-clock work Monday to eel service restored to some 10.- 000 families without fuel for heat or cooking since triday. Service was disrupted Friday when a 16-inch feeder line explod ed near Edwall, 30 miles west of here. The company turned off all outlets to eliminate any danger of further explosions. The cause of the initial explo sion, which ruptured the feeder line under Rock Creek, has not been determined. With the feeder line repaired, company servicemen have been working to get gas into each out let in some 10,000 homes and re lighting individual pilot lights for each gas fixture. Nathan H. Gellert Jr., presi dent of Spokane Natural, said the company expected to have serv ice restored to all of the 10,000 homes by late Monday night. He said the outage has cost the firm $13,500 a day in lost revenue and extra labor costs. Oregon-Born Educator, E, S. Evenden, Dies At 72 LONG BEACH, Calif, tfl Dr. Edward Samuel Evenden, a grad uate of Monmouth, Ore., Normal School, died here Saturday. The 72-year-old teacher was a professor emeritus of education at Columbia University. Evenden, who was born in Sheridan, Ore.; received his Ph.D. degree from Columbia, from which he retired in 1950. 86 proof and find out how a bourbon can be! You'll find 86 Proof Old Crow- is just as mild as your present brand of whiskey-with a superb taste only fine bourbon can offer! f4 95 43 q(. i-. OLD CfiOW DISTILLERY CO., FRANKFORT. KY., DISTRIBUTED BY NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORPORATION KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY u ROSEBURG JR. T?v Joserih Lane and Rosehure' Central .it m ANNOUNCE THE 21 ST ANNUAL MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTION CONTEST TUESDAY OCT. 22 THRU TUESDAY NOV. 7 INCLUSIVE SAVE YOUR NEW AND RENEWAL MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR THE STUDENTS OF THESE TWO SCHOOLS They will conduct a joint compoign. A generous commission on the Ladies Home Journal, Saturday Evening Post, Holiday, Jack & Jill and approximately ena hun dred other cooperating publishers, will be kept at home to kelp buy equipment, car ry on athletic programs and provide act ivities for the student bodies. m . m in pi i 9 Save Your Magazine Orders For The Student! 1 a . See '68's freshest new styling in the car that , t 'B' ' 'f'fif'J il 11 5s K 9 holds the official NASCAR le-a-mile-for-gas J If k , M t J'M -. 1 1 ilWC' I jl 1 - economy record. 4-Door Sedan illustrated.- 'J U fi.. J ? IXn Hi lUllrV 11 Jltf ", 'W-? K mJZfifiJL , jMlmsM-'' : b . tern JIMMH..... - mm C- ; letT- -rTrT?' . v)3(.' HH fiML.'I.WT' -'X 'A i .niv. r I I Il mi MK'-m I : ' am 4 4 m. - . .J. rtm. i-enWf , in VCH, RAMBLER REBEL yea Sparkling performance Bnd top V-8 economy in the compact Rambler that turns easier, parks easier, handles easier than any other American car. V-8 models feature self-cooling brakes, optional POWR-LOK anti-spin differential. ALL-NEW JhtthaAAadaL World's finest travel car, the luxurious all-new 270 H.P. Ambassador provides top V-8 performance with outstanding V-8 economy. The distinguished Ambassador Country Club Hardtop is illuatrated.The Ambassador is also available in hardtop and 4-Door station wagons and in 4-door sedan models. All-new I'owr-Saver fan optional. irH feki wQt N E W I Sleek new jet stream styling extends right through to. the beautifully sculptured rear fender lines. NEW! All-New Pushbutton-controlled Flash-O-Matic transmission, Overdrive or Synchromesh available. NEW I Distinctive Four Beam Headlights are standard at no extra cost on all 1958 Super and Custom models. GET THESE 7 BETTER DIFFERENCES 1. Fresh, distinctive jot stream styl ing. 2. The best .of both: Hif? car roomy luxury Small car economy. 3. Single unit construction. 4. Pen-ny-a-mila gas economy record. 5. Easiest parking. 6. Reclining Seats, Twin Travel Heds. 7. Lowest cost All-Sca.son Air Conditioning. See ths car that's first in resale value first in sales growth, too. See the all-new, stunning Rambler today. ONLY RAMDLER Gives You the Best of Both! IFrV " O AMERICAN Big Car Ktfc'C Room, Ride and Comfort EUROPEAN . Small Car I Economy, Handling Easa f.l IN y.-'.'hvA l.i :' A MILE , UON A - FOR CAS I ( ' NAeOA oortl-e wltn Ovirarwe AMERICAN MOTORS MEANS MORE FOR AMERICANS SEE THE SENSATIONAL NEW 1958 RAMBLER TODAY AT RAMBLER AT NASH AT HUDSON DEALERS UTNE BROS. 267 N. E. Jackson ORchard 3-5237