The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, October 21, 1957, Page 3, Image 3

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    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.
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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
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9
Save Your Magazine
Orders For The Student!
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