The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, November 21, 1957, Page 6, Image 6

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    6 The Newl-Review, Roiegurg, Or. Thurf. Nov. 21,1957
Local
News
Yoncalla Club Schedules
Date For Christmas Party
South Facing
Greatest Conflict,
Says Eastland
Jimmy Sullivan, ion of Mr. and
Mrs. J. H. Sullivan, has been ill
with flu and pneumonia and ia re-
turieu iu ub recovering ai m
iome.
Merlin Millar, Seattle, spent last
weekend visiting here with his par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Miller,
and with his fiancee, Miss Kath
leen Mchlhoff.
Mrs. Florence McK and Clif
ford Kristensen of Eugene spent
Sunday in Roseburg visiting the
former's son and daughter-in-law.
Mr. and Mrs. Paulus McKce, and
children, Carol and Dickie.
Miss Judy Ball, student at Uni
versity of Oregon, Eugene, spent
Saturday here visiting Miss Helen
Casey. Judy attended high school
here her senior year and made
her home with Miss Casey. '
Mrs. Frederick Chapman Jr.
and son, Judd, have left for Cen
tral Point to visit a few days with
Mr. and Mrs. George Adams. Mrs.
Adams is a sister of Mrs. W. F.
Chapman of this city.
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice J. Naw
land are back at their home in Lau
rel wood, following a trip to Seattle,
where the former attended the
board meeting of the Pacific North
west Kiwanis District.
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Sullivan
of Arnctt, Okla., have arrived
here for a visit with their son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
J. II. Sullivan, and with their son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
R. J. Sumpter.
Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Brown of
Eugene were weekend guests at
the C. R. Bartlett home. The
Browns are former residents of
Roseburg. E. E. Brown is wilh
the new City Drive-In Market in
Eugene.
A. L. Savall and son, David, to
gether with Joe Sojka, attended
the Oregon State-Stanford game
Saturday in Corvallis. While they
attended the game, Mrs. Sevall
and Mrs. C. V. Mintgomery at
tended to business in Eugene.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Honn
traveled to Mcdford Tuesday eve
ning to attend a dinner given by
the Southern Oregon Dry Cleaners
Assn. Honn was speaker and gave
highlights of the recent associa
tion at Pendleton.
Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Butenbarlc,
Mrs. Fred Goff, Mrs. Mayme Pick
ens and Mrs. Fred Herman made
the trip to Elkton Saturday to
attend a Rebekah Lodge con
vention. The former attended to
business In Scottsburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Holmgren
and sons, Steven and Stanley,
spent three days recently visiting
in Portland wilh Mrs. Holmgren's
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
george Lambert; Theresa Smith
at Newberg and Mrs. Saran Staats
Mrs. Holmgren's aunt, at Dallas
Richard Andrews was born to
Mr. and Mrs. Dick llennessy in
Taeoma, Wash., Oct. 6, according
to word received here by friends.
Mrs. llennessy was formerly Rose
burg City Recorder and Mr. llen
nessy was employed by Specialized
Parts.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul K. Ryan have
returned to their home on SE l.ane
Avenue, following a week in Port
land attending to business. They
returned home via the coast route
and stopped over in Nelscott for
a few days as houseguests of
friends.
Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Motichen.
bachtr of Roseburg went In Cor
vallis Saturday for the football
game and were Joined there by
Uieir son-in-law and daughter. Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Gerretsen, of
Roseburg, who had enjoyed the
week vacationing at the coast.
Ron McAneney, U.S. Navy, son
of Mr. and Mrs. L. P. MrAnonev
of this city, has left by plane for
Japan where lie will board the SS
tireenlel and go back to Pearl
Harbor where he expecls to finish
out his enlistment. McAneney re
cently relumed from assignment
in Adnk, Alaska.
Olive Smith, who has been a
telegrapher in Minneapolis, Minn.,
for 35 years, and her sister, Alice
Fuller, and the lalter's son, Hob,
of Albany, Calif., spent a couple
of days in Roseburg recently vis
iting their brother-in-law and sis
ter. Mr . and Mrs. W. J. Mulhol
Inncl, and wilh their niece, Mrs.
Alice Hopper.
By MRS. GEORGE EDES
Yoncalla Town and Country
Club met recently to make plans
for its annual Christmas party at
the Yoncalla Rod and lun
Dec. 13.
The club voted to give grocery
money to a needy family for
Thanksgiving. The next meeting
will be Dec. 4 at the home of Mrs.
Dixie Honuine.
The group met at the home of
Mrs. Charles Vian for a potluck
dinner. Mrs. Lucille t.ross ol look
ingglass was a guest.
Canadian Visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Boucock of
Calgary, Canada, are visiting
friends and relatives here for a
few days.
The Rev. and Mrs. Orin Chan
ner of the Yoncalla Assembly of
God Church have purchased the
Thomas property adjoining the
church.
Mr. and Mrs. Amon Roberts
have moved into the Stacy Adams
house in West Park Addition.
Word has been received from
K amath Falls of the arrival of
son, born to Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Flurv Jr. Nov. 8, This was also
Paul Flury Sr.'s birthday. The
father attended high school here
Son Born
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Allen have
announced the arrival of a son
James Ernest, born Nov. 15 at the
Cottage Grove Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Hutchins of
Portland are visiting at the rred
Scflon home. Mrs. Hutchins is a
sister of Mrs. Sefton.
Mr. and Mrs. William Skaggs
have purchased the Baughman
home south of Yoncalla and have
moved in. Mr. and Mrs. Baugh
man and family moved to Arizona
recently to make their home.
Mrs. Francis Bray, a returned
missionary from Japan, delivered
the sermon at the Yoncalla Mclho
Sunday morning. She told of cus-
NEW ORLEANS W Sen. James
ir.aMianu lu-missi says me auutn
toms of Japan and of her work faces its greatest domestic con
there. Dr. Bray sooke at the fid since 1860 because of what
Drain Church Sunday morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Steple-
Club ! man and family left Wednesday
for Nebraska where they will visit
relatives in Brewster and Broken
bow for a couple of weeks.
Undergoes Operation
Mrs. Kittie Jobe is recuperating
in the Community Hospital at
Roseburg following a gall bladder
operation Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer McKirdy
are the parents of a girl born at
the Cottage Grove Hospital, Nov.
14. The baby was named Emily
Sue.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Campbell and
daughter, Dawn, of Dallas visited
at the Ernest Sinnock home over
the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Cook Jr.
and sons, Bobbie and Johnnie, of
Grants Pass epent the weekend at
the Harold Phillips home in Hay
hurst Valley.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Quiglcy
and daughter, Barbara, of Rich
land, Calif., are visiting at the
Dare Kingcry home for a few
days.
Sutherlin High Senior
Play Deferred Indefinitely
The Sutherlin High School senior
class piny has been indefinitely
postponed because of recent illness
es at the school, reports Ray Hill,
senior class president.
The play was nriginallv sched-
uicu mis murviay and Friday at
the auditorium.
Drop Opposition
To Negotiations
With Reds, Advice
LONDON I George F. Kcnnan
urged the Western Allies last night
to abandon their opposition to bi
lateral negotiations with the Russians.
"Coalitions are poor negotiators.
particularly when anything posi
tive is to be achieved," said the
leading American expert on Soviet
affairs in the second of a lecture
scries he is giving over the Brit
ish Broadcasting corp.
The United States, Britain and
France have steadfastly rejected
ho viol suggestions lor u.b. -Russian
talks on major world issues.
The British and French fear such
bilateral negotiations would force
them into the back scat.
"I am sure the nconle of th
world would prefer that we make
some sort of progress privately
ratner man mat we continue lo
get nowhere in a scries of sterile
public demonstrations of Atlantic
unity," said Kennana, the former
U.S. ambassador to Moscow and
author of the West's containment
policy.
FIRE:
POLICE:
'MONEY:
664 S. E, Sfspheni, Roseburg
Coil
OR 2-2644
Call
OR J-u633
Call
OR 3-6668
Potato Council
Wants Better
Picture Of Stock
WASHINGTON I The Na
tional Potato Council sought
means Wednesday of obtaining a
more accurate picture of national
potato stocks during marketing
seasons.
This and reestablishing the non-
ularity of potatoes on the Ameri
can dinner table were among
problems before the ninth annual
meeting of the grower association.
Officials said (here is great
need for more reliable and fast
er distribution of information con
cerning movement of potatoes to
market and to diversion programs,
and about the quantity In stork
on farms.
Council Executive Director A E.
Merker said the Agriculture De
partment's crop reporting board
docs good work in its monlhly
crop forecasts, but that for order
ly marketing procedures the nrn.
dueers need more knowledge on
the actual movement of their pro
duce in trade.
He said the council hones al
this session to evolve methods of
rovidmg such information, possi
ly on a weekly basis. He said
distribution of the informal ion ob
tained probably would be through
trade journals and the Agriculture
Department s fresh fruits anil
vegetables division.
the council voted Tuesday In
instruct its policy coinmillee,
headed by Ted Still. Monte Vista.
Colo., to draft a resolution oppos
ing luriner luiures nailing in po
tatoes on the New York Mercan
tile Exchange. Growers have con
tended such futures trading ran
be used to fix or manipulate
prices. Proponents of futures trad
ing argue that it permits growers
to hedge against losses.
Secretary of Agriculture Benson
will address Thursdays final
luncheon session.
Gov. Faubus Won't- Order
Protection In Schools
SIIHKVEPOHT. l.a ..f - Gov.
Orval Faubus of Arkansas savs he
will not order state police or Na
tional Guardsmen in Arkansas to
guard anyone in school.
However, the governor said, Ar
kansas National Guardsmen will
have to carry out federal Integra,
lion enforcement orders or "thev
will be court-martialed at the-drop
of a hat."
Faubus told the Shreveiwt News
Club Ihe planned withdrawal of
federal troops loin Central llish
School at Little Rock was unfair
to guardsmen who will be left with
what he called Ihe distasteful task
of enforcement.
Bishop Carman To
Confirm Sunday At
Episcopal Church
The Rt. Rev. James W. F. Car
man, bishop coadjutor of the Dio
cese of Oregon, will be at St.
George's Episcopal Church, Rose
burg, lo administer the sacrament
of Confirmation Sunday, at both
the Sunday school and the late
services.
A class of children will be prc-
time and are presently mostisented at the Sunday school serv
aclive in Louisiana .and Virginia. jjce by the Rev. Alfred S. Tyson,
"But the flag is still flying in rector of the parish, and a class
Louisiana," he said, "and 20 years. r adults will be presented at the
from now the white culture will 'later jervice. which will begin at
instead of the usual
Aluminum Use
In United States
To Double By '65
Crippled Children's Benefit
Dinner Sunday At Scottsburg
I Reedsport.
Mrs. Joe Slagle and
Eugene wert recent
he called the Communist-inspired
and Communist-directed integra
tion issue.
Eastland and Gov. Marvin Grif
fin of Georgia spoke Monday night
at a rally of the pro-segregation
Citizens Council.
Integrationists, said Eastland,
wage their fights one state at a i
still be supreme."
Griffin said President Eisen
hower would never force school
integration with federal troops in
Georgia.
"The President," Griffin said,
"or no one else will ever march
citizens of Georgia down the1
street. If federal troops are evcrj
orougni in, ney n wain up an. ; d Confjrma,ion visit of Bishop
down in front of an empty school Carman , st GeorBe.s, and ,
nouse- seventeenth class prepared and
presented by the present rector. At
WILBUR PTA 4 p , Bishop Carman will go to
Wilbur - Winchester PTA will (Sutherlin to confirm a class to be
meet tonight at 7:30 at the Winches-'presented by the Rev. Albert E.
ter school. There will be a Boy ! Render, vicar of the Church of the
Scout speaker. I Holy Spirit in Sutherlin.
11:30 a m.
time of 11
A reception will be held in the
parish house honoring the new
members of the church as well as
the bishop. Arrangements are be
ing made under the direction of
Mrs. Ray Casebeer. and it will be
held about 12:30. This will be the
said Monday.
Joseph H. McConnell, general
counsel for Reynolds Metals Co.,
told a House Small Business sub
committee that annual U.S. alum
inum consumption probably will
reach 6,800,000,000 pounds by 1960.
In a prepared statement, Mc
Connell said there is no present
shortage of aluminum, and that
WASHINGTON I The United ; . .., , ui ueunPRSR
States will be using 10 billion " " " fc invited1 Mr- and
nnnnH, nf aluminum a vear bv Scottsburg Grange has inneu .. .
15. compared to a current an-'all Elkton friends to alter io . c-, a( tne Francis MoJe home
nual rate of less than half that. fit dinner Saturday for the crippiea Mr nd Mrj LeRoy MorgnU
an aluminum rnmnanv official Lniiurens iluMmm
Dinner will Be serveu .
grange hall from 5 to 8 p.m.
Luncheon Friday
The Women's Society of Chris
tian Service of the Methodist
Church invites the community to
its Thanksgiving luncheon triday,
at the Methodist Church from 11
a.m. to 2 P.m. A -ancy
and family of Eugene and Rev.
Donald Gibbs and family of Eu
gene were Sunday dinner guests
at the Frank Binder home.
nonage or aluminum, ana.inai,- from n.4i
mall, medium and Dig Dusiness i s evisors soil Conservation
meeting was held at the fciKion
i nrioR Hall recently. E. G. Dunn
can get all they need.
"The reason," McConnell said,
"is not to be found in any sudden
drop in consumption, but rather
in the steady and substantial in
crease in supply."
He said the total U.S. aluminum
supply "has increased from 2,400,
000,000 pounds in 1950 to 4.670.
000,000 pounds today, a jump of
95 per cent."
McConnell said peacetime uses
account for more than 90 per cent
of present consumption.
of Reedsport was recommended io
fill the unexpired term of Bert U
Roberts who recently resigned
when he moved to Springfield. J.
Rowland Parker of Roseburg and
District Soil Conservationist J i m
Wilson of Reedsport were present.
Mr. and Mrs. Delmer Wodell
spent last Saturday night at Ban-
S .. .. M....I.. Bn.nt
don ana arove io ujnn
Celebrates 75th Birthday
Frank Binder celebrated his 75th
birthday Friday in North Bend at
the home of his sisters, Mrs. Mary
Hart and Mrs. Millie Brown.
Mrs. Bill Hansen and Mrs. Jack
Gorman drove to Portland last
week. Mrs. Gorman spent the
weekend withjier daughter, Mrs.
C. W. Johnson in Newberg.
Mr. and -Mrs. Wcndel Weatherly
and family of Eugene were week
end guests at the parental Floyd
Weatherly home.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lowe and Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Albro attended
the smorgasbord given by the Bay
Side Grange in North Bend re-
Point ;cently.
Patterson of Patterson's
i ... iu.. ..nrn runner naiDn
r r.len Hutton Roseburg School of Dance will
home.
Mr. and Mrs.
meet at the grade school Nov. 25
seventeen 01 me M presioenis mr. aim mi. . """ " 1 , -h , hallei r tan
of the United States visited New-1 Sunday evening guests at the home of school l a e tor Ballet or tap
while holding office. lot Mr. ana Mrs. nerie t,uum -
I port, R
Sale Airline portable radio
with unbreakableTexon case
MAKES FINE GIFT
Dependable perform
ance. Compact, tough,
leather-like case.
17
Sale! Airline 4-transistor
radio-fits pocket or purse
2J88
ONLY $2.79 DOWN
Weighs only 22 oz. with
battery (extra). Sensi
tive reception I
FREE 100-hour battery with
Airline 7-transistor radio
ONLY $5 DOWN
We know of no better
performing pocket set at
any price I
49
Sale! Airline table radio
finest we've sold under $20
88
TERRIFIC VALUE
Wonderful gift! Modern
cabinet in chip-proof
mocha-brown color.
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U "-f M
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m ti Li La. Km
PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE
1 mss5$m
ROSEBURG,
OREGON
PHONE
OR 3-5553
TV o RADIO HI-FI
SALE PRICES AT WARDS MEAN REAL SAVINGS
BECAUSE WARDS EVERYDAY PRICES ARE ALREADY
LOW! COMPARE ANYWHERE-Y0U BE THE JUDGE!
Sale! 1958 Airline modern
lo-boy or Swivel-base 21
TV -compare at 269.95
ONLY $10 DOWN, $10 MONTH
Choose either the newly de
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quality at great
savings! Fine fringe-area re
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all controls! Tilted, tinted, re
movable safety glass. Alumi
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row slim-look cabinet! Two 5"
sound-up speakers. Mahog
any finish. Blond, $10 more.
'Overaff diagonal; 162 la. in. viewable area
SALE! Airline 17" portable
Easy to carry only 40 lbs.
11488
ONLY SS DOWN
$6 A MONTH
Convenient top-tuning for alt controls.
Full year guarantee on all tubes!
SALE! Airline 3-speed phono
Equal quality sells at 22.95
Certain fo moire
any child happy
1
Plays all size records. Protecto-Arm pick
upno damage to needle or records if
dropped. Slim-line case wcvhable case.
SALE Airline 4-speed phono
Equal quality sells at 29.95
2088
Ony 52.09 down
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Sale! Airline console
Hi-Fi with 3 speakers
plus FM-AM radio-phono
Powerful 17-wort amplifier
4-speed automatic changer
Power-Point cartridge
3 matched speakers-12" for rich
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highsl Mahogany veneer. Blond oak,
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Sale! Airline portable
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Equals name-brand hi-fi priced at
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