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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1958)
3 0, 2 Th Newi-Rtview, Roieburg, Leader Of Klan Charged With IncitTriei Riot Klaa Leader Charged With Inciting Riot LLMBERTON. N. C. i South Carolina Ku KIux Man lead- r nac mvlnrori In nrrpni T Ini av on a charge of inciting a not be - tween Klansmen and Indians. Sheriff Malcolm McLeod said that if the Kev. James Cole, 33, of Marion, S. C, did not meet the deadline, he would begin legal pro ceedings for his arrest in South Carolina. Cole describes himself as head of the Klan in both Carolina. A Robeson County grand jury composed of three Indians, two Negroes and 13 while men indict ed Cole and Klansman James Garland Martin of Reidsville, N C. Monday on charges of inciting riot. In addition, the grand jury ciled others of the KKK "unknown to the slate." The charge stemmed from the Klan'a short-lived rally Saturday as several hundred Indians, firing shotguns and rifles, drove the Klansmen from the site, near Max ton. 30 miles from here. Four per sons suffered slight injuries as the Indians fired mostly into the air and into the ground. State troop ers broke up the fracas. Authorities already had custody of Martin, a 37-year-old tobacco plant worker. Officers found him in a ditch after the shooting and charged him with drunkenness and carrying concealed weapons. GREENVILLE, S. C. I Elev en white men. some of them ad mitted Ku Klux Klansmen, come to trial today, charged in the flog ging of a Negro farmer six months ago. Solicitor prosecutor James Mann said he planned to cull the case a soon as Greenville Gen oral Sessions Court opened, with juage James m. nransiora presiu - Indictments charge all 11 with conspiring to commit assault and battery and conspiring to house break. In addition, five are charged with assault and battery and housebreaking. The victim waa Claud Cruell, 58. farmer, landowner and Baptist deacon. Winchester Bay Woman Dies In Local Hospital Mrs. Charles E. (Margaret An-1 Most of the day was spenUpie loinette) Bishop, 52, a resident of I viewing the Hair Fashions re W inchester Bay, died at a local ; lease or spring hair styles, hospital Monday following a pro- Douglas Countv was represent longed illness. ed by 18 beauticians. She was born Jan. 24. 1905. at Tacoma, Wash. She was married in Spokane on Feb. 7, 1931 to Charles E. Bishop. Mrs. Bishop came lo Oregon in 1W2, residing in Scio and Newport before moving lo Winchester Bay five years ago. She was a member of the Catholic Church. Surviving, beside the husband, are a Son, Edward E. Bishop, Win chester Bay; her father and step mother, Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Daller. Seattle; and four grand children. Funeral services will be held at SI. Joseph's Catholic church, where requiem mass will be held ' 9 a.m. Wednesday. Concluding services and Interment will follow III Hie Catholic Cemelerv. ' HiiKP. burg. Funeral arrangements are in charge of Long and Orr Mortuary. AUCTION LAND SALE AUCTION FEBRUARY II, 1 938 at 2:00 P. M. Tha Stare Highway Commission will otUr tor salt at oral public auction lo ba hld February l, "58 at 2:00 ?. M., all ot Loll 2S, 26, 27, 2(, 29, 30, 31 and 32, ot Block 16. ot tha Am.ndtd Plot of Plot "O" of tha J. F. Luia Company, in tha Cily ot Sulhorlin, Douglas County, Oregon, being locolod on tka N0aht.1t corner ot Control Avenue and Ash Street. Tha Irontoge on Central Avenue Is 200 tool and tha depth lo 110 teet with a 20 foot alley in Ihe roar. Tha lata will bo held an tha property. TERMS OF SALE: Caih. Tha minimum prica which will ba accepted is S2.S00.00. Conveyance will ba bv bargain and lata deed. Tha right is reierved to accapt or reject any or all bids. All at lha bid prica mutt accompany tha succoillul bid. FOR INFORMATION: W. H. Hoik.n, Property Manager, State High way Dept., Salem. con Org Tuei., Jan. 21. 1958 Scare At School LITTLE ROCK, Ark. Cily police and school officials searched Central lliyh Sthuol agon Tuesday after anotner an- I nnymous telephone caller report f ed that dynamite was inside i lins time capped and fused. . I Supl. Virgil Blossom said nolh I in'4 was found. '"'J'" touched of by 24 hOUrS Was lOUCIieO Oil Dy Phone call to the switchboard operator of the Arkansas (.a- ZetlC, airs. ..iia.e Dt'nicn. Mrs. Bennett said the caller sounded like a teen-aged white boy and had muffled his voice. "There's a bomb in Central C..1.....I anrl this tim il 1A a cap and fuse. sirs, Bennett - Quoted the caller. I That was when he "had a sense Then he hunS up. she said. of frustration' waiting for deci r The new search got under wayU'ons from Washington he ex :., FBI agents began investigating I planned. But he said hindsight and the discovery of a stick of dvna - , mite in a basement locRcr at me ; court-integrated school Monday. At classtime the Central High scene was placid. Two outside pa trols circled the campus and eight of the nine Negro students en terml si-hoot without incident. An anonymous telephone c a 11 Monday sent cily policemen und federalized Arkansas National Guardsmen on a IVi-hour search. ,'"" .. ",r They found the dynamite, winch I chief of staff for public testimony had no cap or fuse, in an other- " earch for ways to stream wise emptv locker. J lln ufnse, Department and The Justice Department said at" speed missile-satellite programs. Washington last night that t h e ; At the same time, the House FBI would find out whether any Armed Services Committee was federal law had been violated. I continuing its separate inquiry The telephone caller', tip said ?' "ed like the Senate aubcommit two sticks of dynamite had Been ce s at finding ways to strengthen placed at the school but only one i the defense set up. The HoJse u. Lind Kroup called Secretary of the Ar- '!!' I.... ...r. .i,i ii . dv Brucker and Gen. Lvman possible but difficult to set off un - r . . -. fused, uncapped uynanuie Hair Stylists Attend Roseburg Conference !hro nout lhe slaU. allcn(ed t (wunn Beauticians Assn. Sundav in Rose - huri I Presiding over the session, held : , in lhe Hotel Umpqua, was Mabel1 I Schmidt, Salem, a member of the I group's executive board. i A feature ot lhe meeting was me appearance of AI lale well-known Hollywood hair slvlist. Tale show ed several films to accent points' made in his talks. , Marsha llybm, Myrtle Point' won first place in a hairdressing contest held as a preliminary toll. 1893, and came to Sutherlin 10 the meeting, second place went ' years ago. He was a veteran of lo niclf Kphriini F.iiupne Opening Of Coffee Shop l-prmrin?.'""""1 ,rrangcn1cnt, Set Wednesday Morning j Winst(mBoy c,Ught The rcstyled Hotel Umpqua Cuf- In Shoplifting Act fee Shop will be opened again Wed nesday morning. Manager D i c k I Application of "a stick lo the Smith said today. I right place" was recommended to Seating loo persons. 15 more ! the mother of a 13-year-old Win- Ihan previously, the coffee shop has been styled with a modernis tic approach. Featured each evening starting l S till l.a h,frM fai-ilitia fir which have been specially design- ed. Patrons at the buffet wilt belan eraser from Anderson Place ' nrnsenteri with tickets entitlnigl i them to reduced price at tne: I Indian Thonter Kmith vaiil The Wednesday opening will be 'at 7 a.m. THE SENSATIONAL SWEDISH-BUI lilrs to the (lallon l.o I)on and l ow Monthl) Payments Low Maintrnaitre I.ow Ocprcriation .""ports Car Handling Dual tlarliuii'lors Kesene Power 8.) hp Kngine AII-WeKled s)i.h eel Body Siaiidar.l American Gear Shift Sps.-ioii Luggage Compartment U hitrwall Tubeless Tirea ALL TRADES WELCOME COME IN FOR A FREE DEMONSTRATION I M!1-- HU.II. milill- Favors 3-Man Chief Of Staff WASHINGTON li Chester W. Ninuu, former tup Navy oilicer, proposed Tuesday that the Joint Chiefs of Staff be reduced to three members. lie told the Senate missile-satellite inquiry that the post of chair man of the top military advisers 1 could be rulaled a,nonS he,ds oi , the Army, Navy and Air Force "This would remove one layer in this pyramid of the chain of command, Nimitz said. The white-haired Nimitz recalled that at one time during World War I II, when he was a top commander in the Pacific, he favored a "sin- 1 experience nave convinced mm was wrong and I am now opposed to a single chief of staff." After World War II- Admiral Ni mitz served as chief of naval oper ations for two years and then re tired. Celled For Testimony The Senate Preparedness sub- committee called him and Gen. 1 Lemnitwsr, acting Army chief of islaff fnr flneoH rinnr niiActinnmcr slaff, for closed door questioning Brucker had a prepared state ment, given to newsmen, which said that "the Army has never ; SU..M.-IIUCU u M.C uicwij . " " ICBM intercontinenta ba istic misilei i or will he the ultimate weapon " ultimate Brucker said the Nike-Zeus anti- missile on which the Army is work- inn Mill nritvulp thic eniinlrv 1 with its first effective defense i against soviet intercontinental oai- hslic missiles. Wnfja Friend Aoe 64 "Hue menu, HIJC Ot , I'r A CnlL. !. II . I aICS Ml JUIIICIIIII nulllC Wade Friend, age 64, died at his home in Sutherlin late Sunday evening, He was born in Missouri, March worm war i ana a memncr oi the Baptist Church of Sutherlin He is survived bv his wife. Marv. of Sutherlin: one sister, Mae Pit ney; one brother, Walter, both of Denver. Colo The body has been removed to Stearns and T.ttlte Mnrttiarv Olf. , ston boy caught shoplifting at a Roseburg store Mondav The advice was noted in an offi cer s report of the incident. Accord lint, tt lhj rnnnrt lha kn hod stolen two pens, three pencils and Market, 16.10 W. Harvard Ave. To tat value of the merchandise was listed as &1.92 He had been caught bv the nrn. nrietor who allowed Ihe mereh.n. disc to he returned and the boy to he lurncd over to his mother. She in turn asked the officer what he thought should be done about the affair. The answer was ready. A stick applied to the right place. Mailboxes Damaged, Sheriff's Office Told damage fo mail boxes in recent weeks was reported to Ihe sher- ill's office Monday by two North I'm pn.ua Road residents llichard llallard, Box 116. Idlrvld Route, and Hoy Trommal. who lives anoui tnree miles east 01 Roseburx, reported the vandalism. ai)0(iXV0LV0..juMi dnm LT 5 PASSENGER Bellingham Woman Is Named Polio Mother Of Year NEW YORK I -"Mrs. Dewey Huston, 35, Bellingham, Wash. was named 1958 National Hobo Mother of the Year Tuesday oy the National Foundation for In fantile Paralysis. Mrs. Huston suffered a severe attack of paralytic polio in No vember, 1952, a month before her first son was born. The mother was an iron lung patient at the time of birth. The selection of Mrs. Huston was announced prior to a lunch eon in her honor at the Waldorf- ! Astoria Hotel. , Mrs. Huston, a brunette, uses a wheelchair in caring for her Uo sons and tending to household chores. She said she and her hus band designed their ranch-style home with one floor and no steps so she could reach every part of it from her wheelchair. Mrs. Huston is a graduate of the Rochester, N.Y., Institute of Technology Art School and still does some commercial art work from her home. She also bowls once weekly, from a wheel chair. Her husband, a graduate of Kansas State College, is a chem ical engineer for the Puget Sound The National Foundation said, r i n or I .inner i.u. i Mrs. Huston was selected because suse she exemplified this year's March of Dimes theme: "Survival Is Not! Enough.' The theme is intended to point up me neeo oi ten, oi mo usam of polio victims who can be aided by rehabilitation. The rnnnle with their two chil - dren, Michael, 3, and Jonathan, 10 months, flew to New York Sat urday and expect to remain here until the end of the week. r r . . . House Croup Approves Added Missile Funds (Continued from Page 1) .1 ....hi. Ik. PnUei. !"'" "v! " ""' ' Dalllstlc missile. The committee described (he missiie-toting sjbs " " m,""r deterrent to any na- tlon x hreatens the peace , tod t w. n- - I magnuure. nciuauy, u auucu, wie ruiMIIS uecuiucB an imcivuu- tinental missile when used by sub marines that can sneak within firing range of an enemy's shore. The House will consider the committee's action Wednesday and there are indications of a strong drive to provide even more mon ey. Space Age Waapons The new money will be made available to the Defense Depart- ment immediately to f i n a n c e space age weapons programs which are developing faster than ! anticipated. in a report written Dy tiep. Ma-, respondent Virginia Proctor, hon (D-Tcx). chairman of the sub- Nimmo told the council he will committee that drafted the moas.lg0 jnt0 business for himself as a urc, the committee said "our, mil-, commercial fisherman at Win itary strength as of today, in lhe chestcr Bav. He had formerly over-all, is superior to that of the t,ee a fisherman in California. USSR, although in the critical The retiring chief said he would area, of space satellites and lal- begin fishing March 1. He had lislic missiles "we are generally been police chief since September behind" Russia. i0( 1949 In those vital areas, the com- Meanwlfile. his family will re mittee added, "we cannot afford main in Canyonville until the Nim to be in second place. mo poperty can be sold. The present superiority of the No replacement has bcen,named United States over Russia, the to succeed Nimmo. but applies committee said, is due to the sink- tions will be received by the city ing power of the Strategic Air recorder. Command. LeOnl Grocery Store ! R...L tM I. D. A second break-in of Parks Groc- ! ' fj . " .C "7 ' . ' "V.Vi - today. Deputies were told that a hasp had been pried off a rear door nut inai apparently noining was taken in the Monday burglary, Officers noted that about three weeks ago there was a similar oc rurranre with nothing missing from the store. PROCLAIMS NURSES DAY Mayor Arlo Jacklin today pro claimed Wednesday as American Nurses Assn. Day in Roseburg, saving that nurses have contnbu- led to the general welfare of the oeoDle of the citv. The dav also was proclaimed oy Uov. Robert D. Holmes. FAMILY SPORTS CArV A Product of Suporb Swedish Engineering 4 ! oj . jajoa., r t a BLM Must Wait- Jury Decision On Rock Creek Road PORTLAND The federal government will have to wait too a jury's decision on how much the land is worth before it can i take possession of some 20 miles Rock Creek logging road near of Roseburg. U. S J)ist. Judge William G. East Monday refused the im mediate possession asked by the Bureau of Land Management. The BLM sought the road, owned by a number of logging companies and individuals, to pro vide access to timber on Oregon and California Revested Lands. It got title by condemning the road and depositing $342,000 which it estimated the value to be. But under the law, a judge may say whether possession should be given immediately or be deferred. Judge East said Monday the gov ernment could wait until a jury ruie, on the value and how I muck money should be given to each of the several owners The companies owning an in terest in the road are Umpqua Plywood Corp., Weyerhaeuser Timber Co., Douglas County Lum ber Co., and Evans Products Co. Court Acquits - - In Kin YarhrflllOh ; I " Acquittals were won by John Yarbrough. 28. 1303 SE Pine St.. two district court trials Monday. Judge Warren A. Woodruff found Ylirbrougn innocent of vagrancy . . ,um ,rria -,a u, u; 7'""' """ '01 r. .j j and of driving on the wrong side i Hit former wiie. r.veivn. nia accused him of vagrancy in a com - plaint alleging Yarbrough had used obscene and abusive language in her home at 1617 SE Eddy St. The driving complaint was signed by Clifford Pcnnell who charged that Yarbrough had been driving on the wrong half of Weav er Road, two miles north of Riddle, on Jan. 11. It was brought out in ..imm.. k. .. Hriv.n kv V.r. IT u ' 1 i, 11 V j ' ! brough and Pennell had collided, Judge Woodruff ruled that testi- mony in the driving case did not conclusively shoM; 'that Yrbrouh , ,,bu uv, w,,..,,. ......B side. In the other case he said that there was, no evidence that the peace and quiet of the neighbor hood had been disturbed by Yar- I brough as had been charged the vagrancy complaint, Chief At Canyonville Resigns After 9 Years Ted Nimmo, Canyonville chief f police for nine years, resigned ; the position Monday night, m, resignation was accepted by the Citv Council It will become effective Feb. 28, according to cor- ; Portland Woman Found Strangled To Death PORTLAND 1 Mrs. Bessie Vivian Hammonds. 36. Part- I j" . j VT. . .J". " J" belt knotted about her neck. A coroner's deputy said she ap- parenuy w as sirangiea 10 oeain after a struggle, but scheduled an i autopsy to make sure of the cause of death. Disarrayed furniture led police to believe struggle. there had been a DRUNK MITEO FIN! Jack Henry Freeman, 55, Port land salesman, pleaded guilty in district court today to being drunk on a public highway and was fined S25 bv Judge Warren A. Woodruff. Freeman was arrested . night by a deputy sheriff. Monday ' PARTS AND SERVICE EVERYWHERE Unions To Be Asked To Make Financial Statements Public VANCOUVER, Wash. t-Con-, gress will be asked to past legis-J lation requiring unions to make I P"b'j ,'i'l"ciw:.r--ilid; fj' here Monday. That is a recom Monday, mat mendation President Eisenhower will make in his labor message to Congress later this week, the secretary added. Mitchell was guest speaker at a Republican fund raising dinner. In his speech at the $25-a-plate dinner he said 99 per cent of all money spent on missile develop ment "has been spent during ihe Eisenhower administration" while only one per cent waa spent dur ing the preceding Democratic ad ministration M.,,i;n. t nAinli lne tcvicMii b wuiiiuc w fcni, he President .will bnns out in 'Ciiy. t. u . , . labor message wis given ' Frer, Colo., high m the I.e.- to a party meeting. He said the . had eariy morning low of President wdl ask that penalttes 32 Movl ier0, hs .,. ... ..- fnr refusal bv unions to make pub- 4, i i.vtinns belowl ii. h.i. fin.'m.i.l reenrH. include loss of tax-free status and loss of certification as a bargaining agent by the National Labor Relations Board. Mitchell said other things t h e President will ask include election of union officers by secret ballot every four years; and permission for state courts to take over in certain labor disputes where the NLRB does not take action. As to the national economy, Mitchell said it should start pick ing up by mid-summer due to in creases in missile and defense I,, w.v. ... spending, continuation of the hign- wav construction program and an increase in resioenuai duuuuii. . ' 175 4-H Officers, Leaders At Meet By MRS. CEORSI MUNSON Some 175 club leaders and offi cers of 4-H from the Central Doug las County District attended the annual officers training day last weekend at the county fairgrounds community building. To launch the meeting. Frank von Borstel, 4-H extension agent, presented a film on the duties of club officers and business meeting procedures. The officers were then split into four srouDS for special instruction. Speaking to the four groups were Von Borstel. Hope Tacchini, Jane Gates, county extension agents, I grow ever stronger as long as : recommended issuance of the con and George Castillo, assistant ed-1 there is any danger of attack upon struction license to PNP. One of itor of "he News-Review. On returning to the main assem bly, the leaders and officers heard Miss Gates outline important com ing events. Included are special sewing and cooking classes, Na tional 4-H Week in March, Achieve ment Day in May, 4-H summer school at Corvallis and 4-H camps. On Achievement Day, all those hoping to compete at the Douglas County Fair will display and re ceive help and instructions. About 40 leaders attended meeting. the Rock Slide Provides Adventure In Mexico A vacationing Green area fam ily possibly was saved from more adventure than they had bargained for recently by the timely arrival of a bus on a lonely Mexican hitfhwav " Mr ni tin John Hartiuii and their'children, Val and Karen, left for their vacation Dec. 22. They entered Mexico at El Paso. Tex and arrived in Mjxico City in ' 'Peno new 1 ear 1 i .0 . -"'Mean capital. I En route home, reports News Review Correspondent Mary Wei . Rum. the Hartwigs came upon a pile of stones which blocked the ' highway. ! A bus pulled up alongside just 1 the Hartwigs stepped out of their car to investigate. They were told by the occupants of the bus that such blockades are a favorite trick of Mexican bandits, who force a car lo stop by such means then rob its occupanti of their possessions. The Hartwigs learned that they probably were saved from robbery bv th arrival of the bus, which 1 probably frightened off the band its. VOLVO Blizzard Hits? Two Midwest States Today By THE AS9tCIATD i PRtSS were reiease() to their par- The worst bluiard jn five years ems wim the younger Doy order swirled in Kansas and J"SJU" ed to apper at the juveile office Tuesday, halting transcontinental ltoday wlln one of his parents . Ju road traffic and virtually P-ilin Helleck, juvenile officer, asked lyung metropolitan Kansas cny. i tnat cnargc5 against the older bov At least two deaths were ai- dropped if e can enusl in tne tributed to the storm. I service. The Weather Bureau in a spe- Accorc)ins to police reports, the tin issuea neaty for northeast and nortni warnings central Missouri and souineasi (y af(er 0ffjcers were cie l0 Iowa, forecasting an additional Cnuck-, Cafe wnere lne rack wa four inches for an area in whicn nporlei rjfied. depths already ranged up to 14 .fhere witllesses sajd tne young inches with some drifts of six leet.! er had been caugnt picking The Weather Bureau had to go up money from oeneatn tne rack back 27 years to find a storm : He ran when surprise(J Dy p I j - -- . ,. i a k im in iniK nn in Aditaaa """' " "ir" " 1 m-r .zero reauinKs wcic southern Wyoming aim Colorado. Jn.w Fallin, At mid-morning, snow was fall- Ins from northeast UKianoma, thrnnoh eastern Kansas, into west 1 -u i;eni a 11 I h east 1 Iowa and northern Illinois. I (Continued from Page 1) Behind the storm a mass of' cold, dry air hung over Colorado, by the FPC to build three low Wyoming and New Mexico and; dams. was beginning to edge into west- N Perce, which would im ern Kansas. It was expected to! pound waters 1 of the Salmon River move eastward Tuesday night, 1 'swell as the Snake, has been bringing temperatures down from under study by Army Engineers the present low ZOs 10 trom a 10 to above zero. Air and bus travel through Kan sas City came to a stancisti 1 anai several 01 me ma 11 iiiKiiw.y trict and many businesses and factories failed to open. Eisenhower Says Nation Ii Strong Militarily (Continued from Page 1) pie who for reasons of their own PNP's application on grounds contend that America is feariul, Ncz Perce would be better adapt America is weak. ed to a comp.chensive plan for "Let us throw back our shoul- development of the river. The ders and stand proudly and erect. 1 FPC legal staff recommended its 1 Let us throw out our chins 'say: America is strong and and will: I us or our allies. "America has never been afraid.1"'?'; dissented from the opinion, to sacrifice for the common good. ' . K L ,Rb'n,,on' chairman of tne America does not want war iti of PNP, said the four corn wants only peace, just and secure Panic comprising PNP "must and lasting peace. Our country i have their own greatly increased wants ail people to attain a oeiier world for themselves and their children. America Dadicatad "America's heart, her strength, her faith are dedicated to this sin gle, over riding objective." Eisenhower's audience at flag draped Donovan Hall in the Am phitheatre where he was nomi nated for a first term in Un interrupted him with applause IS times during his quarter-hour talks. His delivery was vigorous and he obviously got a kick out of the rousing ovations he received at the start and conclusion of his speech. The President was introduced on TV and radio by Vice President I Nixon, the principal speaker t i the New York Republican rally, I Party dinners held in 27 states and Ihe District of Columbia at- na'iS fromVn'io .Jon ?T, W" 1 P i from$I ' m " P',le- After calling for removal of se- curity and peace as political is- sues in this year's congressional election campaigns, Eisenhower , said: Wants First Team "When we consider what is at stake in the great world struggle we realize mai America can not afford to send in a third string team, com parties nave their can didate! for the team. We want their s to be good but we must make ours a team of all-stars." Discussing security further, the President said: "The American people richtlv expect their government will keep the nation's defense strong. ThesS defenses are strong! Thev com - mand the respect of all the world, friendly and unfriendly. For the future, we have charted a pro gram of action that will maintain that respect." Besides security and peace. Ihe President said the Republican! have two other main objectives (1) support of the American free enterprise system, and (2) to do for the people what they cannot do for themselves. Ai for free enterprise, one of the most sinister threats to pros perity it inflation, Eisenhower said. He added that appeasement in dealing with inflation ii just at dangerous ai in dealing with ag gression from abroad. Discussing th party aim of do ing for people what they can t do for themselves, Eisenhower said that during his administration there have been "improvements in social security, unemployment insurance." and in other social health and labor areas. The President made no menfion of the economic report he aent to Congress just before traveling to Chicago from Washington yester day. It took note' of the current business decline, but predicted an upswing later in the year. for- a a lei ktMfanit Vxkeets 94 feoeeal ami out Horoct C, lr i Fauns Im. Km ii miii Stealing Money oFrom Newspaper Rack Charged Chars! with stealing money from a newpaper rack, two Rose burg boys were arrested Monday night by Roseburg police. Th vn.iths. lfi and 17 teirt nf two bovs were taken into custody , (n creyhound bus depot hoi-i- nc in wiicii auipiiscu ujr n. . un .... 1 1 . the cafe. The lock had been brok- a coi ,ube nd (aken The ig.year-old said he was re- ." .1-- -j .. . I sponsioie lor u.e Ull ana mat W,m nnmnsnmn hail nnl Irnm... about it until he told him. A state- ment to this effect was signed. police noted ! FPC Denies Two Snake I Dams Applications It would cost upwards of 430 million dollars, impound 6 million t , -( ... I I ..,:.,.';, , ' ; ,. -. ftntl ki,; terests. The dam would block runs of salmon and steelhead trout. FPC said the outlook is prom ising for development of a way to get fish around high dams like Ncz Perce. Public Power Opposition Public Dower erouos onoosed aeniai on similar grounds. FPC Examiner Edward Marsh me live ri-i. memoers, Arthur ! pfv lt,c 'Certainly," Robinson added a statement. "It is not in the pub lic interest to force them to steam power generation and bring about substantial increase in powvr costs to their customers simply because someone thinks a high dam at Nez Perce may someday be built. "The invitation in the FPC or der to file on" the Nez Perce site will have to be considered by the companies but such action will be sad news to the fish interests. The 800.000 customers served by the four organizing companies will certainly be disappointed that the companies are not being assured of the firm power supply that would result from favorable FI'C action, which would produce pow er on time and as needed by them. "The statement of the commis sion that the denial . . need not ,10n the Northwest seem, not ! justified by the record of the hear ing." . Car Liability Insurance ! Rate Will Be Raised (Continued from Page 1) Clackamas. Columbia. Washing ton. Marion and Yamhill' ?nt: 55,000 and $10,000 plus S3.000. old rate $47, new rate $62; $50,000 and $100,000 plus $5,000. new rate $80.90: comprehensive and $100 deductible collision, old rate $44, new rale $19. Zones 3, 4 and 5 Benton, Lane. Linn, Polk. Deschutes, J Y",'"' "T.?i. ft "e"on'rl; ?P ! SP' ,u Douglas, Hood River, Jackson, Klamatn, Coos. Curry. Lincoln, Tillamook, and those parts of Clackamas, Marion. Multnomah. Washington. Yamhill and Columbia not in zones 1 or 2: S5.000 and $10,000 plus $5,000. old rate $35, new rate $42; $50,000 and $100,000 plus $5,000, new rate. $53.25; comprehensive and $100 deductible collision, old rat $44, new rate $52. Zone 6 Baker. Creek, Gilliam, Orant. Harney. Lake, Malheur, Morrow, Umatilla. Union, Wal lowa and Wheeler: $5,000 and $10,000 plus $5,000. old rate $30, new rate $39; $50,000 and $100,000 plus $5,000, new rate $49.35; com prehensive and $100 deductible collision, old rale $44, new rata $52. BOOKMOBILE RUN CANCELIO The Douglas County Bookmo bile's acheduled stops today were canceled because of motor trouble, reports Librarian Carol Trimble. FIRE: POLICE: CALL OR 2-2644 CALL OR 3-6633 MONEY: 0c&.fa Stephens, Roseburj THE PRUDENTIAL " (oepiei el iMenej enwl hfc Mima 529 S. E. STEPHENS Q ROSEBURC. ORECON ORchard 3-4401 Heme OHica lae ptnfelee, CaJ P O V 0 h , eo IS G PAL' MOTORS, LTD. I 664 S.I.