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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 11, 1958)
Todi CALENDAR OF EVENTS cUlomorrour TUESDAY - FEB. I Douglas County Juvanii. Ailvi sory Council, 8 p.m. Circuit court room "B" of countv courthousp Kxecutive committee meeting, 7:30',. Dm. ' i"ou riie, (:ju p m., dessert suDDer home of llrs. C. B. Wade, SE Kane St.. . Oregon Btauticians Attn., breakfast, 7:30 a.m.. Umpqua Ho tel Coffee Shop. Official opening of National Beauty Salon Week, vh in-ifi LookinogUst Gran... 8 15 nm Mr,l CrM.k Cirr William Petheram and P.rkv n.r !P m- .. ' ' Rl serving commmee. Buckeroo Square Dance Club, dance lessons at Barn, 8 to 10 p m. Alpha lota chapter, BSP. 8 p.m., home of Mrs. David Weisman, 366 W. Hazel , Roseburg Rod and Gun Club, iWinchester clubhouse, 8 p.m. R --it burg Eaglet, 8 p.m.. Eagles I Hall. Lady Trainmen, Woman's club- p U ' UUUSC, .WUSIItT 31. Badoura Club. Daughters nf th.l B,, Gamma Chapter, ESA, b umber city Chapter oi sweet Adelines, Inc.. 8 p.m., call OK 3 3887 for meeting place. Fair Oaks Grange, 8 p.m. grange hall. Winston Chamber of Commerce, 8 p.m., city offices Council, St. George's Episcopal Guild commumun service at 11 a.m., i speaker after 12 noon luncheon. Yoncalla Town and Country Club, with Mrs. Warren Anderson. Hucreit School Cub Scouts of Pack 133 and Boy Scouts of troop 133, at Riverside School in gym, 6 p.m., annual Blue and Gold din ner. Parents and families invited. Blue Star Mothers Chapter 4. 11 a.m., Woman's Club, potluck din ner. Members asked to bring pro spective members. I Air Force Reserve, 1614 W. Har- Roseburg Rebekah Lodge, 8 p.m. IOOK hail. Roseburg Toattmasters, 6:30 p.m. Hotel L'mpqua. Boots and Calicos beginners square dance lessons. Norval Cock- Elks duplicate bridge groop. 7:30llram: 1onst,ruct.or', p.m., tuts lempie, tor members of Elks and invited guests. Glide Kiwanis Club, 7:30 p.m. Associated Volunteer card party, 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. VA Hospital rec reation building music room. Lad it invited. Army Reserve, 8 to 10 p m v. narvara. Winston Com munity Building, 8 p.m. Roseburg Rebekah Lodge, 8 p.m., lOOF Hall. Members to bring white elephants suitable for small prizes. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 11 Glendaie Olivet Presbyterian 1614 Church, Lincoln's birthday congre gational dinner, at church, 6:30 Daroersnop singing, KicKetts Mu-ip.m. sic Store. 8 p.m. I Glide Community Club, monthly Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30 meeting, potluck dinner, 6:30 p.m., p.m., 245 SE Jackson For more: old grange hall Members bring information call OK 2-2-2755. 1 table service. Coffee furnished. It's a treat! Just imagin! There are aix ten different (train and vege table Hours in Hollywood Special Formula Bread! Ya, that's right tixteen ! The result is a rare flavor blend that will delight you not once, but time after time after time. And such m teniibl bread, too, with only about 46 calories in an 18-gram alios) Insist on the genuine. .1 jL-.-S i t :4 4 3 VtNtfIA STEVfNSON apfmi M til 'DARBY'S RAHCCIIS" ttlinw Brgs. PioHtielion FREE IWIrwaW OiM 4 d Out AiMriltiv nilM twr 4i. sna pnra t. itoonr Oar, 100 W. Mmtm St., Oiicaa. 1. lllinN. Only about 46 calories per slice A or SPECIAL FORMULA BREAD Sak1 Bclwlvlv FOI WILLIAMS' BAKERY Ulrfli Liwnt by Nitmnil Bikut Siicn. Inc. Ctiicaio 81 vard Ave.. 8 D.m. Umpqua Radio Club, clubhouse on Klamath Ave . 7:30 p.m. Doug one's. Sheriff's Mount ed Patrol. 7:30 p.m. fairgrounds. Drain Chamber of Commerce, noon, city hall. VFW Auxiliary, 8 p.m., Veterans Memorial Hall, business. ' Degree of Honor, 8 p.m. Union Hall. Knights of Columbus, St Jo seph's Catholic Center Hall, 8 p.m. Winston - Dillard Toastmistress Club. 7:30 p.m. Roseburg Jay-C-Ettes. Laurel Lodqe No. 13. Boots and Calicos beginners pat tern dance lessons. 8 p.m., Wins ton Community Building. "Special Hour of Prayer" spon sored by Ladies Aid of St. Paul's Lutheran Church assisted by mem bers of Bethany Lutheran Church and St. John's Lutheran Church at 7:M p.m. at St. Paul's Lutheran Church. Jay-C-Ettes at 8 p.m. at home of Mrs. Don Brown, 809 SE Pine St. Xi Tau chapter of Beta Sigma Phi, 8 p.m., home of Mrs. Bill Semmler, 1555 NW Almond Ave., Hucrest. St. Paul's Lutheran Ladies' Aid special hour of prayer, 7:30 p m., at church. Coffee hour to follow service. Friendly Circle, noon potluck. luncheon, home of Mrs. Laurence Peterson, 1407 W. Jefferson. Birth days this month. Riversdale Happy Hour Club, 2 p m., home of Mrs. W. C. Bailey. MNO Club, 8 p.m., home of Mrs. Don Kruse. and DABK ! You'll find a great variety of daily health needs for tveryone at our modern, up-to-date pharmacy! See us for all your family health needs and professional prescription service. Pharmacists always on duty! WE GIVE S & H GREEN STAMPS 635 S. E. JacVson St. mas a ORchord 3-7415 Three Mental Patients Face Kidnap Charges MOUNT VERNON Three mental hospital inmates faced ar raignment Tuesday on first de gree kidnaping charges. The charges were filed Monday by Skagit County Prosector Walt er Deierlein for the kidnaping of a voung couple seiied by the Northern State Hospital inmates after they escaped from the Sedro Woolley institution with the aid of smuggled arms Friday night. Charged on two counts one for each hostage were John Charles Burr. 18. and Richard Martin. 21. Seattle, and James Edward Ensor, 23, Port Angeles. If convicted, the trio could be sentenced to life imprisonment or, if the jury ordered, to death. Deierlein said he does not at pres ent intend to ask the death penalty. The three inmates had been committed as osvchoDathic delin quents. In their escape they used a shotgun and rule ana an at tendant was slightly wounded when the afcotgun was fired, ap parently accidentally. Saturday morning they abduct ed Mr. and Mrs. Charles Seay. both 21. hospital employes, and forced them to drive south. The Seays were released unharmed when the escapees were captured near Everett, about 40 miles south of Sedro Woolley. Burr, Martin and Ensor were being held in jail here. sif Ik. . r. County Library Board Reports Book Increase Mrs. Joe Withers of Glide, who was recently appointed a member of the Douglas County library board by the county court, met with the board at the regular ses sion Feb. 4. She succeeds James Bovingdon who has served on the board since it was created early in i!ioj. Mrs. Jack Randall of Drain was elected treasurer to succeed Mr. Bovingdon in that position. Circulation for January soared to 37,990 books in the county sys tem, compared to 30,305 for 1956, Circulation in the Myrtle Creek community library reached 2.190 lor the month. Yoncalla circulated 1.541, Reedsport 1,494, Drain 1,495 and butnerun l.zoo. An outstanding increase has been made this year by Sutherlin. In January 1956 the library circulated 432 books. Members reported on a meeting with the county court held Jan. 31 at which time a proposed budget for 1958-59 was considered. It was reported that a commit tee to plan for National Library Week had Been appointed at KeedS' port. Members are Mrs. Charles Corey, Mrs. Juanita Halliday, Jlrs. Bessie Murray and Miss Ada Sherman. Mrs. Francis Riley, who has been a patient the last few days at Douglas Community Hospital, where she has been receiving medi cal treatment, is now convalescing at her home. . . -J ..... Ut lainnid FgImIIa Urn Imni Vh Q 'ft Prineville. Ore. to Mr. and Mrs. Phil Kaser, for mer residents of this city. Paternal grandparents ot the oany are ir. mil lr Noil Kaser Sr. nf this city. Mrs. E. H. Lister of Grants Pass, who visiting nere, is ine paternal great-grandmother of the baby. CHAIRMAN ELECTED GAT FM ll Henrv S. Howard. Eugene, was elected chairman of the State Wage and Hour Com mission Monday. The commission esiamisnes wages and hours for women and unors In employment. Portland Traction Co. To Appear In Court PORTLAND I The Portland Traction Co. is to appear in court at 2 p.m. Thursday to say wnetner it wants to defend ltseit against a contempt of court charge or ap peal the contempt action to the state Supreme Court. The firm had asked Circuit Judge Charles W. Redding to auash the contempt proceedings. the judge, however, on Monday granted to Dist. Atty. Leo Smith an order directing Portland Trac tion to show cause why it should not be held in contempt for its defiance of a court order in halt ing service on its interurban lines MB ... Is This Your Wife! V """" Vvy Her dishwoshing ,': i. ? i' time adds up to over f f -""l---i two months of 40. ,"Lm Hour weeks Every ") Year. eLa L ONLY $ 3.00 El WI1K Vf TO 6 WII1 IIMTAL J 3 Local News FLORENCE BEARDSLEY . . . the women's role Educator To Speak To Association Of University Women By HAZEL S. MARSH Miss Florence Beardsley. Salem. director of elementary education , in the state will be guest speaker at a dinner meeting of the Rose burg Branch. American Assn. of university Women Thursday at' 6:30 p.m. in the Hold Room of the Hotel L'mpqua. She will address the group on the status of women ; in the rapid social and economic ! changes of this age. i Miss Beardsley has served on ' the State Board of Education fori the past 18 years. Prior to that I time she was an educator at the Oregon College of Education, Mon-1 I mouth. She was awarded her bachelor's and master's of arts i I degrees at the University of Ore- gon and did advanced study at j Columbia University. She is currently an executive member of the commission on the study of general elementary school standards and is an ex-secretary of the State Elementary Principals Assn. and of the State County I School Superintendent's Assn. She i? also a member of the education Policy Commission of the Oregon Education Assn. In addition to her association with the State Department of Edu cation, Miss Beardsley is president of the Delta chapter of Delta Kap pa Gamma and is a past-president of the Salem Business and Profes sional Women's Club. Girl Says Mother Coached Her On How To Testify SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO Joseph Bedard was bound over to superior court on a child beating charge Monday :er his daughter told a municipal judge she had been coached on how to testify. Bedard, year-old sheet metai worker, is charged with beating his stepdaughter, Susan, 9. Pamela Bedard, his 7-year-old daughter, told Judge Thomas L. Bocci Jr. in a chamber conference that her mother had coached her to testify that the mother and not Bedard had beaten Susan. Bed ard's attorney moved for the abrupt ending of the preliminary hearing. Susan Bedard Tuesday testified that her stepfather beat her with a doubled up belt and hit her in the eye. She is now being cared for in the San Mateo County juve nile receiving home. Bedard showed no emotion as Judge Bocci ordered him bound over. Her case came to ljght week ago when she wrote a note to a school official begging to be adopt ed because she said she wasn't liked at home. She testified she was beaten for cooking eggs, which was "against the rules." The Bedards live at nearby Mar. Tues. Feb. 11, 1958 The News-Review, Roseburg, Cre. 3 Minnesota Vote Closely Watched and three Democratic candidates will vie at the polls again seven days hence for the seat in the House held for 31 years by the late Rep. August Andresen, a Re-' publican. The forecast called for temper atures no higher than 10 above. A heavily farmed arsa, Minne sota's first district, embracing a dozen southeastern counties, has aligned itself on the GOP side for more than 50 years. It showed Republican margins of 60 to 69 per cent in the last several elections. MINNEAPOLIS I Near zero; cold and a chilling northwest wind 1 met voters balloting Tuesday in a special Minnesota congressional primary election being watched by national leaders of both po-j lineal parties. The two successful nominees from a field of seven Republican New Trial Requested After Youths Convicted SPOKANE i A new trial was asked Monday for convicted teen age slayers Joseph Harry Weston. IS, and Nicholas W. Sim chuk, 14. The request was made in a mo tion filed in superior court by at torneys for the two youths. The petitions, the attorneys said, were based on "statutory grounds usmtl in asking new trials." They did not elaborate. Weston and Simchuk were con victed of second degree murder Saturday in the shooting of Man ley G. Martin, 63, Spokane, dur ing a burglary of Martin's hobby shop. They were also convicted of second degree burglary. Men Old at 50 or 60! Recharge Body's Batteries Feel Younger Fast! TrKHuandf who ftl wruk, worn-out at 40, 5U, 60 tkUme ftdintl visor on prrmdture tae nia. The ml c-iiue may be Um? lock oi invinor- Iiiiii iron and Vitamin Bi, nettled to rrchaiu tlte body's batterm. Tltoiaiiids are tmdui at May potent, urw and improved Ostiri Tonic TufiMs prp up blood, cflls, ortfaDi. In a un file d-iy, Ottrri supplier iron x,iuval?nt to 10 drwn raw oyitn, or 4 Ibt. ot hvrr, or 10 Ibc. of hrrf. Ottrei alio contains therapeutic dos Vitamin Hi to itdy nrrva, incrrai enerty, v i( Of .Vitality. 3-day "gt-acriuaiDtrxl"'six,fl9C. Or get Lcooomy sum, aave $1.67. Ail druftCuU. 'Voice Contest Winners Listed WASHINGTON itf Four young high school students were given $500 college scholarships and gold recordings of their winning broad cast scripts in the annual "Voice of Democracy" contest Tuesday. The four won out over 750,000 other 10th. 11th and 12th grade students in all 48 states, Hawaii, Alaska, Puerto Kico and the Dis trict of Columbia. One of the winners was from the Pacific Northwest, Sharon Mc Clelland, 15, Portland, Ore. The others were: llavid Hardacre, 17, Piedmont, Calif., Ross Fish, 17, ' Phoenix, Ariz., and Barbara Mary Breaud, 17, New Orleans, La. Announcement of the winners climaxed a four-day all-expense lour of Washington by all 52 stale and territorial winners. Each wrote on the topic: "I Speak For Democracy." OPENING SOON! PATTERSON'S SLENDERIZING STUDIO FOR MEN AND WOMEN MODERN EQUIPMENT FOR YOUR USE Open Days and Evenings 4.50 as low oi per month ENROLL NOW Dial ORchard 3-3423 If No Answer, Pleas Call OR 2-2870 821 S. E. DOUGLAS AVENUE Ak CoredlHoAlr9-rmprahirt mo4m to or aii-warnx comfort Got EE Newer and finer in every way. Yet CHEVROLET IS LOWEST PRICED OF THE LOW-PRICED THR IH THE MODELS MOST PEOPLE BUY!' Chevrolet is by far the newest, nicest car in its field the only one that's new from ride to root; And in the models most people prefer, , Chevy costs you less than the other two low-priced cars. Chevrolet docs more for your dollars than any other car in the low-price field. Even the lowest priced models share in Chevy's unique new beauty and costly car feel. Every Chevrolet's a full nine inches lunger lower and wider, too. And when you hitch these new dimensions to anyone of Chevy's new engines, you've got a big serving of spirited action. See your nearby dealer soon find out how little Chevy's brand of fun will cost you. 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