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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 15, 1958)
0 0 o 2 Th Newi-Reviw, Roseburg, Free-Loader Gets Free Load In Jail CRAWPonUSUU.E. Ind f A hulking itinerant, identified by a medical authority as the man who went on a six-year tour of 31 states frecluading en nioin and board in hospitals, rested lcj$ com- lorlably today Ihe man, who gave, his name as I.co Lani.here, 47, was taken Irom Culver Hospital to Montgomery County jail on a vagrancy charge late friday after being identified through a telephone call to Dr. John S. Chapman of the State Uni versity of Iowa. Dr. Chapman wrote about the traveling patient in the Journal of the American Medical Assn. last October. Italph Haas, Culver llos nitat suoenntendenl. said Dr. Chapman tuld him on the tele- phone the man s name and de- scriniinn tallied cxactlv with the subject of his research. 1-amphcre entered the hospital alter complaining to city police Ihal he feared he had infection in his legs and had no money to pay for medical care. Saleslady Leaps From Moving Car During Argument Roseburg police reported today that a 20-year-old girl was sent on her way to her Portland home after she leaped from a moving car in which she claimed she was vir- tually imprisoned by three other juiiiik UIH.II. The victim was (ierda Naum burg, who UiUi police she had I ....ti, ill. kF pillar Tl Van Nuys, Calif., about whether ..... :' a . a - ....... tllMUIIiriB VI UIC UWI -W-vnnl mat, azine sales carried on bv the four unmPn worm heme rhrated. Miss Naumburg lold police she arKtied that customers were being rooked. Hut she said Miss Krcdler object ed to her arguments and would not allow Mis-s Naumburg to leave the car. Police identified the other wom en in the vehicle as ilelda J. Vance. 19, and Judy A. Scanlon, 18. Neither gave a permanent ad dress. Miss Naumburg jumped from the car at SE Jackson St. and SF. Cass Ave. and was picked up and taken to cilv oolice station bv Tom I.. Smith, owner and operator of Roseburg Bus Co. Smith was lowing the vehicle in which Miss Naumburg was riding. A police check disclosed that the women had not solicited within the city limits. Officers saw to it that Ihe other three women purchased a bus ticket to Portland for Miss Naumburg, then released the quar-; let Clare Sawyer Of Drain Dies Clare Morgan Sawyer, dent of Drain for many rcsl- ycars, died in Cottage Grove Hospital Frt d;iy. He was (19. He was a former Iirain postmaster. He was born Aug. II, 1K88 at North Bingham, Pa , and was mar- ried at Omaha, Neb., Sept 28. 19L'8 to Opal Vinyard. who surv iv es him. ; 'I hey came to Drain from Rights, Ta He was a member of the Methn- Hist Church and a life member of lite heileration of Postmasters. Kiiri'ivino tl,. u.fn r. four children. William Sawyer, I'onncclicut; Robert M Sawver, l.os Angeles; Richard N. Sawyer, a Navy man. stationed in San Di- e-o; Mrs. Roberta Matipin, Drain; in grandchildren; one brother, Norman Sawyer. Port Allegany, l'a.: three sisters, Mrs. Blanche Meeker and Mrs. Mary Gallup, both of Port Allegany, and Mrs. Je-se Lewis, Dullois, Pa. Funeral services will be held at Drain Methodist Church Mon day at 2 p m The Hev C. E. F.chlin will ofliciale Vault inter ment in Drain Odd Fellows Cem riery will follow. Mills Funeral Service. Dram, is in charge of ar rangements. The family requests that contri. billions to the Heart Fund be giv en instead of flowers. Stranger Bilks Woman, Steals Money, Watch A man who passed himself off as a friend of her son is a sus)ect in a theft from the home of hath erinc Mock. 6:"0 SE llellview Ave. She told police F'rulav that about SIS in rurrency, a ladies' wrist watch and possibly another wrist watch was stolen from her home 'I liursdav . The vming man came to her d.iur and ulinlilinl himself as a friend ol her son in Washington. Mie invited him in. and he watch ed television When lie l.-ft. the monev and at hast one watch was gone He had said he was out of vsmk and was liking here fur a lob Mrs. Mock (ie-crilx'd him a. be teg about :lo. nf slim build and dm ir:4 a two tone car of aKnit 19.'aj vintage Mie didn't know his name. Former Cuban President Cocs To Jail In Florida MIAMI. Fla r - i, (;, Prio Socarras. who inarched to his jail cell to the strains ol the Cuban national anlhein. stayed there today In share the imnVis- oninent of lellow dcfeiiders unable to bail themselves out. WANTED -WANTED t tn .llr,.. X i,i .!,.., ., tlt,, M ,,. M "I"! IM'em . Iiiii i.Ki Vn, i.ii.m I, t .(, tf is.il twi.ct.iit i, , , , ,-(.m,fci ,., , ffMxn t nt vt i, i mti u,tl n.i M ,. Cm M sIH l t.a II . Sftliat ., NO.BUSkNESS EXPERIfXCE NEE6ED NO SELLING ritttrt ' CM (W 'ctt, M WTtitatflt tw ,mmrt lit Hft If t .. i . ftt r"" ft (Wtl tttlt Ml, lit fli'ltlf It Mlrtiitl ItVI. Writ . CONFECf 1 DliTRlBUIORS, 622 Crt l Thj KticbM Ntw.ttviar Rttlrurf, 0fm,Q G Oft. Sot. Feb. 15, 1958 Standard Rating uiven i o dcnooi Af Canyonvifle lull standard rating was given to Canyonville elementary school! in a message received by Supl. O. J. Munger troin stale supervisors; tor elementary schools, waller u. t Shulds and Virail Moss. The rat. ing was attained on the basis of provisions made in the 1958-59 budget lor hiring administrative leaders in botn the lower and up per elementary grades. The full standard rating followed the previous year's rating of ' standard with advice " T h rating was based on advice to h1 an elementary school administra- tor The Canyonville School Board solved this problem by hiring two K l(i,.. ..Immulrimn William halftune Marsters in the upper elemc ntary urades and Mrs. George Brink- worth in Ihe lower grades, who will also continue teaching, In other Canyonville school ac- tion. undertaken by the budget board, the board voted to cut out one bus to the Galesville and An- chor precincts of the district. This will include cutting out the after noon primary school bus and will mean a saving of about $6,000 to the district, according to Supt. O. J. Monger. Monger explained that this ac tion meant that the contract with Dale Oxford had not been renew ed and that the district will run and maintain its own bus to that Cow Creek area. Discontinuing the bus resulted i,,,;"";", from what is described by Can- Review corres pondent Virginia Proctor as a "tre mendous fallotf in attendance" from the two precincts affected ; Should ain. : the attendance increase tain, she continued, tne e x i r a : , , , .. uus '"""' run- would be ddcd to 8e" e the arpa- . hnilunt In other business, the budget board, presided over by Ed Oaks, accepted recommendations of the school board. The budget board's next meet ing was set fur Friday, Feb. 28, at which time the hope was ex pressed that the budget would be completed so that a voting date could be set for the last part of March. I Pirftmfn Ppftn ITemen I rOUC DkUla I n HnnPC fiil-lUDDie In nuptJ Four Men Alive NEW YORK i Orim fire men worked desperately Saturday in the forlorn hope of saving four men buried under tons of rubble in the eolhipse of flaming six slorv building Friday night. .Two iiremen were miu-ii ami ciidnics i-rencn caoinei sessions ociore i appeared slim that the other men making new contacts with the j might still be alive. Tunisian government. I "If there is any hope for these President llabib Bourguiba was I men, we must get to litem in thesaid to be keeping himself ready next few hours," said fire cum-'for a quick meeting with U.S. 'ssioner Edward F. Cavanagh i Ambassador Lewis Jones. T i . , . ., ., i '! f"r men were at the third-i,v story level when the building caved No sounds have been u heard from under the debris. ( avanagh said il would take week to remove the rubble brick by brick so other measures were called for Firemen planned to lower the boom of a huge horizontal crune in the street into a horizontal po sition so firemen could crawl al.oio il In unili ul . rorner sn.il where the men were believed to be Firemen also were struggling at the same task from four large holes punched through the wall of an adjoining minding. Sutherlin JCs To Head Timber Days Division The Sutherlin Jaycees will meet Monday evening at 8 at Scout Hall lo make preliminary plans for par ticipation in the annual Timber Days observance. The Javcees have taken over one of the main events of the occasion, the logging event. Also lo be discussed will lie the part the javcees will play in the Teen Ai;e Placement Bureau, which is aimed lo finding jobs for teen-auers, both part-time and sum mer jobs Ihe bureau was formed by the Sutherlin PTA, but steps are now being taken to form a committee, with representatives of several groups, lo better organize the bu reau. It is pniMscd to have seven rep resentatives on a committee, in cluding one each from the Suther lin Jaycees and the Chamber of Commerce, two teen aers from the hich .school, one PTA nienibr and as ex odiein mcmlvrs, the president of the PTA and Ihe high school principal Craveside Services Held For Idleyld Infant Oraveside services Mr the infant son of Mr anil Mrs Harold Ilimls. Idles Id lit . Rii.eburu. were held ttsday in Itnsehurg Memorial Car dens The bahv died at a htcal hospital Friday. Surviving, liesiiles the par ents, are a hi other. 1'erry (lene: the palt-rnal grandparents. Mr and Mis Harold Hinds Sr. Havre. Mont . and the maternal grand mother. Mrs era Hitterman. 1 en train. Wash Ihe Rev W A Svlwester nf St Paul s Lutheran Church officiated 'I hi- rh.,i.. .,( 11,. u... .... , Charge uf arraneements 1 liari,e of arrangements tl ' t 1 fJMl t t-.t iijttt. 1 t4 rl Azalea Church Sunday Attendance Contest By MRS. C. B. FOX The Azalea Community Church is currently holding a contest for Sunday school and church attend ance. A prize will go to the per son bringing the most new tple to attend both services. j Visitor Expected Carl Falcone of San Diego is ex pected to arrive in Glendale Tues-' day to visit his wife's parents. Mr. and Mrs. John Bone, his wife is already visiting here. They will return to San Diego about Keb. 20. Mrs. Bob Young of Glendale took her son, Bobby, and Leona Baker to Eugene Sturday for dental work '. .a "xi i .,r iinmur.n f fj'Pn(jae ,'re j,e parents of a 5 ' pound 5 ounce baby boy born at vonvlll. Lch ,, yv"'F ' U the Forest Glen Hospital in can Mr. and Mrs. Kobert Winkleman or Gjendac are tne parenis 0f 9 pound baby boy born Feb. 7. at the Josephine General Hospital in Grants Pass. Three-month-old Danny Brown. son of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Brown of Glendale. has been released from the Dornbecher hospital in Port- land Medical attendants were unable to find any explanation for his illness, and he has had no re currence since reaching Portland. Man Hospitalized Cliff Johnson, co-proprietor of Ihe guincs Creek Cafe who recent- j rreoentence Investigation Ordered For Man A pre-sentence investigation of Floyd Raymond Burkhart. 19. was J - " - - . onierea rrmay ny circuit juaye Charles S. Wood rich afler Burk - hart Poaded K"1' o burglary in a dwelling Burkhart's attorney, Robert Davis-, made a plea for either proba tion or a countv jail sentence. He revealed that Burkhart is AWOI. from the Navy and that he will have to be dealt with by Naval authorities. He and three others were arrest ed following investigation of the theft of a set of tractor tracks in ih. ntn ir.9 nnntin IpamrH nf the burglary of the ti e o r g e j Smith home during their checking on the tractor parts case. Three ; others were Burkhart. arrested along with U. S. Trying To Soothe French And Tunisians (Cuntinued from Page 1) waiting reports from Paris on the The French canine! neculcil 10 dainee in civilian victims y 'i" r's ",-.,,.. imhi ,,! - strafing of the border village of .-jmi mm iwiiMci. iiitr laijuKb i- i f . t 'il. Ki..t insirurteu me rrencn iieo ross to contact Red Cross officials in Tunisia to determine the amount of damage suffered by Ihe civilian population. At US Headquarters in New " ' .....s -- I Unisia was reads 10 xu lunisia was reaoy 10 xo ocioie the U-nation Security Council with her protest on Tuesday. Hut these sources doubted that lunisia cotiin get the nevcn votes needed to approve resolution of condem n.n-u. Mack To Testify Next Week Against Charges I (Continued from Page 1) f the loans had been forgiven and .nine renaid in rash Whiteside said in Miami Friday that Mack was a friend of long standing and that he had loaned him money over a 20 year period. All hut about tlM of this has been repaid, the lavvver said. Whiteside, who cal' d Schwartz a "liar." said he did recommend awarding Chan nel 10 to Public Service, but he never was retained by the TV firm, a subsidiary nf National Air lines. Harris said Whiteside and three other Miamians mentioned by Schwartz were brine asked by telegram lo appear Tuesday. The chairman listed the other three as Circuit Jiidfc-e Robert Anderson. Paul Seott and Pernne Palmer. U. S. And Poland Sign Economic Aid Agreement U'ontinucd trom Page 1) placing a tli.un on the dollar re sources of t"-e foreicn countries involved Fiulliei more, since the 1iM-.11 ,-nrrtnrif sip iri.niipnuv -- "- used in part to build up the erono- lines of thuse countries, this is a form of I S grant aid A credit of '. milium il, .liars to r in men surrounded a Virth Bal- tial area of the timber and sev be administered hv the Export- titmne numinc. housp Friday and eral miles of our main Lewis uiporl Hank and to te iiseit nv Poland for the purchase of a san ely of materials I hev include fiHHl. leather, textile and metal proccssinc machinery, industrial items such as ptmer handsaws and wire cable, ami a number of raw materials rancins from hides anil artificial fillers to plastics and -ll : . A'M.;ll A--:4 , . acourmasrer at urcen (Mtc O'Nnll ha been apthtiiiietl mnulnij',rr of (irren Trnip 4.1 "I hp appointment n miile when prrml commilte met at (ireen i-hiMl to oiitlinti a training pro gram for the lrop O'Neill succeed Je Sumner a oulmater You Just Can't Top Our Hocie Stylt? Cooking Swedish Dining Room Conducting is still hospitalized at the Forest Glen Hospital in Canyonville. Kenneth Irving of Glendale left recently for army service. He is presently stationed at Ft. Ord, Calif. The Women's Council of The Glendale Church of Christ met at the home of Mrs. Nancy Gregory. .Mrs. Juanita Buenger led the de votions, and Mrs. Alice Patterson had charge of the mission topic. The Glendale Camp Cookers 4.-H Club met at the home of Nancy and Bruce Fisher. The president, Dennis Hayes, had charge of the meeting, and was assisted by the leader, Mrs. Murphy. The group started work on making a tin can or hobo stove. Meetings will be held every other Friday. " Light Snow Covers Much OfMidsouth MEMPHIS lift Snow covered much of the midsoutii Saturday but lingering traces of summer warmth in the earth kept the fall shrunken to manageable depth Even so, at least five highway traffic deaths were reported in Ihe area, with weather conditions listed as a contributing factor in lour of them. '' The fall covered nearly all of Tennessee and parts of adjoining lucky, Alabama and .Mississippi. The Weather Bureau said the average depth would be less than three inches because much of the snow melted. Ip to eight inches fall had been predicted for some me neainer ouicau iiu uic sectors In the Suuth. where the art of driving on ice or snow covered 1 strpcls and highways is unknown. , few inches of snow sav six or more stops most traffic. ' Hi2hwav natrol reoorts said all highways were hazardous but passable. Buses, trains and planes were running on or near schedule. Spaceman Begins Homeward Stretch Of 7-Day Stint SA.V ANTONIO. Tex j Air- : m:.n n,.naiH c. kftrroii i.hoi-riiiiu began Saturday the homeward stretch of his seven-day stint in a make-believe space ship. "We have no doubt but what he will come thrnuqh with flying rnlni's." I t Col Cram H Sipm - kamp. chief of space medicine at ! Randolph Air Force Base, said after Karrell began his seventh (day in the experimental space cahin here. Steinkamp said the 23-year-old nn,... of Ihe Bronx apparently passed" a big crisis of fatigue hi ilav. Throughout the dav he showed indications of being ex-i trcmely weary and it showed up in his reactions until midnight, i "Then he had two hours sleep1 and to our surprise perked up to; wnrre ins reaeuons ami jiingweni - were almost as good as they had'..,,,,. .k. .!... ,..!. been " . . McinMinp added that his voice , . .......... siiiiMflfrl tnitf fhnirv at h irtm. v.""..-: J ,A.,e .mh unr n m m aaturdav. Sutherlin School Athletic Field Survey Approved A survey for construction of the West Elementary School athletic field in Sutherlin was made Fridav ! I alter plans for the field were ap-! proved by the school hoard at its regular meeting last Tuesday in Sutherlin. The work was let to Funder hurk Construction Co of Sutherlin for $200 to level the field. The proposed school budget for 1H.S8 .W was discussed and will be submitted to the budget committee on Feb. 2.Y Sutherhn's teachers' association made a recommendation for having hospital and medical insurance for teachers next year, but further slu. riv will be made by the school board before any action is taken. other business undertaken bv the board was to postpone the election the summer recreational program committee. FBI Recovers Most Of Loot BALTIMORE FBI agents have rcciivfifil til ooo a,,H B.is-i- 11I two nun charted with Ihe Wed- nesd.-iv holdup o( a suburban bank. A lone bandit, waving a snub- noseil revolver, staged the actual h.il.uip He held five customers at hay and lorced four tellers in the sparrows Poml branch of the Pros-, Hlent Sav lilts Bank to stuff S.15 - j.-.i ill lis 111111 a immnri h, 11 - - . ... iic fled in a car he drove himself, eluding hastily erected road blocks ,.''" Ih-,n ' hours later a doren namwu vear oid .Martin J seph au- su-noias About 14 hours later, FBI aaents , . .. where they arrested Robert K Pippin at his work as a draftsman Tumbling Log Injures Mjn Af Shinglt Mill Injuries sutfered bv Albert I. Paulson. .North 1 mpqua Ruad. whrn a log fell off his truck at Roseburg Shingle Mill hospitalized him Friday with undetermined in juries Pan. son is in Community Hospi tal where he was taken for treat ment Attendants said X rays showed no broken bones He was hurt when the log rolled off the irtick as binder chains were re moved t3 SIGN A0R f EME NT l.uMHiN r .- An agreement to station ls intermediate raiue ballistic missile bases m this eountrv is etected li be signed here Monday or Tuertiav. ' "! Y V i iv u -.Cl ENTERTAINERS Beatrice Tompkins, principal doncer, left, ond Dionne Consoer, leading soloist, will appear here Thursday night with the Robert Joffrey Theatre Bollet. This Roseburg Community Concert Assn. presentation will be held at 8:15 p.m. at Roseburg Senior High School. Gerald Arpino is the principal male dancer with the group. The Senior High has been chosen because of the better stage facilities. Sumatra Rebeli Proclaim New Provisional Regime (Continued from Page 1) Ion's close associate in lh 1956 uprising. Hussein s proclamation came ex actlv five days after an ultimatum ! Premier Djuanda's cabinet' and form a new government stripped 0f all Communist influence, uls proclamation was issued at , mammoth Padang rally and erected with great applause, the form a new iiovernment siriDDea Droaucast reported The proclamation was issued as Sukarno was flying home from a vacation in Japan in an attempt to head off the uprising that car ries with it the threat of civil war. Sukarno To Speak Sukarno, who has been on a five week foreign tour, is scheduled to address the troubled nation Sun day. All major non-Communist par ties strove to head off a collision between the rebels and the cen tral government. They made an offer to mediate between the Sumatran rebels and Djuanda's government. The Com- , munists. whose strength is reoort- steadily in the island re- public, stood aloof from the offer.1 me political parties aciea only a few hours before the rebels read their proclamation from Padang. ' The rebels apoarently lost all hope that Mohammed Hatta. pro- . Western former vice president and a national nero secona omy 10 Sukarno, would form a new gov- eminent. In their ultimatum, they had de manded that Hatta he named pre mier and left free to pick a new cabinet. SfasSen Resigns Job t D c ' Kll" ror Governor (Continued from Page 1) I VI .;,'"' ' "'."V - "..."" a IM, in 1944 .., bom.,i as ti'-iiuat fiumiiiriiiuii hi uio nuu .... ....... tne .Minnesota delegations lavor- ite son. I birthday anniversary. She was Ika As Constituent born at Olalla, Feb. 15. 1869, the If he were to win the nomma-1 daughter of Linus and Lucinda tion for governor of Pennsylvania Wright Bushnell, pioneers of the in the May primary and go on to community in the late 1860s. defeat the Democratic candidate She was married at Looking in the November "lection. Stassen glass in 1892 to Jasper B. Howard, would have Eisenhower as a con- who died in October 1939. Mrs. stituent. The President is Penn- Howard was a charter member of svivania resident with a farm at Gettvsburg. In 19J6 Stassen tried to dump Vice President Nixon for the No. 2 spot on the GOP ticket. At the last minute he conceded failure to Eisenhower, who took no side publicly in the controversy, and then made a convention speech seconding the renomination of Nixon. At the time Eisenhower de fended Stassen's right to try to block Nixon, and granted Stas sen's request for a leave of ab sence to try to block Nixon. IP Completes Harbor Plywood Tract Purchase (Continued from Page 1) , compe , the regular plywood market. The letter lo stockholders said in part: Won't Impair Operation "The sale of the Lewis River area will not materially . "eel manufacturing and sales opera ti 'ns While it represented sub ntnntinl rvurlinn nf th rnmnanv'l 1 ..i.. ,i uimirr iuiiuiiiks, 113 same " mc companv's operations was serious- v impaired bv a contract entered into in 19.i0 hv Harbor and Long- Bell which required the sale of portions of the Lewis River tint- her to Long Bell, "The value of this timber . . . u. forth- rliiri-d hv Psrifie it j t ...u . . , I USI'l BIIII l.llll S HllCirSl. resulting from their Swift Creek power development, which neces- $,tate the flooding of a substan- River road " The letter vent on to sav that oiiiii,rim-iii ui iimi uvii nu or- ... ..... i ii--.. .j- plywood items and that us mills at Aberdeen. Wash . and Riddle. The youths are Cecil Neal Whit Ore., and timber stands in Oregon ten. 23. Rt. 2, Bo 94. and Dwam and Washington "are presently llayden Pace, 19. 74 West Whot adequate" for this typo of produc- ton St. Police stopped the vehicle tion. at West Harvard Ave. and I'mp- qua St. after following the suspects WORD OP DEATH TOLD Gerrit A. Nan Voorst, brother of the late S. W Van Voorst of Dixon ville. died Thursday in St. Paul. Minn .. according to word from Mrs. S. W'. an Voorst, who now lives in Redlands. Calif The St Paul man is survived by his wife and three children. The Dixonville man died Dec. 4 Writ II 'r tl. Oo tkt harrh h.lU fm. I. M. .1 ..... S.N. Ik. I SO Will .!. ' Who tfioro s 'rink fttoro t 4n or." m M II i A it"?.' . . - Mohn To Replace Frank Brewster SEATTLE fi Einar O. Mohn, the man who will replace frank W. Brewster in the S25,0U0-a- ear i i00 " president of the Western his union career in Bellingham. Mohn s appointment was an nounced in Miami Beach. Fla., Thursday night by James R. Hof fa of Detroit, new Teamsters Un ion president. Mohn rose to Dower in the -ionn s iDDomimeni was an - , Teamsters as a protege of Dave Beck and has been the giant un- ion's executive vice president for five years with headquarters in Washington. D C. His selection to head the 11-state Western Conference had been con sidered almost a foregone conclus ion after Hoffa's election as Beck's successor. Mohn threw his support behind Holla at the union's international convention in Miami Beach last October while Brewster cast his lot with William A. Lee of Chi cago, an international vice presi dent who unsuccessfully c h a 1- lenged Hoffa's bid for the top P Brewster, whose handling of , leamsier iunos ana uorrowuiKs from the union drew censure ol the Senate rackets investigating committee, helped Beck set up the Western Conference in 1937. Brewster remains ai president nf Jmnt ( nnnri 2 made tin of locals in Washington and North Idaho, except for two locals at Vancouver and Longview. He also heads the Teamsters' big Local 174 here. Delia Howard Dies At Tenmile I ., n n Howard IN life ' A."!' K. " ' ' mnrnmtr nipn ai nr nnm in ipnmii inia i r Mrs. Howard died on her 89th the Tenmile Ladies Club. Surviving are five children: Clif ford Howard, Chester Howard and Ralph Howard, all of Tenmile; Vic tor Howard of Silverton and Mrs. J. P. (Viola i Hahn of Tenmile; a stepson, Alfred Howard, Rose burg: six grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be in the Tenmile Methodist Church Mon day at 2 p.m. with the Rev. New ell Morgan of the First Christian Church of Roseburg officiating. Concluding services and interment will be in the family plot in the Tenmile Cemetery. Funeral ar rangements are in care of Long and Orr Mortuary. John Fowler Requests Preliminary Hearing John Edmund Fowler. 19. 510 W. I'mpqua St., asked for a prelimi nary hearing Friday when he ap peared in district court on arraign ment on a charge of receiving and con,ims 9tolen property. T h e I hearing ii scheduled for Monday at 3 p.m. Fowler and Ronnie E u g t n names 21, 1635 W. Ann St., are accused of receiving merchandise stolen from Roseburg and Eugene itores by two 17-year-old girls. They were arrested this week by Roseburg police after the girls al legedly admitted the extensive shop lifting spree in which more than 200 items were taken. m . , COnrrioutin J Charges Fjced Bv Roseburff Men r-cu ' Two young Roseburg men were arrested by Roseburg police early today on charges of contributing to the delinquency of a minor afler they were picked up in a ear at 4 30 a m. in eompanv with two 17- year-old Roseburg girls for some time. The girls were cit ed for curfew violation. BIG "M" Hi j he FrfOsfmnc Ltwtr Coif in Ro'.efXi'g Si Dilljrd Motor Co. A Gootl rlocO To Do IwJMnoM Slash.. 01 otoaelol Private Schools State Support Is Proposed PORTLAND Oregon private colleges should get stale financial aid. a Hate Senate special, com mittee was told here Kriday by two educators. Edgar W. Smith, Portland, chair man of the Guvrnor's Committee on Higher Education and for 16 years a member of the state Board of Higher Education, said there are facilities for 7,000 more students in Oregon'i privately supported colleges. He suggested that faced with a heavy enrollment in the next four years, the state could save money by supporting private colleges in stead of expanding state institu tions. Dr. Morgan Odell. president of Lewis and Clark College, also called for state support of private institutions. Each student in state-supported colleges costs taxpayers about 51.000 a year, he said, and added: "The 7.000 students we would have would relieve expenses of the state system of higher education by 7 million dollars." Tuition payi 72 per cent of the cost of educating a student at a private college, he said, while tuition takes care of only 25 per cent of the cost at a state school. lvj;, C.u( flOP Will Mavp To 1 tbb Stop Recession PHOENIX. Aril. i.t The Re publican administration "will not stand by and allow a recession to continue or unemployment to rise." Vice President Nixon said here last night. There is nothing wrong with America's economy that confidence won't cure, Nixon told an Arizona GOP rally. Rep. Martin (R-Massi,: appearing on the same program, echoed the theme. Nixon said that as the 1938 con gressional election campaign ap proaches, opponents of the admin istration are sure to raise the cry' that "depression is just around the corner." But he said five billion dollars more in defense spending con- tracts will be let in the early months of 19.S than were let in the last six months of 19o7. j He also noted that President Ei-1 senhower has approved a two bil- . lion dollar post office moderniza-; tion program, and that about two ' billion dollars will go into the fed- j eral highway program. 4 Men Swallowed. Up By Snow Slide OURAY, Colo. Three men seeking to rescue a fourth en tombed by a snowslid were swal lowed up by a second slide Friday and presumed dead. The threat of further slides im periled would-be rescuers who worked in snow, rock and shorn timber 60 feet deep in zero tem peratures. Sheriff Bud Slott of Ouray Coun tv said of the victims. "It iwould be impossible for any of them to I be alive." Oscar Kranr. a county commis sioner, said the last hope for the four vanished when searchers dug 18 feet to reach a bulldozer on which three of the missing men were standing when the second slide struck. It was hoped they might have crawled beneath the vehicle and gained safety in an air pocket. But none was there. The four are Ted Mason. 42. Walt Smith, 45. Danny Gerrell. 27. and Mike Muransky. 40, all of Ouray. Each was married and had children. Mason had six, Muran sky two, Smith and Gerrell one each. Don't Take It M ' V5 M ii .o A:r7 DELIVIRI0 DAILY TO 11.500 mm m Morgan Authorizes Railroads To Up Rates 12 Per Cent PORTLAND Oregon Public I'tilities Commissioner Howard Morgan has authorized railroads to increase their freight rates 12 per cent for most products shipped within the state. Excepted from the increase are: Limestone, fresh fruits and veg etables moving to processing plants, empty fruit lugs, sugar beets, logs and wood chips. Morgan granted a 8 per cent in crease for shipment of logs and wood chips under contract. He said an increase for the other items had been denied because he doubted it would produce addi tional revenues for the railroads. He said that evidence from ship pers indicated that if increases were granted on these items, the shippers would use other car riers. The increases granted will be come effective on not less than 10 days notice to the public and Mor gan. The railroads have not yet filed their new freight rate sched ules. In 1957, the railroads requested a S per cent intrastate rale in crease. Later, they upped the re quest to a general 12 per cent aft er the Interstate Commerce Com mission last August authorized a 12 per cent interstate rate hike. V In his order, which was dated Tuesday, Morgan said he was keeping the record of the case open and would retain jurisdiction to hold additional hearings and issue final orders on those com modities not increased in the gen eral increase. Portlander Killed In Medford Crash MEDFORD i John E. Smith, 30, of Portland, died in a hosp'tal Friday night from injuries suf fered a few hours earlier in a four vehicle pileup south of Medford. Smith was driving a truck be longing to the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Co. Also involved in the collision were a loaded log truck, operated by Bernie G. Helms, 33, Talent, who was unhurt; a passenger car, operated by Ruth Catherine Oil man, 40. Medford, who was shaken up; and a l'-i ton truck operated by John S. Wilford, 50, Medford, who suffered broken legs, nbi and other injuries. His condition was reported poor Saturday morning. The cars piled up after Wilford s truck, loaded with oranges, at tempted to make a left turn onto a private driveway, state police, said. Smith was Oregon's 14th traffif. victim this month according to the Associated Press tabulation. TODAY AND TOMORROW SUN. FEB. It ,mt Lutheran Layman's Ltagua, St. Paul ! Lutheran Church, Svlwester home, 824 W. Military, 7:30 p.m. Personalized Servic "Th Skinners" Bookkeeping AND Income Tax Service NOTARY PUBLIC 427 S. E. 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