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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1958)
IT. of C. Library Eugene, Oregon COffcp msmm raw's mm All 47 Tragedy Follows Collision With Supersonic Bomber; Both Jet Pilots Also Killed LAS VEGAS, Nev. (jP A huge airliner winging east in perfectly clear weather collided with a supersonie fijrhter bomber'high over the desert Monday, exploded and crash ed. All 47 aboard were killed. The jet plane was an F100F from nearby Nellis Air Force fase. a pilot training center. The craft's two occupants. on an instrument training mission, rode the craft to their deaths. j The transport exploded and crashed, killing all 47 1 aboard, ine jet crasnea, too, Initial reports were that on or both had parachuted, but the chuta sighted apparently wai drag I chuta from the plane. The collision was at 21 POO feet over a hilly desert area 15 miles ; southwest of here. nhirvpr laid there was spurt of flame as the United Air Lines transport exploded and then went into a long death dive, trail ing flames, black smoke and de bris. pples Kansas City and Washington It left Los Angelea at 7:30 a.m. and was due over this desert gambling resort at 8:31 a.m. al though it was not scheduled to land here. Th rrinnted airliner ,.i,,j i crasnea ... , rZ like a bomb. mt.. Tft ... ..rrinnD 7 roOll- I ilPrtrm inW1 IWlav a tha t-aauiilt nfl l.r passenger." 5 airline- employ- an attack by vandal, on the unused j "',er .Jjff W1S.ay 1 1" ? es and a crew of S from Los An-1 facilities of Umpqua Plywood Corp. "a'mS" J ,orev Ji 5' ir. ,w York via Denver, ai Myrtle creek, reports eorres- . "" A rescue party headed by sher-),m in s deputies reacnea me i by mid-morning and reported all ilead. Most of th bodies remained in the fuselage and the wreck- U on ' the limp ,Ce, which burned on the ground, quJ plywood property. The opc was not widely scattered. hydrant was not discovered until The scene is 9'4 miles south ol about 8 a.m. Sunday and by that Las Vegas' McCarran 1 leld. with-1 tln)e- cj,y-, reservoir had drop in 10 miles of the mountains i p,.d about two-thirds of capacity. i. atpAe 1" rta limnarn . t . i . i . . . . . . . . wuric " . - i Hwri whrn a transoort in which I ne was a passenRer un a ""covered. A warning light set for 1942. The jet came down three miles awav from the airliner and over a hill. The Air Force said the bodies of both airmen were in the j near the plant discovered the run-j . , wreckage. , nine, water. It is estimated it will PlnnC Ttsr Tltflnar After the collision. Nellis AFBltakeaUweektofUItheUnkagain.il IUII I Ul I IIIIUCI said, its radio men heard one re-1 The intake valve to the reservoir I . , port from the.,et: 'Mavday'; -1 has been opened to capacity ; QqC fp ebrOtlOn the aviator's distress call. There were a few other words, so gar bled they were indistinguishable. The radiomen said the speaker could have been saying "flame- (Continued on Page i Col. 1) Oregon Coast Air Crash Kills Physician, Wife NEWPORT, Ore. ufl A Van couver. B.C., physician ana nis wTf. died Su'nday when the r light this eoastai town. The victims were identified by slate police as Dr. and Mrs. Jack I ronint McMillan of Vancouver, B C. They were killed outright , wnen ineir piane crasncu aim , burned. At Vancouver, B.C., Ross Ed-. wards, a partner of Dr. McMillan. I said the McMillans were en route to San Francisco for a medical WIlvcilllUll. Their plane first was noticed over the "Newport are. at . about t w.P. fivfng "o" over the beach ifieeri that a 1951 car had driven '"'ndn''PP""". Pns: ATLANTA w A strange hul Li fog and rain UP on nr driveway and rammed I. .T,n,br D?vs '? LPr0,B ' Ihe let like obiect with a fiery tall nJir. said th. nlana anoarentlv ml ,he ,rike- she ald he trike,ht.me 'or ,h iebran . Ias sighted in at least six states "'.'"ii'J ,J, Mlnrt? uhJnlbecmecauKhtnleraealbth. car f "'"-escent bumper strips ad- last night as it streaked high i ,,m i. hruah ahont 250 feet II erasned in nrusn aoout Joo ieei , - m" - : short of the landing strip. . . . . Wreckage was scsttered over a wide area. In The Day's News By PRANK JENKINS Snm fiunrai nut out a few davsiwere called I i. k u I nA..Arn.n'n nai u iii itTiriBi a" departments that deal with employ- ment and unemployment indicate that the unemployment rate is hishest in the highly industrialized Northeast sernnri highest alone ihe growingly industrialized Atlantic coast and third highest in the Pa- rific Coast states of Oregon. Wash- inaton and California, where the relatively new industrialization of the Far West is chiefly concentrat- ed. They show that unemployment tends to be lowest in the aencul- tural area, of the Middle West Thee figures show percentage of unemployment (that ... percentage (Continued on Pica 4 Col. () The Weather AIRPORT RECORDS a i j V Moitly cloudy, ft hfwr tonight. Partly Twotday, with Hw afternoon ahowort. C volar tonight. Lawatt tamp, latt 24 hours . Highatt tamp, any April Lowtit tamp, any April Pracip. latt 34 hours Procip. from April 1 Praetp. from Sapt. 1 . E icoss from Sapt. 1 Sunsat tonight, 7:01 p m. SunritO) tomorrow, $.21 a.m. That is to sav agriculture is a "taiement in which he said he out lf ',aj ' - . 3 a-i.' ,ar " ' ,ax f I stabilizing influenc in our Amen- w" ""h Ba,,lt " ,he ,,me ot ,he The resulting crowd jammed the i f fcV2 jj L 5 It .Pk'& xt -J T' ' kS15lS J ran economv. E X c e p t in war !,masn,lPs- narrow county road leading to the I f ' , Jr HP.1". ' ""lrJL 1 11.-713 T . I." '.jjn i ji fJ booms, it doesn't rise to di7v '. park, and some spectators i 'ijS''i. i taf iV " VV I iMaf f Sm y!f J " 'st L heights. But. on the other hand. Petty Larceny Counts it necessary to park more than a I - ar-r wm M , y ' -fJK.ww(lt 'I mtS&l "i'S it doesn't fall to the bottom depths FICed By Pair Of Men half-mile away and hoot it the rail ' A N jMfJ frriaaaiij-w) -"''i.T?' ' 1 1 Aboard Killing uoin aooara. ii J I f VflnOCIIS V.UT " MIIMMIrf s.WI Myrtle Creek Water Supply Extent of damage was still un- : iwaurui nuin vans. One of the results was the los. of almost a third of the city's million-gallon water reservoir. Police Chief Jum Pringle .aid the vandalism attack occurred sometime Saturday night. It was c . . . lunuwcu suiiuay uy me meil OI ,w0 uroaulins valued at .hn,.. Hvdrant Oiianad Tr. ,. ,., ,h.j , " i.?. . .. ine tail, lias a uepin OI o leei. 11 h.h a a , n ii i, a... about 20 feet failed to go on or it might have been discovered soon er. An attendant at a service station City Recorder G. D. Myllenbeck (Continued on Page 2 Col. I) Charges Of Hit-Run Are Filed Against Dillard Man Sunday A 23-year-okl Dillard man was booked at county jail Sunday eve- nin on tw0 chare ,nllo'n (lary Gene Bault was charged ; wiln fajure l0 5lop lt the scene of an acc,dent and reckless driving. u,, i ...i ., t?u . charge and at $75 on the reckless driving count, Bault was arrested by Winston police on the lesser charge shortly alter a small girl was injured and an automobile and a tricycle were damaged in two separate incidents. U,tBahwa .A ,1 . . l-:i ..U...UUH pumw aiu UlfT III 31 IIU,. . . nd run was reported about 3: 1-V P m. Th. conlainant. Mr., Mabel , an u'9 HrvanaA ....... away. . . . , . . 'Winlcfeman CI U.'al VL-kn.t. l:. " " ituiuiii .,t . . i reported to polic that a car of (similar description had smashed' i into his vehicle as he attempted to make a left turn from Harvard I Avenue onto Wharton. He said his I daughter, Carole, 4, lost a tooth in i !the smashup and the other carl ; fled west on Harvard. j Roseburg police said they later by Winston officers to attlst in hnnkintf Kanlt mt nmniu . . .vu... Jail following his arrest on the reckless driving charge. Following Bault's directions. Roseburg officers then went to the. residence of Gordon Clayton on &en Creek west of Dillard! "a"" car was found there and' Police said they found the trike in 'he rear seat and paint marks matching samples from Winkle-; man's car on the front bumper, Meanwhile. Bault disclaimed any knowledge of the two Roseburg in- cirients. tlaylon. however, signed Two men arrested bv drDutv .henff Saturday; on pettylarceny in.iii:e i-rf scnenuien lo ne ar- raiuned in Canvonville justice court lortnv Held in lieu of bail each are Melun Lester Horv. 22 Wa- 'coma Beach, and William Luther ' Smith. 35. Otis. The were talon mt cusicriy in'th louthtrn part of Iht county NOTED CHURCHMAN OlES Presbyterian Church la th Inited1 States in 1947. ' ROAMlKK Va iaP Korrtt 1... B... b:j-. -:-... j I . W JBa.f II ' ! : i . ' I m.nSe,,'?h.,MlI17'!.tVrV',C' An """") 1 800 P".ons took' k!k. L, "VT4- '?' AjS ' - "" " V r.1,!.,?. l0,,"tp'h";r" '"vantage of the tluV. ofler rfi lvrX V ''-' ' ; v . VT' I ' Railway and prominent Prcbvte- i ht . v. . , V " ( r T ' a, ).. (.',,,, ia i it EH4taH5-2' & b ll.M lXZT.' vrn.ra",'r. P'nger. JAM IN PARK Th.s wo. only a port of th. crowd of Dool. ond diinlnvi which Perish E.toblished 1873 12 Pooe ROSEBURG, OREGON. MONDAY. APRIL 21, 1958 93-58 PRICE 5c Researcher Held On Count Of Perjury FBI Links Harvard Educator With Soble Red Espionage Ring BOSTON UP FBI agents ar rested Mark Zborowski, 50, Rus sian born Harvard researcher, on perjury charges Monday in con nection with the Jack Sobla So viet espionage ring. He was held in $20,000 bad for ... - ,vr"" " T" " V " '"V'""?" w" vous and Dale His only comment in the small federal building courtroom was on the matter of bail. He said $20.-1 000 was -an awful lot of money" and added: ' I never intended "to 7 - : , , , leava here and I can be here any- , time you want me I al"M" jiyu may n-u ! h,ra. ,wa"' haod-.-uffed, to the de- tention room. Registered as Foreign Agent FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover had said earlier Zborowskis ar- "'cians- "e ls." lacmty at rest was on the basis of a federal Wayne University College of Medi warrant issued in New York Fri-clne- Frora 1942 ,0 19js h, serve dav. It charged Zborowski with!8? non-commissioned officer and 1 n(,P:nrv rtflll,;nB trnm h laalt 1 Perjury resulting trom bis testi- (Continued on Page 2 CoL 2) c.il l: a J JUKICIIIII HUVUIILH a Plans for Douglas County Tim- oer uays at ftumernn are taking shape, and after a recent Timber Days Committee meeting; addi tional details were announced. Mrs. Olive Putman, committee chairman, said the Douglas County Mounted Sheriff's Posse and the Bagpipers from Eugene will take part in a parade Saturday morn ing, Aug. 9. A plan to bring a woman who had been named Queen for a Day on the Hollywood television pro gram to Sutherlin for the Timber Days event was dropped since free transportation is not available. Mrs. Herb Osaki, News-Review correspondent, said. I he children s parade has been chea'uled for 1 a m and the grand parade at 11 Saturday morn ing. Individuals or organizations wishing to participate in the pa rades should register at Warren's Studio anri Camera hnn nn Fact Central Avenue in Sutherlin. floats will be judged on the fol - Vy . , . i g'" J"'""'-, vriuMnK ne eveni nave mpn nr. j" . .",," dered. Chairman Dick Be is ra- Ported. First Boat Overflow . Surprising Turnout Size Ra,JA Am Pnnlsrif e8rdedA Popularity Proof Of Water SpOttS The Lmpqua Boat Club is look-1 ing for a new site to stage Its 1959 boat show alter 6.500 people the minimum estimate crammed limited Singleton Park Sunday for the club's first show, Robert Kerfe commodore of the Huh said mamhor. hart esti- mated that 2.000 Deonle would turn Commented Skip Cairns, show ln, aT - ' . ,, - t Pu.,llr.. Twi.nty-three central Douglas r"n,y "" trailer and sporting in"'' dealers displayed their ' ' -iuo onireri ,"'r 'he exhibit that one firm loM al " $2 f'00 worth sma" boa,s and ccesnoneii. Anotrt- r told a boat and twin outboard " or worth nearly M ono. Others were content t slay in (Continued on Pin I Col. 4) a dcoutv Commented Skip Cairns. show.Pri.. "IJ.'tI fsVC-, fZl J Zi In Crash Of Society Of MayF . . a Die In Fires technicians uate 2-Day Meet Here Approximately 125 members of tha Oregon Society of X-ray Technicians will meet in Roseburg next Friday and Saturday for their annual convention. This will mark the first time the organization has met in this city, Mrs. Olive E. Uoerner of Roseburg, general convention chairman, said. The society was invited to meet here at last year's convention in Coos Bay. All activities will be held in the Lmpqua Hotel. A highlight of the -'m,in h. .!.,.., r (... iT.TrH.i a x!,.. -.hiw.. cers Saturday. An X-ray exhibit wlUb s "P " n toral Koom '"le hotel. The X-rays, to be submitted by ,n members, will be judged and I ,he winner presented an award latnrHa nioht saluraaT "'S1"- 1 Refresher Course Clark R. Warren of Detroit, Mich., will instruct a refresher course in basic exposure factors. Warren is first vice president of the national Society ot A-ray lech auer me war was enipioyea oj uie Detroit Memorial Hospital. Registration for the convention will start at 6 p m. Friday and wiU open again at 8 Saturday morning. Warren will conduct the refresher (Continued on Pag 2 CoL 1) Funds For Access Roads Released; Near $6 MilIon WASHINGTON lv-Sen. Jlorse (D-Ore) said Saturday that at the urging of Sen. Gore (D-Tenn), the Agriculture Department ordered release of $5,914,000 in impounded funds for timber access roads. George, chairman of the Senate Roads subcommittee, also had called on Secretary of Agriculture Benson to lay before Congress a complete timber access roads pro gram before it adjourns. "Full use of (the department's) i contract authority would mean 1 that our 32 million dollar access road program could be put into operation this summer . . ." said Morse. "Oregon's share of this work would help greatly in getting people back into paying jobs in I an ,.area wner. unemployment is !r""' eu 4 STATES SEi METEOR anrnvi tha sniitha,, am tirw -n" " ijuuuieasiern skt. Anicai seminary at f ort Worth since astronomer iH i n,.h,hi. .,! a i ..... . . . m ffiant metenr - " Exhibition Attracts 6,500 Attendance v a-.. .7iif isak-nt-.' :s.r-r-jTifiw:ii . i i ivy, i Zm jtro.' w 1 . ....... "V- I lommtd, Singleton Pork Sundoy in tha Umpqua Boot Club's 6,500 peopl turnexl out. (Pojl Jenkins) CLARK R. WARREN . . . convention speaker Log Slips; Myrtle Creek Man Injured Paul Jlospeller. . 32, of Myrtle i reek was admitted to Douglas Community Hospital Friday alter he received a fractured right thigh while at work, hospital authorities said. The Myrtle Creek resident is em ployed by K. J. Stansen. Jlospel ler was injured when a log slipped and fell on him, hospital authori ties said. His condition is reported as satisfactory this morning. Ten-year-old Steven Simnson. son of Mr. and Mrs. Neil Simpson of Koseburg was released from Douglas Community Hospital Sun day. He was admitted Saturday afternoon after he fell while play ing and fractured his right arm, nospuai authorities said. Kenneth Cronk. one-vear-old .on of Mr. and Mr.. Alton Cronk, 3065 Porter St.. was released from the hospital this morning. He was ad- mitted to the hospital Saturday aft' er he fell and cut his tongue, hos pital authorities said. BAPTIST PREXY DIES FORT WORTH. Tex. I Dr J. Howard Williams, 6.1. president or ,-ouinwesiern Baptist Iheologi- ..a.. I II. u n-ii-- hi waa uuui in uiiiii. AiriinerLl"T I In 4 States I $400,000 BIjzo Raxes Community Hospital; All 23 Patients Saved By THI ASSOCIATED PRESS Seventeen children died in four fires over the weekend. In New York City's Harlem, Al fred Madirville, 31, father of sev en, perished in an early morning fire with four of his children and a 4-year-old girl who was an over night guest. The four Madirville children ranged from i month, to 4-year-old twins. Th other fatality was ivonne i nomas, 4. Mrs. Madirville managed to get out of their tenement apartment with three of her children. Officials blamed th blaze on eareless smoking. At Dunn, N. C, Mr.. Archie Robinson, expecting her eighth child, returned to her farm ten ant home to find six of her chil dren burned to death. The oldest child, Bobby, (, man aged to get out safely. Mrs. Robinson and her husband had been visiting a neighbor. The dead children were 1 to 7 years old. The New York and Carolina vic tims, were Negroes. One Plays With Matches Four children were burned to death in Las Vegas, Nev., as fire swept the home of Simpson Jun ior. Fir Capt. O. K. McFarland said one of th victims. Tommy Ray Junior, 18 months, had been play. ing with matches while Mrs. Jun ior was shopping. Th other vic tims were z, 4 and s. Three other Junior children playing In a yard, escaped the flames. Two children, left alone at their Delta, Colo., home by their moth er, were fatally injured in a fir. A third child of Mrs. All Ro mero Kathy, S managed to es cape without injury, lha victims were a 2-year-old girl and a - month-old boy. At Sylva, N. C, S400.000 fire destroyed the only hospital in the western North Carolina town of 3.000. AH 23 patients wer evacu ated safely from the C. J, Har ris Community Hospital. Accused Non-Supporter Returned To Douglas A man sought by Douglas Coun ty authorities since 1954 on a charge of non-support la now lodg ed in the county jail. Frederick Newton DeBolt, SS. was extradited from San Diego, Calif, and booked at the Douglas Jail Saturday. A grand jury re turned a non-support Indictment again.t him in 19M. According to th sheriff's office, ina uanara nananmanr naa nam r n..rl lin oon tn .nnnorl n.Rnll'. . .t lainiiy. first onnuol boat show. About I lllfUITGJ VU.IC.II LAJCII3CJf 2 Special Bond Flotations By DARRELL MADDOX News - Review Staff Writer Roseburg- School District voters will jro to the polls Fri day and vote on $1,109,668.75 outside the 6 per cent limitation and two special bond issues. The polls will be open from 2 to 8 p.m. at eigrht locations. These are Central Junior High School. Senior High School, Riverside, Rose, Melrose, Green, Winchester and Riverside elementary schools. Total estimated expenditures of the proposed 1958 - 59 budget are $2,330,518.59. The proposed budget totals $90,002.69 more than the present one. Raging Gunman Storms Convent, Shoots 3 Nuns TRENTON, N.J. W "I wanted to kill some nun. and priests." That, police said, was the ex planation offered by i 24-year-old father of two wno Durst into a convent Saturday night and wound ed three nuns with a shotgun. They said Louis Felipe Marrero signed a atatement in which he admitted .hooting the nuns and turning the area around St. Joa chim's convent and school into a battleground as he fought off po lice and National Guardsmen for mora than an hour. Th county prosecutor said the youth would be charged with atro cious assault with intent to Kin. had sent a series of suggestions to such prominent Catholics as Bishop Fulton J. Sheen and then became resentful when his sugges tions wer ignored. Nuns Out Of Danger Two nuns wounded seriously in the shooting spree were reported out of danger. Ihey are sister Lorenzina Sassani, SO. who was shot in the chest, and Sister Mad elm Eussile, 23, Bayonne, N. J who suffered a shotgun blast in the thigh. The third nun, sister Angela Bulla. 24. Torrineton, Conn., and Asbury Park, N. J., was wounded in the arm and was listed in good condition. A passer-by was hit in th mouth b pellets fired by Marrero from a convent window. Th prosecutor said Marrero has no polic record or record oi men tal illness. The youth sat In th polic sta tion and ipoka calmly of his "vi sions. ' "I hav been having visions and signs from th Virgin Mary fur about two years," he said. "I've never spoken to her. I've never seen her. Just the signs Marrero, an $80-a-week press operator who lives only two blocks from St. Joachim's, was married in th church and was known in th neighborhood as a regular churchgoer. II has two children, aged 1 and 3. Autos Crash Near Astoria, Killing 4; Boy Seriously Hurt ASTORIA Wl - The toll of a highway crash south of her stood at four Monday. A little boy, hurt in th accident, remained in criti cal condition. The boy s brother and sister asked for their mother and father, unaware that both of them were dead. George Brand, about 30, of Til lamook, died just befor midnight Sunday. I lis wife, also about 30, waa killed in th Saturday acci dent, aa were Mr. and Mrs. Jack Edward Wood of Astoria. The Brand and Wood cars met headon on a curv five miles south of here. Ihe Brand. T-year-old son con . . tinued unconscious with a head inmrv. The Brands' other children, a hoy S and a girl 2, suffered fi ac- tures. They asked for their par ents. a hospital attendant said Monday. Also hospitalised as a result of the crah was Sulo Conway of,... . . , , Astoria, a passenger in th Wood! Higher School Budget "Th. fourth dealh, raised Or.-Awjit Drai" Dtcision gon'a traffic toll for the year to; pollj for Drain Klementaty 112 in the Associated Press tabu- School District voters will b open lation. So far this month, per-lfron, 2 to 8 p.m. Tuesday when sons nave neen ainea in uregon traffic accidents. Missing Eugene Angler's Body Found In Reservoir Kl'GENE A search for a missing fisherman ended Sunday when the body of Paul A. Blktti, 31, Kugene, was found la Fern Bulge Keservoir, 30 miles north wet of here. Bellotti. who had gone out into the lake alone, first waa reported missing Friday when his boat was seen drifting toward shore. it was announced here today that the Jim Mi Kee Trailer Sales will close all day Wednesday in memory of Bellotti. B-llotti's fun eral is scheduled at the Krienillv Church of God In Eugene Wed nesday at 2 p ut. AWARD CIVIN SINOIR j NKW YORK i .Marian An-1 drrson is the winner of the 1U.". Albeit Kinstein Commemorative Aard in tha Arts. Miss Ander- son, a Neero contralto, will receive her award May 4 from the Albert Kinttein College of Medicine of 'Yeshira University. The two special bond issues will be voted on separately. On calls (or 155,000 for improvements in th science department at th high scnoni, in outer lor S35,000, would provide for a shop storage building to be built on the Edenbower School site. Some materials on hand would be used in construction of the shop storage building, which would be 80 by 120 feet in size. Present facilities in the high school science department would be remodeled and include a new chemistry and general science la boratory, physics room and stor age rooms. Superintendent of buildings and grounds Guy E. Davis has told the school board a new shop storage building is needed because trucks tractors, a fork lift and other equip, ment must now be stored outside. Such material as lumber, plywood Pipe, fittings and other supplies can be purchased cheaper in quantity if storage spaca i available, he said. Rural school district's apportion ment to the Roseburg district is Pteito PPronimately $667.- ,umi estimated tax levies '"J " ensuing year are $1,565,. S'S . as compared with $1,261,- ur uie present oudget. Estimated Millag Down Th county assessor has eslimat. ed that the assessed valuation for the school district in 1958-59 will ...iwj,ui. ror in current fis cal year the millag is 54.5 and as sessed valuation is $25,389,237 uie rural scnool budget passes plus the state offset in the basic school fund, the Roseburg School District tax millag may be be tween 10 and 12 mills less next year than for this, Sunt, M. C. Dcl ler said. Two items in th budget de creased: fixed charges and pay ment of interest and principal on bonded indebtedness. Fixed charg es dropped by $10,184.06 from $138 936.32 to $128,752.26 and payment of interest and principal on bonded indebtedness dropped from $288 SX.2S to $283,171.25, a decreas of $5,385. Other Costs Liired The cost of instruction, due prin cipally to automatically-earned in- . creases in salaries and adjust ments in the lower end of the sal ary schedule, is up $40,053.03 to a total of $1,417,021.39. Textbooks, teaching supplies and library sup plies, however, amounted to $9. 105.76 or 22.7 per cent of the in struction increase. Plant operation, til salaries of custodians, building sunnhps furl lights, water are up from $223,479 to $226,362 or only $2,883. Due prin cipally to increased transportation costs, the auxiliary agencies cate gory of the budget is up $4,674.12 from $100,920 to $105,594.12. in general control items, or the total expenses of oneratinir the school superintendents office ar up only $782.40. Two Lillie Moore Lots Will Be Sold May 28 Two of th three remaining lots in th LiUie Moor estate wUl be auctioned May 28 by the General Service. Administration in Seattle. The GSA, in announcing th aale, said the 154-foot frontage on Rose Street would b "excellent as a husinesa building site, parking lot, etc." Th two lots lie immediately south of th Moor house, which is in fll nran... n hminn !..... I ,:Kliairvi I into tha rnntml nf lha nnnola. n .... ... . County Historical Society. Th GSA said th sealed bids will be opened at 11 a m. May 211 in room 126 nf tha Federal Office Building in Seattle. . rP,,df wlU v0(. J91 lW. .h. a ner rpnt limitalinn. F.stimated expenditurea for th lStf -.W school budget total JltW -57K. Th polls will be located in the grade school. The new budget amounts to about SM.0UO above th estimate for th current year. The increase is primarily be cause of some teacher arlary in creases and the need for an addi tional teacher, Principal Vernon S. Todd said. Levity Fact Rant By L. F. Reizenstein U. $. Senate has pasted a bill to allot $1,000,000,000 tor loam to cities tor various projects. May be opportune tor Roseburg to revive the once beaten plan tor a new city hall and act the tin cup ready, ,-.,,,,; ,,., w; ..... Construction costs will never be ony cheaper. 1