Get-Together Planned For
Umpqua Teachers, Students
By MRS. GEORGE MUNSON al Ihf Munson home on Joelson
Flans are being made for a gel- Hoad.
together of all learners and pupils .Mr. and Mrs Paul t rben Sr. re
of Ihe lmpqua area who attended turned home Friday after a weeks
school there. ; vacation in central California. Mrs.
This includes the Day. Millwood. Fred Williama Sr. of Cambria.
Tvee and Coles Valley schools, all mother of the latter, accompanied
of which are now consolidated in them home, to spend part of the
the one school. Umpqua District 45. summer here.
The event has been planned asi Ben Clark of l mpqua and his
an all-day meeting with a polluck sister. Mrs. Alice (irimmell. of
dinner at 12:.K) noon. The date has , Anderson, Calif., have just return
been set for Sunday. June 8, at the'ed from a trip to l.ewiston, Idaho,
I mpqua Community Hall near where they were called by the
lmpqua. lealh of their brother, William
Portland Guests l,rk-
Mr. and Mis I. accrue Olrnun
and children. Mrs. Mary Kidins. F -. C.-a,-and
Mrs. Klla Oleson all of Port- rQlT UQKS 56l6CtS
land, were guests Saturday at the
Will Long home on Joelson Hoid. ll I
Mr. and Mrs. Al Hendricks, of NOlll iraCTOlT AS
Portland, who made their nome
here for several years, were guests
Kndav al the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Will Long.
The Coles Valley Cemetery Assn. Kair Oaks Grange recently se
of L'mpqua will have its regular ilected Nora Cracroft as delegate
clean-up day this Saturday. A pot- to State (irange.
luck dinner will be served at noon1 Before the meeting Robert Da
in the Community Hall, followed vis spoke on prevention and cor
bv the annual business meeting, rection of juvenile delinquency and
All persons interested are invited answered questions from t h o s e I
to come present
Mrs. Alice Grimmett of Ander-i Dorothy Norton and Edith Ger
son. Calif., was a guest Wednesday . ard were announced as hostesses
for this month by Virginia Wil-
J n hams, asst. Home Economic chair-
CjiIuC DUSinCSS man She also gave a report on
. I the Silver Tea and the show re
DaAnsnerl Ssfr icently sponsored by the Fair Oaks
IXCUpCIICU Jdl. . :(;range ana- the Mother's Day ban-
. aotumd CEI BV qUet Sund"'- S"e '' ,he '1K
By MR5. Arthur itLBT meeting would be postponed for one
The Roya I t oachman cafe and week unlll Mav 27 and woud D,
tavern at (.lide was reopened Sat- at ,le Gerard home,
urday after a closure of four and jionev realized from the Silver
one half months, by the owners. :Te, and dinner wj be put in the
.Mr. and Mrs. Guy Metcalf The general fund. It was voled to re
business will be under the manage-1 quest booth space for Fair Oaks
ment of Mr. and .Mrs. Jack Lam-: (;ranRe at the Douglas County
bright, r'air and Howard and Nora Cra-
California Guests croft are to be the committee in
Weekend guests at the home of charge of the booth and will he
Mr. and Mrs. Kual Young were assisted by members of the
their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. i grange.
and .Mrs. Kenneth Young from Fort 1 rhe bloodmohile will be in Sulh
Biagg Calif er'in av 2 (rom 3 to 7 p.m. at
Mrs.' Elaine Ash left Sunday for"" 'OF hall. Fair Oaks Grange
Portland on a three dav business members will supply cots and
nd State Delegate
i -,.,,.. , .. , -. i
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Garden Valley Women's
Club To Meet Thursday
Wad. May 21, 1951 Th Na.i-Rtviiw, Honour?;, Ore. 11
By ADOIE SCHNEIDER
and Mrs. Kenneth Kissell. former
Drain Business Sold,
Roller Rink Planned
The Garden Valley Women's clubi Garden Valley eighhors who were
Women's Assn.
Fellowship Tea
will meet this Thursday instead of
the previously scheduled date.
Mrs. Tressie Clay pool will be host
ess, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dunn have
returned with Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Kennedy of Med ford from an emer
gency trip lo Toppenish, Wash. Mr.
and Mrs. Kobertv Kennedy, son of
the Kennedys and daughter of the
returning from a California holi
day lo their Portland home.
Henry Booth, senior student al
University of Oregon, came noma
to vole Friday and visit briefly
with bis parents. Mr. and Mrs.
K. S. Booth before returning to
Lugene for a picnic.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Coe and School Ihu school term.
Mr. and Mr. W. S. Carlson of ThleTS. AftemOOn
Drain have told tneir ineaier
property in Elkton to Mr. and Mra.
Ed EUton, also of Drain.
The Elstona plan to convert the
building to a roller rink and hope
to be ready to open sometime in
June. Mrs. EUton is teaching the
third grade in the Drain Grade
four sont and Mr. and Mra. Mur-
Dunns, wrecked their car Thurs- riel Short and five daughter of Cal-
day between Golden. Wash., and kins Road drove to Lighthouse
loppenisn. while Mrs. Kennedy
was driving she struck loose gravel
and lost control of the car which
flipped over and slid down a rocky
embankment. The car was a total
LOT OF LISTINGS Booked solid for qufle a while, Marga
ret Childress, of New York, scans the stack of telephone
directories she will have to revise. Her employer, the Xa
tional Cylinder C Company, has changed its name to Cheme
tron Corporation of Chicago, and Miss Childress will revise their
listings in the phone books of the more than 100 cities w here
Chemetron has plants or offices.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Donnelly left
this week for Reedsport where he
will manage the new bowling alley.
loss. The accident occurred at dusk
and fortunately another car was
following close enough to see the
accident and give immediate first
aid. Mr. and Mrs. Kennedy were
not seriously injured. They were
able to continue on to Pullman,
Vwish.. and returned lo Corvallis
with their parents Sunday.
Robert Claypool left Sunday for
Madras where he will work on con
struction. i
Several Garden Valley residents!
have conducted business in Eugene
within the past few days. Among
them were -Mr. and Mrs. Virgil i
Woodruff and Mr. and Mrs. E. A. 1
Post. Mrs. Clem Schneider and
Adam Schneider and Mrs. Lillian
Hill made up another party.
Nelda Norris and Mrs. Lena Slat
tery of Rosehurg visited over Fri
day night in Eugene and continued
on to Klamath Falls bv train. Miss
Norris visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Youngren while Mrs. Slattery
visited her son. They returned by
plane Sunday.
Visits Portland
Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Brodersen
look advantage of the election holi
day and visited her two sisters in
Portland. Recent callers at t h e
Brodersen home have been Mr.
Beach for a Sunday picnic. They u,. ijmD011. Bowl. The Donnellvs
report the coast quite colorfu returmof Wednesday from Lot An
wuh the rhododendrons in fuligel wnere ne finished a three
h'oom. i course in automatic pin set-
Rev, and Mrs. John B. Ellingson ting equipment. Donnelly had one
of the Garden Valley Community
Church took Rev. llasford, the Nor
wegian evangelist who spoke at
tb,eir church, to Crescent City,
Calif.
Garden Valley children are in
vited to attend the vacation Bible
school to be held at the Riversdale
schoolhouse from June lo 20.
Classes will commence at 9 a.m.
and end at 11:30.
Mr. and Mrs. F. Graham Ew
ens returned home for voting from
Medford where they had been visit
ing her father.
California Guest
John Sinclair of Englewood,
Calif., has been visiting his mother,
Mrs. Pete Sinclair and his brother,
Robert, and wife and his sister.
Mrs. Eddie Kohlhagen of Rosehurg.
Mr. and Mrs. FranK Sampson
have returned to their Harbor City,
Calif., home after nine days in Ore
gon. They visited her sons, Don
Rogan, and family in Garden Val
ley and Bob Rogan and family in
Roseburg and her daughter in Cor
vallis. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Raikes and
family of Grants Pass recently vis
ited Mrs. Kiltie Winniford.
John Carries has gone to Albany
to cultivate the roses on his farm.
of the highest ratings in the class
being one of three who did not
have to take final examinations.
Fred O. Hunt, former resident of
Drain now living at Monroe, Wash.,
was in town on business Wednes
day, reports Edith Bush correspondent.
"Accent on Youth" will be the
program theme of the May meet
ing of the Women's Assn. of the
First Presbyterian Church when
they meet Thursday, at 1:30 p.m.
for the May Fellowship tea.
Barbara Gadway and Donna
Frisk, members of the Presbv
teens high school group at the
church, will sing and Mrs. Richard
Eastman, of the Mother Goose
Nursery, will present her kinder
garten group showing how Chris
tian education begins at this level.
Mrs. Frances Lintott will give
devotions, and Esther Circle will
serve refreshments.
All women and friends of the
church are invited to attend the
program and tea which will be
held in the aocial hall of the
church.
. A nursery will be provided at
the church for children.
BIG DEMONSTRATION
trip.
blankets and the Home Economics
Student Killed Monday In Panama Demonstration
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Ireland and Clun will furnish cookies and juices.
nephews, Chuck and Bud Cudmore.l There will be a meeting at the
made a recent overnight visit with Riversdale Grange May 2.S at 2
Ireland's mother. Mrs. A S. Ire- P-m. for members of the Pomona
land and his brother-in-law and death benefit fund,
sister, .Mr. and Mrs. Arwell Muet- Cards of thanks were read from
zie at Olalla. ' Emma Norris for flowers during
Mrs. Charles Harper of Elko. ! her recent slay in the hospital and
Nev., arrived Tuesday for a two: front the W. L. Smith family. Vel
week visit with her sister, Mrs. ! ma Braumnger was thanked for
Ray Chastain and Mrs. K. K. Shel l acting as secretary m place of
ton of Glide and Mrs. Claude Bar-!;' Murdock. who. with his wife,
clay of Roseburg. I Naomi, are absent in California. At
The 41 students of the Glide j 'he close of the evening lunch was
freshman class held a picnic Mon-1 served by Dorothy Norton and
day after school at Wolf Creek. Kl'h Gerard, reports Mrs. Brit
They played baseball and Softball, 1 tain Slack, correspondent,
followed by a wiener roasl. Chap-1
erones were Mrs. Ray Chastain,
Mrs. Jim Miles. Mrs. Leo Bunnell,
and high school instructors, Mrs.
Fdith Meshes and Delbert Peterson.
PANAMA I Students promised
an orderly funeral today for a high
school youlh fatally injured in
demonstrations against Panama's!
education minister. I
President Ernesto de la Guardia
Jr. blamed the clash Monday be
tween the students and National'
Guardsmen on political opponents!
who he said used the youths as
a shock force against his govern
ment. He agreed to meet tomor
row with student leaders to dis
cuss their demand for removal of
three guard commanders.
Sixty-two persons were injured
in the clash at Panama City's
largest high school 42 students,
18 guardsmen and two bystanders.
Four students and five guardsmen
were hospitalized.
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LONDON :.T Some 20,000 peo
ple converged on Parliament from
every corner of Britain Tuesday
for the country's biggest ban-the-H-boinb
demonstration. Anti - nu
c.ear campaigners began queing
three deep outside the House of
Commons to lobby with the House
members from their home dis
tricts. The queue was expected
eventually to wind several miles
through downtown London
CASH TO
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Visit vour nearby Pacific Finance I-oans office. Here, you
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Gen McCoy, Manager
64 S. I. SNatient, Ret.burj, OKcherJ 1-tMI
WD Toastniistress
Club Elects Officers
Lowly Potato
Holds High Place
In Paris Crisis
By EDDY GILMORE
PARIS if The lowly potato
i was the root of big trouble in
Winston - Dillard Toasl mistress ; Paris Tuesday,
club met at the Dillard school for To some Parisians it loomed
election of new officers, llavlis more important than the political
Spergon was in charge of Ihe meet- crisis.
ins ! "The situation is terrible," said
Kdna Ebner gave the invocation, ' Madame Orandjean. "It could
followed by refreshments, and a mean revolution."
social hour. Topic mistress for the i Mme. Grandjeau cleans offices
evening was Beverly Harris, who for a living and cooks polatoes
introduced the subject. "1 Am a i for her family when she can find
Democrat, or Republican, and the spuds.
Why." ' "My niece has her confirmation
Margaret McCord was acting j on Thursday," she wailed. "How
toast mistress. and introduced 1 can 1 possibly entertain relatives
speakers Ruby Kobernick. who
gave a book review on, "Kids say
the darndest things." Jo lusher
gave a word drill, and Bunny Kl
bertus reported on Council 8 meet
ing in Coquille. Beth Gordon led
a panel composed of Virginia l.aur
ence. Zilpha McAllister. Bunny Kl
and friends when 1 can find no
potatoes in Paris?"
The headline in the left wing
newspaper Liberation was pitched
in the same shrill note of protest.
"Potatoes and The Defense of Lib
erty," it said.
The grave potato crisis was
hei'tus. and Shirley Wagner, who ; brought about by two factors, one
gave their views on. 'If college en-! political, the otiier economic,
trance must be limited lo one sex.i For obvious reasons few, if any.
which should be admitted ' .lo new potaloes are arriving from
Lesher was timer, and Kdna Eb-1 strife-torn North African farms,
ner evaluator. I For less obvious but just as real
-New officers elected were. Belh reasons the French farmer at home
Gordon .president; Zilpha McAllis-jis boycotting the Paris market,
ter, vice president: Beverly Harris, Early this spring the grivern
secretary, and Shirley Wagner, j ment slapped a price ceiling of
treasurer. Haylis Spergon was about 10 cents a pound on pota
elerted club representative. : toes, a staple of the French diet.
The next meeting will he May Demanding at least 22 cents a
27 at Roseburg, with the Roseburg: pound for his pommes de terre,
club The closing thought was giv- the farmer is refusing to haul his
en by Edna Ebner, reports cor- new crop to Ihe markets of Pans,
respondent Brunette Wilson. "It's awful." said "Mme. Grand-
l jean. "At Ihe only place wnere
potatoes are oeing sold mis morn
ing, there are long lines of house
wives. "With no potatoes what is going
to happen to France?"
Eds in above read overline
TERMITES
Con aoiily at control ltd. Don't
bo ttompoded into a high prico
trootmont. A few dollars and
a littlo work will toko coro
of thflio pcsti.
C0EN SUPPLY CO
Fld I Mill OK 3 4441
Portland Voters Refuse
To Change ER Center Site
PORTLAND Work ran go
right ahead on Portland's Exposi-lion-Recreation
Center near the
eastern end of the Steel and
Broadway bridges. Voters here
have refused to change the site.
That presumably ends the legal
fighting which has been carried
on for years over location of Ihe
city's S million dollar center.
this latest attempt would have
required the center to be built at
Delia Park the old East Vanport
north of the city hut the city
voters rejected that by a to 3
margin.
-Kir-
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