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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1958)
U. cf CV Library Eugene, Oregon Corr.p osenhoweir Vetoes T Fore Adams " MICROWAVE REPEATER STATION on Mt. Nebo at Roseburg-was the scene of the weekly meeting of the Rotary Club. The meeting was devoted to an inspection of the station by 69 club members. It was the first public inspection of a mountaintop micro wave station ever staged by Pacific Telephony and Telegraph Co. This is one of a chain of stations at about 30-mile intervals from California into the Northwest designed to relay network television signals and long-distance telephone calls. Also see pictures on Page 3. (Paul Jenkins) McClellan Warns Against Wrecking labor Control Bill WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark) told Senate colleagues Friday they might wreck the labor control bill i they load it with controversial amendments. The chairman of the Labor Rack ets Investigating Committees said to those seeking even tighter con trols, "We can load this bill down with things I favor and others favor and we" get no legisla tion at all." He said the Senate Labor Com mittee had made 22 changes in its original bill in line with sugges tions he made or favored and the pending measure should be enact ed to make sure "we have made some progress." .McClellan look the floor after Sen. Barry Goldwater ( R-Ariz) called for "plugging more loop holes" in line wilh suggestions McClellan has made for tighten ing union controls. As the senate plugged away in the second day of debate. 44 new amendments, mostly offered by Republicans, put in their appear ance. Eighteen represented a pack age of Eisenhower administration proposals, offered by Sen. H. Alex ander Smith (R-NJ). Some cov ered major efforts to rewrite the bill to put In more stringent pro visions. Rodeo Caravan Tour Scheduled A caravan, heralding the upcom ing 1958 Douglas County Rodeo and featuring Rodeo Queen Judy Def ferding and her court, will wend its way through the county Saturday and Sunday. The Saturday route, beginning at 10 a.m. in Drain, will include as slops Elkton, Scottsburg, Reeds port, Coos Bay. North Bend, Co quille, Mvrtle Point and Camas Vallev, home of XJueen Judy. Prin cess Cheryl Goldson hails from Elk ton, where the caravan will stop at 10:45 a.m. Sunday's jaunt will begin at Can vonville at 1 p.m. and will end at Yonealla. A Roscburg stop is slat ed for 2:45 p.m. Roseburg is the home of Princess Patricia Bell. In The Day's News By FRANK JENKINS Financial note: A r.cw York savings hank is giving away everything from desk lamps and skillets to cameras and steak knives to attract more sav ings. All you have to do to get one of these gifts is to open a new sav ings account with at least ten dol lars. How come? This particular bank is confident that the United States of America ' has a big growth ahead of it. It knows this big growth will call for new investment capital which is created by SAVING. That's about th long and the ; short of it. j A word of advice: j If YOU want to get ahead in I this period of growth and expan- sion which because of rising (Continued On Page Co.. 5) j . , , The Weather ' AIRPORT RECORDS Night and morning cloudiness, mostly sunny and littl warmr iflirnooni today and Saturday. Highest temp, last 24 hours . . 48 Lowest tt-tp. last 24 hours S3 Highest tomp. any Juno 96 Lowest temp, any Juno 34 Precip. last 24 hours . 0 Precip, from Juno 1 3.47 Precip from Sept. t 43.0 Escots from Stpt. 1 13.45 Suntot tonight, 7:54 p m. Sunrno tomorrow, 4:32 a.m. fr Special Events Set For Rodeo, Chairman Says Lesler Miller, special events chairman for the Douglas County Rodeo, has announced details of four events to be held during the 1958 rodeo June 21-22. The chairman said all special events will be held between the main contests in the arena. Included on this year's specially program are a chariot race, 220 yard dash for local saddle horses, bareback relay race and baton race. The chariot event will provide the largest purse for the winner, said Miller. Prize money for the race, in which horses pull a two wheeled vehicle containing the driv ers, will be $50 plus entry fee mon ey. An entry fee of $10 will be charged for each contestanl. Miller said the race will be over the half-mile rodeo track. Both the 220-yard dash and the bareback relay race will carry prizes of 510 plus entry tees. The 220-yard race will be open only to Douglas County horses. Mil ler said the event usually draws a field of young local riders. En try fee for the race will be $5 per horse. In Hie bareback Telay race, teams of four or five men take turns riding a single horse in com petition with other similar teams. Entry fee for the event will be $1 per man. said Miller. The baton race differs in that a baton is passed from one mounted rider to another. Miller said four or five-man teams also are used in the baton race. Prize money for (he event will be S5 plus entry money. Entry fee is SI per man, the chairman concluded. I Swimming Pool Opens Saturday Roseburg's municipal 'swimming 1 pool , opens Saturday at 1 p.m. with the traditional first day being I free. Opening of the pool was post i poned about a week after a pipe I burst in a locker room. Swimming was supposed to start last Friday, but before the gates could swing open the pipe broke necessitating repairs and delay in opening. mere s no inflation at the swim I ming pool admission remains jthe same. The charge for kids is 10 cents, and 35 cents for adults. If there is sufficient demand, ac ; cording to city officials, the noon hour swimming period for busi ness men and women will again b scheduled. However, il was not ,ed that last year's attendance dur ing the noon hour was too light to ; warrant opening the facilities, j Red Cross swimming classes at the pool are slated to start Mon day, June 15. The classes will be held from 10 a.m. until noon. Winchester Bay Resort Granted Liquor Permit A class A package store license has been granted by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to John .1. and Ruth E. Ziolkowski for tre Umpqua Beach Resort at Winches ter Bay. Following violation hearings, the commission ordered a 10-day sus pension for Alma E. Butler, Alma's Tavern. Myrtle Creek. The suspen sion becomes effective June 23. On the same day, a 20-day suspen sion of the permit of Ramnna Hcsch, Alma's Tavern, is to be come effective.. Sreelworkert Union Cets New President Leo Collins, who has been -erv-ing as financial secretary. Tues day was elected president of l.'nit ed Steelworkers of America Local 5074 at Riddle. Collins succeeds John Ruen who did" not seek re-election. Rusen is completing his fourth year as head of the local which represents work ers at llanna Nickel. j . J! ' Large Entry List In Fat Lamb Show Will Be Judged A large entry list in the 19th annual Douglas County Fat Lamb Show will be judged Saturday by Kenneth McRae, Monmouth, at the Fairgrounds in Roseburg. Prizes totalling $427 will be dis tributed among the winners. The sponsoring Douglas County Live stock Assn. will put up $402 and the Willamette Valley Ram Sale Committee $25. Single lambs and pens of five will be exhibited in the open divi sion and singles only in the junior division, according , to Wayne Mosher, assistant county agent and association secretary. The livestock association will award $50 to the best pen of five and $15 to the best singles in both divisions. In addition, the sale committee will give $12.50 each to the best pen of five and overall individual champion. The exhibits are to be in place hi their pens by 10 a.m. Saturday. In conjunction with the show, sheep dog trials, a 4-H and Future Farmers of America judging con test and 4-h showmanship contest win oe neid. Fifty dollars in cash prizes will go lo tne nest nogs in me trials, an event in which a shepherd dog is required to herd a band of five sheep through an obstacle course and pen it in less than 12 minutes with minimum help from its han dler. The trials start at 1 p.m. The Umpqua Lions Club will serve free lamb barbecue at noon. Roseburg Woman Found Guilty Of Drunken Driving I A Roseburg woman, Frances ' Alyrtle Regan, was found guilty of drunk driving and given a 10-day jail sentence and $150 fine by Mu nicipal Judge Randolph S loo urn Thursday. ' She was cited bv city police in the downtown Roseburg area May '25. indue Slocuin suspended $50 tot tne line loiiowing her trial. Norman Lewis Davis, 563 W Ccn iter St., was found guilty by a mil nicipal court jury of reckless driv ing. He was fined $1)0 for violation of the basic rule. City police cited Davis on April 26. Arraigned Thursday by Judge jSlocum was a 16-year-old Roseburg youth who pleaded guilty to two I city ordinance violations, disrharg ' ing a weapon and disobeying the midnight curfew law. Police picked him up about 12:30 ) a.m. Thursday on a citizen's com i plaint that he was shooting at street lights at the corner of Pine Street and Oak Avenue. They took a BB gun from the youth who i pleaded guilty as charged. Judge ISIocum fined him $15 but suspend ed $10 of it. The judge also released Bill E. I Walker of Morton, Wash., picked up here Wednesday and cited for failing to have ah operator's li cense. A 20-day jail sentence was ! suspended on condition he report to his parole officer in Washington I within 48 hours. . Fat Lamb Grading To Be Demonstrated Two fat lamb grading demon , st rations will be held Tuesday un der sponsorship of the county Ex tension Oil ice W. Y Fouler, extension live stock marketing specialist from Oregon State College, will discuss and shew what the market wants in the way of fat lambs, accord ing to Wayne Mosher, assistant county agent The first demonstration will he at 10 a m. on the Joe Bruinbach farm on south Deer Creek. The second will be at 1:30 p.m. on the Don Ollivant farm near Looking : glass. The Ollivant farm is located ' a half mile west of the junction of Happy Valley and Brockay coun ty roads J Established 1873 14 Pages Suicide-Bent Flier Unfound In Wide Search LONG VIEW, Tex. (AP) The search for Donald Keeton, young Texas airman apparently bent on suicide in a rented plane, switched to this East Texas area Friday on the basis of information that he made a brief landing near here Thursday. The 19-year-old airman, whose engagement lo a childhood sweet heart was broken last month, was on the ground two minutes at nearby Greggton at about 1:30 p.m., took off again and hasn t been seen since. Earl Cleveland, process superin tendent for Premier Oil Refining Co. of Texas, said Keeton asked for gas and was told he would have lo go to the Gregg County Airport eight miles away. He never showed up at the Gregg County airport. K e e t o n's appearance at the small unincorporated town on the western edge of Longview, lent support to belief he was heading for Dallas, home of his childhood sweetheart. The youth, who has been sta tioned at Keesler Air Force Base, Riloxi, Miss., rented a two-seated Cessna 120, painted yellow with black trimmings, from a Gulf- port. .Miss., airport Thursday. Pursuers lost track of him in northern Louisiana near Monroe. In Dallas 17-year-old Lynn Bowl ing sobbed "He's the most won derful person in the world. I want ed to get maried, but called it off because I thoughl I was too young." The airman's mother, Mrs. Ann abelle Keeton, said in Dallas her son had losl weight "because of worry over a love affair." At Keesler his barracks males found a note that he wanted to die in the air because "that is the way to go." ) Entry Deadline For Rodeo Event Slated Thursday Jim Golden, entries co chair man for the 14th annual Douglas County Rodeo Parade, said today mat tne deadline tor submission of entries has been extended to Thursday, June 19. Golden said 15 entries have been submitted so far. The deadline was extended from last Tuesday. He especially called for more commercial entries. Only two commercial entries have been sub mitted, he said. Included among entries is the Knights of Pythias Drum and Bugle Corps. Golden said the unit will participate in the parade fol lowing its return from the national Jaycee convention in Los Angeles. The rodeo parade will be held Saturday, June 21, the opening day of the rodeo. The co-chairman said troDhies will be awarded to the three top entries m tne commercial division. Cash prizes of $75, $30 and $10 will be awarded to the non-commercial winners. Entries should he mailed to the Junior Chamber Parade Commit tee, Box 109, Roseburg. or to the f Douglas County Rodeo Assn., said Golden. : The other entries co - chair man is mil oiemiiK. nuger iver ' son is parade chairman. Tumble From Swing Breaks Arm Of Boy A fall out of a swing might not seem serious to some people. But it docs to 10-year-old Dan jpl Cook, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cook., Rt. 3 Box 1450, Rose burg. He's sporting a cast on his left arm today as a memento of just such an accident. . Admitted to Douglas Community Hospital Friday at 1:20 p.m., Dan iel is reported coming along in top fashion. Ha broke his arm at mid day Friday in the yard of his home. Sen. Morse Urges Serious Consideration Of Miners Co-op Ferrochrome Program The Senate Minerals Subcommit tee today was urged by Ken, Wayne ' Morse lo give serious considera ! Hon to the Oregon chrome miners I cooperative ferrochrome program. The Oregon cnromite producers have suggested that the govern ment make loans available for the purchase of chrome ore until a plan, is made available in the west for processing such ore. The gov ernment would also be asked to agree to buy the ferrochrome out put, if necessary, over a period of live years. Morse said. "The ferrochrome cooperative program would not only give benefits to (he govern- i mem, nut would oner tne govern I ment something of value through a 1 stockpile of ferrochrome. This the typ of cooperation hatween government and the miners that should ba encouraged i Support Inetntiv Paymtnt In his statement to th luhconv imittee, the senator gave strong support to the .Murray chrome in- ROSEBURG, OREGON FRIDAY, Miller's Addition Sewer Problem Will Be Threshed A session between Rosebnrg city officials and Miller's Addition landowners to attempt to thresh out the problem of providing sew ers for the area is slated for Mon day at 7:30 pin. in the council chambers. The meeting was called early this month when the City Council learned a snag had been hit in financing sewer installations. Primarily, the difficulty lies in the low assessed valuation of much of the property in Miller's Addi tion, Up against this is the state law governing Bancroft bonds for financing and the city engineer's estimate of the eost of the work. The law limits property owners to bonding their property for twice its assessed value. However, ac cording to Mrs. Wilma Hill, city recorder, 60 to 70 per cent of the property in the addition falls into the unimproved category which puts the bonding capacity at much less than the estimated cost of sewer installation. The assessed valuation of some of the lots is as low as $40. City Engineer Ken Meng estimates in stallation for a 50-foot lot at $300. Bancroft bonding on such a lot would be held to $80, leaving a S220 difference to be met by the property owner in a cash pay ment. A full explanation of the prob lem and discussion of a solution is scheduled for the meeting. No tices of the meeting and an ex planation have been sent to all property owners in Miller's Addi tion. Catholic Rectory Contract Awarded To Roseburg Firm' A $69,950 contract for construc tion of a rectory and offices for St. Joseph's parish has been awarded to Jack Mathis, Roseburg eminent Friday on Russian pro general contractor. posals for a summit conference. Construction has started on the building, located near St, Joseph's School. 630 W. Stanton St. The work ia expected to be finished in four or five months, me Kev. ta mund Hyland said. Three other' contractors bid on the building. They were Murphy Construction Co. $81,480, Todd Building Co. $71,480, and John Steinmuller of Eugene $79,738. The 35-by 85-foot building will have brick veneer exterior to match the school building. There will be aluminum sasb, some cast stone at the entrance and a shingle roof. It will contain facilities for five priests and a housekeeper. Interior finishes will include plas ter walls and ceilings, asphalt tile on the floors and an oil-fired hot water heating system. There will be a living room, bedroom suite, kitchen and utility area for the housekeeper, plus facilities for the priests. Each priest will haw a private studv and bedroom. There will also be a common room on the second floor, lined on two walls with floor-to-cciling bookcases. Rodeo Ticker On Sale Saturday In Roseburg Ticket sales for the 14th annual Douglas County Rodeo, to he held t the fairgrounds June 21-22, will go on sale Saturday. Bill Pritchett. ticket chairman, said prices are $3 for box seats, $2.50 for reserved seats, $2 for adult general admissions and $1 for children from six to 15 years old. Children under six will be ad mitted free. Ducats may be mirrhasad at the booth in front of the Umpqua Hotel from 10 a.m. to i p.m. each day through tne first day or tne roaeo, added the chairman. Tickets also will go on sale at the gate one and a half hours before rodeo lime both days of the extravaganza. centive payment program but indi cated that the bill would not be workable unless il were amended so as to make it possible for Ore gon's small chroma mine opera tions to sell to chrome buyers. Un der the incentive proposal, the in centive payment is payable only wnen a sale ot cnromite ore Mi been arr.niteri Senator Mors. ... gested that delivery of the or a broker should be considered as a sale within the meaning of the Murray bill Morse stated, "An economic emergency faces Oregon's chrome mining industry. The stockpiling program has terminated. The chrome mines are shutting down their operations. Employes are be ing laid off. The mines are being 1 maintained at th expense of the 1 owners or ar deteriorated through non-use. mis is a sad commentary upon th lack of foresight of the government concerning a produrt whirh is essential to the safety of the nation in Ihe event of a da tense emergency. JUNE 13, 1958 Senate OKs Compromise Bill Oh Pay Increase WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate passed a compromise bill Friday giving a 10 per cent pay boost to the government's 1,0.11, 000 Civil Service and other em ployes. Action came by voice vote adop tion of a report agreed upon Thurs day adjusting Senate and House differences over the legislation. with the house in recess until Monday, final congressional action was put off until next week. The bill's annual cost is about 542 million dollars. But the first year cost will be closet to 800 million dollars since the boost is retroactive to Jan. 1. Sen. Olin D. Johnston (D-SC) said the bill will give all employes equal treatment. Sen. Ralph Yar borough (D-Tex) said the pay in crease was modest compared to those given workers in private in dustry. But Sen. Harry F. Byrd (u-Va) said it was "very bad policy" to grant retroactive pay increases. Sen. Frank Lausche (D-Ohio) said Congress was contributing to infla tion and setting a pay raise ex ample for private industry. The bill covers not only regu lar classified Civil Service em ployes, but also employes of Con gress, federal courts, the Foreign Service, Atomic Energy Commis sion, and Veteran Administration medical service. Postal workers previously were given a 10 per cent raise. The bill permits creation of 599 new super-grade jobs. These pay from $13,000 to $19,000. British Get Russ Letter LONDON (AP)-A new letter from Soviet Premier Khrushchev was delivered to the British sov- Soviet Ambassador Jacob Malik delivered the letter personally to Home Secretary K. A. Butler, who is acting head of the government while Prime Minister MacmjUan is touring America. The letter presumably was simi lar lo a 38-page communication from Khrushchev to President El senhower delivered in Washington Thursday. A apokesman at No, 10 Downing St. said the letter to Macmillan also was lengthy. The letter to Eisenhower was in Russian hut the Soviets saved the British the trouble of translating theirs. Malik brought two copies one in Russian and the other in English. The British spokesman reported that the letter dealt with prepara tions for the summit talks and with the agenda for Uiem sub jects that have kept diplomats busy for months with little appar ent result. GOP Women's Conclave Off; Speaker Lacking The convention of Oregon Repub lican women which had been scheduled for this weekend in Roseburg has been indefinitely postponed because the sponsors were unable to get a sneaker of stature lor the affair. The two-day session may still be held sometime in the future if a speaker can he scheduled, James G. Richmond, Douglas County COP chief said today. He said it had proved impossible to got i speaker ot prominence for the con vention and it was felt it better to postpone the session for that reason. Richmond said if the convention is re-scheduled it will he held in Roseburg as originally planned. Jayceet Count $1,600 For Drum Corps' Trip The Roseburg Junior Chamber of Commerce's long pull to collect sz.uua to send tne Knights of Pyth ias Girls' Drum and Bugle Corps to I.01 Angeles is coming to an end Jaycees said today about $1,600 baa been collected, and more mon ey is assured tonight a 9 p.m. in the auction of three used cars at Ihe City Drive In Market. Dr. V. J. Andirson said busi nesses are being solicited for the trip to the Jaycees' national con vention in Los Angeles starting Monday. Most of the girls will be taken to the big city by chartered bus. n.,,,!,, nie ntt:.... DOUglat OAt OttlCerS toiTo Attend Conference Two officers in the Douglas County division of th Oregon hdu cation Assn. ara attending the or ganization's sixth annual leader ship workshop in Portland today and Saturday They ar Ray Coffenberry of Myrtl (.'reek, president, and Mrs. Vera Matthawman of Roseburg, vie president, Mrs. Matthewman will be on a panel Saturday. Tonight, speakers were schedul ed to talk on problems of educa tion and taxation as related to edu cation. All business session are be ing held in the Portland OKA building at 1.V10 SW Taylor V. I PRICE 5c WILLIAM UNRATH Thursday night was installed as presi dent of the Roseburg Lions Club, succeeding E. R. Buck- ngham. (See story Page 10.) Public Relations Man Dies Following Ceremony Accident By JERRY O'BRIEN SPOKANE (AP) - Lt. Thomas Vrana, 23, the public relations of ficer who was run over by a 24 ton bulldozer while taking pictures of the ground breaking cere- nonies at Fairchild Air Force Base, died Thursday night. The young Pittsburgh, Pa., lieu tenant was badly mangled in the lower part of his body when the heavy machine, operated by the base commander. Col. wiliard a. Atwell, pinned him to the ground after he slipped off during cere monies markuig the start ot a four million dollar base housing proj ect Wednesday. Vrana had jumped up on the front of the bulldozer to take a picture of Atwell and slipped when the machine started to move. The regular operator leaped up after the engine stalled ana eased it back: on tne omcer a body Vr.L ...jj i.i, v,ij small crowd watching the cere mony and shocked the 9,000 men at Fairchild, a prime Installation of the Strategic Air Command. Dozens of officers, enlisted men and even Mrs. Donald Hiliman, wife of Col. Donald Hiliman, com mander of the 92nd Bonb Wing at Fairchild, lined up to do n a t e blood. So did the grief-stricken Col. Atwell, the popular commanding officer. Atwell had been at the hospital almost continuously since Uie accident. Vrana suffered compound frac tures of both hrgs, internal injur ies and deep shock. He was spared instant death when his head and the rest of his body fell be tween the tracks of the dozer. Britain Flying Troops To Cyprus NICOSIA. Cyprus (AP) Britain is flying paratroopers to this Med iterranean island colony to strengthen forces trying lo end continuing clashos between Greek and Turkish Cypriots. tleven Cypriota have been killed since Saturday. British plans for Ihe fulure of Cyprus to be announced Tuesday are expected to intensity the violence by failing fully to satisfy either the 400,0110 Cypriots of Greek descent or the 100,000 Turks. The Greeks want the island an nexed to Greece. The Turks want Cyprus partitioned if Hie British ler,ve. The situation approached civil war Thursday with the bloodiest battle yet. A gang ol 300 ureek Cypriots tried to raid a Turkish village near Nicosia and was met with gunfire. Three Creeks were killed and nine wounded. Ex-Husband Claims Woman Took His Car Stale police have booked Mrs. Lancet V. 1'aros of Tri-City at county jail on a citation for lar ceny over $75. The complaint was signed by her former nusDann George Henry Paroz, owner-operator of the Mid-Way Cafe. lis alleged before Justice of the Pear Nina Pietzold that the 29-year-old woman drov off with his i9.r5 sedan. A warrant for her ar rest was issued by justice court early Thursday morning. State polir from the Medford of fice took Mrs. Haroz into custody at 4:45 a m. after spotting the ve hicle at Csld Hill. She was brought lo Iloscliurg Thursday afternoon. Pieces Of Recently fallen Meteor Found SWEET HOME (AP) Pieces of what appeared to be a recently fallen meteor were found Thurs day east of the town of Foster. John McWade, an assistant fire wi.r:!"n for the Linn County Fire Patrol, came upon the rocks on an old logging road. The largest, 2li by 2 feet on top, was of whit color and appeared lo have been srnrehed. II was in crater. a two-foot McWaile said the fragments .vera not there when he traveled over the road Iwo weeks ago. 138-58 ; i ; , ' fibs Aide Admits B. Goldfine Paid His Bills Hagerry Says White House Won't Reply On Alleged Coat Gift WASHINGTON (AP) The White House said Friday President Eisenhower has no intention of firing Sherman Adams, his chief aide who is a target of House in vestigators. At the same time, press secre tary James C. Hagerty said there will be no White House reply to an earlier question by a reporter as to whether Adams' good friend, industrialist Bernard Gold fine, once gave Adams a $700 coat. Hagerty also said Adams has rejected reporters' request for a news conference at which to ques tion him personally regarding his relations with Goldfine. , Paid Hotel Bills Adams acknowledged Thursday that on three occasions he con tacted federal agencies regarding the agencies. Adams said Goldfine got no favored treatment from the agencies in return, and that ha Adams sought none. Adams also acknowledged that Goldfine paid hotel bills for him during a period when the wealthy Boston industrialist was in trou ble before the Federal Trade commission and the Securities and Exchange Commission. Ha said, however, that it was only a matter of accepting hospi tality from an old friend, and that he had thought Goldfine kept the ' noiei quarters on a permanent -basis. The affair had prompted Rep. Peter F. Mack Jr. (D-Ill) to say Eisenhower should fire Adams. Mack said that would be in keep ing with an Eisenhower campaign pledge for a government "clean as a hound's tooth." Asked if he could say whether Eisenhower has any intontion of firing Adams, Hagerty shot back: "Sure I can. The answer is of course not." At a news conference Thursday, Hagerty waa asked whether Goldfine ever gave Adams a S70O vicuna coat. The press secretary replies no naa no lniormation on that, but would check into the matter. When the matler waa raised again at his news conference Fri day, Hagerty said Adams hid set forth his posilion in his litter Thursday to Rep. Oren Harris (D- Arm, cnairman ot a House ln- . vesugaung suncommittee, and Ada ins would hare nothinf irlore to say. Logging Accident hlol To Comes Valley Resident Lawrence Charles (Mike)Ic, 47, well-known Camas Valley resident, was killed Thursday in a logging accident near Bridge. The coroner'i office reported Ic was struck by a rolling log while setting a choker on another log at the CL&C Logging Co. operation. Born Aug. 23, 1912, at Orofino, Idaho, hs came to Oregon with his parents in 1914. He resided in the Willamett Valley before mov ing to Camas Valley in 1917. He was married Jan. 17, 1942 to Hazel E. Norman in Roscburg. Survivors include the widow, Ha zel E. Ice, Camus Vallev; a step daughter, Mrs. J. T. (Mary Lou) Spencer, Morton, Tex.; a brother, Lyle B. Ice, Camas Valley, and three step-grandchildren. Funeral services will b held in the Methodist Church, Camas Val ley, at 2 p.m. Saturday. The Rev. Roy W. Knight will officiate. Con cluding services and interment will follow in Martindale Cemetery, Camas Valley. Funeral arrange ments are in car of Long It Orr Mortuary. Retail Businesses Plan Late Opening Retail businesses in Rotebura ar remaining open tonight un til 9 as part of Hi current city wid' salts promotion. Timber Capital Oays. Th announcement was mad today by Rod Nvu, chair man of th Retail Trad Divi sion of th Chambar of Com merce. Th promotion campaign ttarttd Thursday and will con tinue through Saturday. 10-Day Jail Term. $150 I Fine Meted To Woman A 10 day jail term and $l0 fin was mrlcd out Thursday by Dis trict Judge Warren A. Woodruff to a Lakeside woman chatged with drunk driving. Birgit Daga Whitley, 37, plead ed guilty to th complaint filed by a sheriff's deputy. The driver was arrested early Thursday morn ing on Highway 101 near Reeds port. Levity Fact Rant By L F. Relzenstein The mortar board and gown decor on many a graduate will ba displaced by a baseball uni-. form at loon a the pay-off Mgins on tne current year s $1,500,000 worth of "bonus bobiet."