The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, October 13, 1958, Page 2, Image 2

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Asian-African Delegates Seek Immetas laral fast
2 The News-Review, Reseburg,
Young Drivers
Are Cited After
Auto Accidents
Two teen-age driven were ciled
by Roseburg police over the week
end for traffic violations following
a pair of accidents on city streets.
David Norman Pefeffer, 19, con-
struclion company laborer from j
Little Shoe, Wis., was ticketed fori
failure to yield the right of way.
The car he was driving collided
with another driven by Keith Al
len Bunn, 16. of Dillard about 10:20
p m. Saturday at Oak Ave. and
Pine St. Police said about $300
damage was done to Bunn's 1955
car, while the Pefeffer vehicle re
ceived about $75 damage.
About 5:40 p.m. Satuday a car
driven by Richard Marcel Kree,
IS. of Eugene, backed into a ve
hicle belonging to Edward Henry
Brinkmevcr. 42-year-old millwork
er of 2006 NE Oswego Ave , Rose
burg. Brinkmever was traveling north
on NE Mill St. when the other car
hit his while backing up. Damage
to Frte's car was estimated at
about $100. and $350 to the Brink
meyer vehicle.
Kree was cited for failing to have
his car under control.
Funeral Held For Pope
In Basilica At Rome
(Continued From Page One)
eial "oremus" (let us pray) re
served for papal masses. He read
it from a book held before him
by an attendant. The celebrant
then pronounced the blessing over
the coffin.
Three separate coffins, one of
cypress, one of lead and one of
oak, were blessed as a thurible
bearer spread incense over the
bier.
. Now the body was wrapped in a
red shroud and placed in the red
lined cypress coffin.
The choir again sang an ancient
chant. The cardinals arose from
their thrones. With Eugene Car
dinal Tisserant, while-bearded
dean nf the college, at their head,
they filed by the body. Each knelt
and prayed before the coffin.
Some of the white-haired princes
of the church had to be assisted to
walk past the coffin. Francis Car
dinal Spellman of New York ap
peared deeply grieved.
A blanket of red was drawn rev
erently over the Pope's body and
a white scarf placed over his fact
by two of the cardinals. Over this
was placd another red silk
shroud, tenderly tucked about the
body by the assistants.
The celebrant intoned the Pater
Nnster once again. In Latin he
consigned the pontiff's remains to
elernal rest.
The words reverberated through
the great basilica as he Intoned:
"We implore thee, O God, to have
pity on this, thy servant."
While the celebrant prayed, the
cardinals stood before their
thrones, and the entire congrega
tion bowed. The choir responded
with a deep "amen" to the liturgy
of the celebrant.
Reads In Latin
Msgr, Nicolo Mctta. chosen to
day by the cardinals for the task,
read in Latin the accomplishments
of the pontiff's reign. This script,
placed afterward in a brass tube
in the coffin, recalled the time
when the pontiff was apostolic
nuncio to Germany, his appoint
ment as cardinal and Vatican sec
retary of state under Pope Pius
XI. and his election as Pope. It
then dwelt on outstanding events
of the pontiff's reign as sovereign
of the church.
Msgr. Antonio Barcl, the Vati
can's secretary of letters to
princes, read the eulogy. He re
called the frightening days of war
and ruin and the "ray of light"
Pius' election as Pope had brought
to a frightened Catholic world.
"While humanity was torn hv
hate and vendetta." said the
eulogy, "and while almost every
where reigned discord because in
I he souls of most there w as no
more divine charity, while flour
ishing cities were being destroyed
and vital youth was being mas
sacred in a fratricidal crime, only
one man, from the Vatican for
tress, urged everybody to hue, to
harmony and to true peace. . .
Aimed at Healing Souls
"All of Pius XII a life was
aimed at healing souls wounded
by hate, at destroying errors, and
at illuminating minds with evan
gelical truih . . With his death
one great light has been put out
on earth, and a new star is bright
ening the skies "
Several cardinals wiped awav
tears.
The eulogy ended, the scroll and
eulogy text ere placed in the in
ner coffin of cypress, and it was
sealed by members of the papal
household.
I'll rvniv.i cnffin v .. . -
placrd inside the leaden one, and:
the leaden coffin inside the third:
of oak while the great bell of St. !
Peler's tolled slowly. j
I'll twwlv U'BI lriU'ri4 Intn H.k.l
Ihe Vatican described as a provi
sional tomb, with a marble marker
Riving only the Pope's name and
the ears of his pontificate. He
was the 144th pontiff to be buried
in the crypts beneath St. Peter's
Mftfnni sun tot fSTiw'Nr him
HHP nutrKS Thf PM'Of) ISAM SP!. H
to ocr. it, ros tnt iouoaimc
Garden of Prayer
A'fuf r ov
10 CnirlM ft'ltlllM
Garden Of The Good
Sheperd
Vttmt C So4
If"; M luify
Masonic Garden
AiWr SrMMiii
Roseburg Merraia! Gardens
Or. Mon. Oct. 13, 1958
Pearlie Ellen Folden
Dies In Melrose Home
Mrs. Pearlie Ellen Folden, 77,
who had lives at Melrose the past
28 years, died Sunday morning at
her home.
She was born at Argos, Ind ,
Sept. 22, 1881, and moved to Michi
gan as a child. She was married
in Roseburg Aug. 2. 1932, to
James B. 1-olden, who died in 1948.
Surviving are eight children,
Ralph C. Quick ot Miles, Mich.,
John Simpson of Berrien Springs,
Mich., James D. Simpson of Phoe
nix, Ariz., Carl I,. Simpson of Pa
sadena, Calif., Mrs. Gertrude E.
James, Floyd I.. Simpson, Ray L.
Simpson and Roy C. Simpson, all
of Roseburg; two brothers, Walter
C. Quick Sr. of Nilcs, Mich., and
John Quick Sr. of Hamilton, Ohio;
a sister, Mrs. Gertrude Davis,
Roseburg; 29 grandchildren, 40
great-grandchildren and one great-great-grandchild.
Funeral services will be in the
chapel of Long and Orr Mortuary
Thursday at 2 p.m. with the Rev.
Calvin llarrah, pastor of the Mel
rose Community Church, offici
ating. Concluding services and in
terment will be in Roseburg Me
morial Gardens.
Limited Number
Students Attend
Private Schools
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. AP A
handful of Little Rock high school
students attend their first day of
private classes today while a new
battle looms over the city's public
schools.
Temporary academies, of the
Weetover Hills Presbyterian
Church and the Second Baptist
Church announced they will ac
cept about 60 students for a lim
ited curriculum.
But there still was no indication
when the Little Rock Private
School Corp. would put into effect
its plan to open all-white schools
for the more than 3,000 students
who have been without classes for
six weeks.
Rural schools agreed to accept
71 more Little Rock students today
but emphasized that no more
could be accommodated.
Those schools were not affected
by (iov. Orval E. Faubus order
which shut the doors of Little
Rock's one Negro and three white
high schools.
The issue of whether the closed
schools can be leased to a private
group as segregated institutions
comes up again Wednesday be
fore the U.S. 8lh Circuit Court of
Appeals at St. Louis, Mo. Three
judges will decide whether to con
tinue an order which prohibits the
City School Board from leasing
the school buildings.
Continuance of the order is
sought by the National Assn. for
the Advancement of Colored Peo
ple, supported by the U.S. Justice
Department.
Dillard Board Policy
Discussion Scheduled
A preliminary discussion on a
code of board policies will be held
at a Dillard School Board meeting
scheduled for 8 p m. Tuesday.
The meeting will be held in Doug
las High School. School Supt.
George Corwin will present a re
port on a meeting concerning O &
C receipts. A total of 38 Western
Oregon county court members,
school board members and school
sdministrators attended the meet
ing in Roseburg Wednesday.
In other business before the
board, discussion will be held on
a proposed upper elementary
school building. The district hopes
to sell bonds for the building in
January or February.
The board will also inspect fold
ing bleachers which have been in
stalled in the high school gymna
sium. Installation of the bleachers
was completed about one week ago
by the Northern School Supply Co.
of Portland.
Jewish Temple Blasted
Sunday In Atlanta, Ca.
(Continued From Tags One)
28 and an attempt was made to
blow up a temple in Birmingham.
Ala. It failed when a fuse burned
out.
President Eisenhower joined with
political and religious lesders in
deploring the Atlanta incident. He
interrupted a speech about civil
and religious liberties in New York
to declare: "We must all share in
the feeling of horror that anyone
would want to desecrate a place of
religion, be it a chapel, a cathe
dral, a mosque, a church or a
synagogue." ha said.
A detective estimated that 40 to
50 sticks of dynamite were placed
just outside a heavy wooden door
on the side and near the rear of
the building. The blast tore a hole
some 20 feet square in the wall,
wrecked some church offices and
the study of Rabbi Jacob M. Toths
rhild. Religious classrooms on the
second and third floors were ex
tensively damaged as wsa an audi
torium on the first floor. Frag
ments of stained glass windows
littered the floor of the main sanc
tuary. Fifth Nuclear Weapon
Fired Over Yucca Flat
ATOMIC TEST SITE. Nev. (UP)
The fifth nuclear weapons test
in the current series wss fired
loday from a balloon telhered
l.ioo feet above Yucca Flat.
The blast yielded half the nor
mal power load 10 kilotons com
pared with the normal 20 kilotons
released
The Atomic Energy Commission
said fallout was light because the
fireball did not touch the ground.
Another shot also set for todsv
wss postponed until Tuesdav. It
will be set off atop a SO foot
woen tower on Frenchman Flat.
India Revises
Resolution
In Accord Try
By WILLIAM N. OAT1S
UNITED NATIONS, N Y. (AP)
India, backed by Asian-African co
sponsors, planned to submit a re
vised resolution today to have the
U.N. General Assembly call for
"immediate discontinuance" of
nuclear weapon tests.
India's original resolution of Oct.
4 called for "immediate suspen
sion" of the tests. Indian Delegate
Arthur S. l.all said Sunday night
this and other changes were in
tended to attract cosponsors and
"remove any doubt as to what we
ourselves had in mind."
Hashim Jawad of Iraq told a
reporter he thought the term "dis
continuance" would make the res
olution acceptable to the Soviet
bloc. The Soviet Union has de
manded that the tests be stopped
"for all time" and has turned in
a resolution calling for a halt.
Rival Resolution
The United States and IS other
countries have submitted a rival
resolution urging that Britain, the
Soviet Union and the United States
undertake no tests during their
talks next month in Geneva seek
ing an agreement for controlled
suspension of nuclear testing.
Lall said he did not know yet
how many cosponsors India would
get. But he intimated to other del
egates that he expected seven or
more, mainly from the Middle and
Far East. Jawad confirmed that
Iraq was among them.
The three resolutions are before
the Assembly's Political Commit
tee, now debating disarmament.
So is a Soviet proposal to have the
Assembly recommend that Brit
ain, France, the Soviet Union and
the United States cut their mili
tary budgets 10 to 15 per cent and
set aside part of the savings for
economic aid to under-developed
countries.
The Assembly's Negotiation
Committee for Extrabudgetarv
Funds reported that the financial
situation of the U.N. Relief and
Works Agency for Palestine
(Arab) Refugees "is still grave."
UNRWA operates refugee camps
in the Middle East.
Neod More Money
The committee said that to con
tinue its current programs, the
agency would need either new con
tributors or more money from
present contributors.
UNRWA expects to get by the
end of the year $25,700,000 needed
for relief and $7,200,000 for first
priority rehabilitation, including
education. The committee said
this will leave the agencv short
$7,800,000 needed for individual
grants and vocational training and
eight millions needed for working
capital. .
The committee also reported
that the U.N. refugee fund needs
$5,748,482 additional to clear and
close refugee ramps in Europe by
the end of 1960 as planned.
Former Roseburg Man
Dies At Brother's Home
Clare Harold Barneck, 63. died
of a heart attack Sunday at the
home of his brother, J. Henry Bar
neck, 1223 SE Overlook, Roseburg.
Barneck arrived in Roseburg
two weeks ago from Ixjs Angeles,
where he was confined to the Vet
erans Administration Center for
two years, lie was born in Albert
Lea, Minn., snd spent several
years there as a guide. He was
an Army Veteran of World War I
and a member of the American Le
gion in Albert Lea. of the Tri
County VFW in Bemidji, Minn ,
and a Roseburg resident from 1954
to 1958.
Survivors irclude two sons Wil
liam (Tare Barneck of Chicago,
and Richard Arlyn Barneck of Tul
sa. Okla , and two brothers, Rus
sell E. Barneck of Glendale, Cahr.,
and J. Henry Barneck of Rose
burg. Graveside services will he held
Tuesday at 1 p m. in the Roseburg
Memorial Gardens The Rev.
James Jenkins of the Methodist
Church will officiate. Gans Mor
tuary in Myrtle Creek Is in charge
of arrangements.
Masonic Crand Master
Slated At Canyonville
Grand master of Masons in Ore
gon, Walter L. Lansing, will malie
an official visit to District 37 on
W ednesday, Oct. 22, instead of this
Wednesday as previously reported.
South Umpqua Lodge of Canyon
ville will be host to the visit which
will include a 6 30 p.m. dinner
and I o'clock meeting. Other lodges
in the district are Riddle Lodge
of Riddle, Azalea Lodge of Glen
dale and Maple Lodge of Mvrtle
Creek.
Roseburg United Church
Womeli Plan Meeting
The executive board of the Rose
burg Council of United Church
Women will meet Tuesday at t 30
a.m. at the home of Mrs. W. H.
Gerretsen. 823 SE Kane
Plans for World Community Day,
to he held at the Nararrne Church
Friday, Nov. 7. will be formulated.
! INSTRUCTIONS SLATID
! By RUTH IVANS
Mrs. Morris Bnwker of Roseburg
I will give instructions in beginning
and advanced bridge, using the
Goren method, at Myrtle Creek be
j ginning Tuesday at 1 p m. Lessons
will be held at Ihe Mvrtle Creek
Elk's Lodge.
PRUDENTIAL LIFE
INSURANCE
HORACE C. BERG
tMciel Asset Itm 101
eitt Btftlfjinff
f OH. OR J 74l. in. OR S-7MS
Former Premier
Solh's Cousin
Shot To Death
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Wahid
Solh. a cousin of former Premier
Sami Solh, was shot and killed
by a sniper while driving through
downtown Beirut today.
Solh was an official in the min
istry of General Planning but was
not otherwise active in politics.
He left the country just before
President Fuad Chehab took office
and after several plots and at
tempts on his life. He narrowly
escaped one plot at the height of
the rebellion against President
Camille Chamoun when a mine
blew up the car ahead of his on
a road outside Beirut.
The general strike called by
Chamoun's militant supporters in
the Phalangist party began its
fourth week today with the Pha
langists announcing their deter
mination .to continue the strike
Until Premier Rashid Karami
either resigns or forms a coalition
cabinet. Intense political maneu
vering over the weekend produced
no satisfactory formula for ending
the crisis.
Scattered firing could be heard
in Beirut this morning. This re
portedly was shooting in the air by
rival factions trying to intimidate
one another.
North of Tripoli Sunday 10 per
sons were reported killed in a
fight between the Duweihy and
Frangiyeh families. For genera
tions these clans have fought each
other. The summer's crisis and
the Influx of arms into the country
enabled both sides to get fresh
supplies, thereby increasing the
tension.
Moon Rocket Fails, But
Valuable Data Received
(Continued From Page One)
about a third of the 222.000 miles
to the moon, it achieved the deep
est penetration yet by a man-made
vehicle into the vast universe.
Scientists said it radioed valu
able data back to earth on its
lonely journey. Among other
things, the experience of Pioneer
indicated that radiation in the out
er reaches of space may not be
as intense as had been thought.
This could have strong bearing
on future space flight by man, sus
ceptible to possible radiation poi
soning. In this connection, the Air Force
claimed Pioneer's epic flight mark
ed the first time man has been
able to measure radiation above
25.000 miles.
Maj. Gen. Bernard A. Schriver,
chief of the Air Force Ballistic
Missile Division, said, "These
measurements will be of great as
sistance in improving instruments
for future space and lunar probes
and for putting man into space."
Ralph Waldo Moore
Succumbs In Hospital
Ralph Waldo Moore, 76, of 330
NE Jackson St., died in a Rose
burg hospital Sunday.
He was born Sept. 14, 1882, in
Dayton, Wash, lie had been a log
ger and farmer in this area for
30 years.
Survivors inckule his wife,
Mary; three stepchildren. George
Pankey of Sitka, Alaska. Don Pan
key of Mclrtise and Mrs. Louis
(Dorothy) Pugh of Glide; two
brothers, Archie G. Moore of Oak
land and Albert C. Moore of San
Diego; and four sisters. Mrs. Wil
liam Loy of Gerber, Calif., Mrs.
Lee Bailev of Seattle. Mrs. Maple
Steel of Portland and Mrs. Hazel
Beeker of Corvallis
Funeral services will be Wednes
day at 10 a m. in The Chapel of
the Roses with Dr. Eugene Ger
litz of the First Biptist Church of
ficiating. Interment will be in
Cleveland Cemeterv.
Curtain Drawn
Across Eclipse
BOULDER, Colo (AP) Ung
preparations and hopes for valu
able scientific data were thwarted
in the south Pacific Sunday when
a thunderstorm drew a curtain
over a total eclipse of the sun.
More than a score of scientists
had arranged for phntocraphs and
special observations of the penom-
i ena.
But Dr. Walter Orr Roberts, di
rector ot the hishaltitude ob
servatory here, said he was in
formed that the storm obliterated
all view of the eclipse, which last
ed about four minutes. The scien
tists were stationed at the Danger
Islands. 500 miles east of Samoa.
Among them were four - man
teams from the Colorado observ
I atory and the Sacramento Peaks
I Observatory in New Mexico. The
j National Bureau of Standards, the
University of Wisconsin and the
California Academy of Sciences
i had sent other technicians. a-
signed to specific aspects of the
! study of sun rays.
RECRUITER SLATED
St. Annie Hswkins, a Woman's
Army Corps recruiter, will answer
questions pertaining to the WAC
Thursday and Friday at the Armv
Recmiting Office in the Post Of
fice Building. Roseburg.
ROGER'S TyE.jp
SHOP
e
OsMifs V'i tntrence
Jyif Ot Herrerd Ave.
42 1 W. Whertee St. OR 2-4021
FAST SERVICE ON
eAyfemerive Tyns Ue
Cerrmrttara GsesteMrs Rtkmlt
lr Rshetd lutricettM j
YOU CAN DEPEND ON US!
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PLANNED TRAJECTORY An American Rocket, called
'Pioneer," foiled to break free of the earth's gravity in
the first flight through outer space, toward a hoped-for
Lunar orbit. This diagram shows the planned path of the
space traveler.
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BLAST OFF The Lunar probe missile named "Pioneer'
leoves its launching pad at Cape Canaveral, Flo., at
4:42 a m., EST Saturday. The Air Force hoped that the
Thor-Able rocket would reach the Moon in obout 2Vi
days.
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TRAJECTORY ARC This 30-second time exposure,
made from about six miles away, shows the Lunar probe
"Pioneer" arching into the night sky over Cape Cana
veral, on the first stage of its flight toword the moon.
Note "Birdwatchers" in lower right corner.
The Greatest
r 1 " -
a9T
lloIuDitlc.
When Peter
tempted him, He
turned and said.
Get thee behind
me, satan . . .
Mat. 18:21-23.
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.sasfJIMsaVlfKpva saatelllkHtHitkT
- tlrmnsiin I
Story Ever Told
BllSlBlilSllSllSllW it a
Hospital News
Mercy Hospital
Admitted
Surgery: Mrs. Albert Pichette,
Oakland.
Medical: Leslie Fleming, Oak
land; Ardis Lambnght, Albert
Teal, Mrs. Jordan Stacy, M r s.
Robert Hall, Roseburg: Reuben
Madsen, Winchester; Mrs. On a
Liles, Winston.
Discharged
Mrs. Donald McWallers. Manley
Kemper, William Sherwood. Leon
ard McFarland, Charles Bell, Mrs.
Donald Standley and baby, Brian
Scott; Sylvia Grant, Roseburg;
Mrs. John Williams. Winston; sirs.
Thomas Dodson, Billy Bodine, Car
ol Farnsworth. Mrs. Henry Davis
and babv, Phillip Raymond, Suth
erlin; Randall Pfeuffer, Mvrtle
Creek; Margaret Cleveland, Days
Creek; Mrs. Keith Brown and baby,
Vivian Cozette, Winchester.
Deuglas Community Hetpital
Admitted
Surgery: Oscar Finney, Mrs.
Gary Kummert, Mrs. John Long
azo, Roseburg; Arlie Templeton,
Yoncalla; Velva Ledbetter, Win
ston; Raymond Washington, Suth
erlin. Medical: Mrs. George Savage.
Mrs. Glenn Bartlett. George
Smith, Terry Carr, Opal Johnson,
Mrs. Noble Price, Mrs. Dell Rast,
Mrs. Glenn Williams, Chester Hou
ser. Roseburg; Hazel Allen. Oak
land; Mrs. Wilbur Schneider,
Glide; Jimmy Allen, Sutherkn.
Discharged
William Knight, Mrs. Russell
Brownson, Oakland; Mrs. Clair
Worm an. Sutherlin; Christine
Campbell, Mrs. Leonard Swanson,
Mrs. Harvey Reed. Mrs. Michael
Coen and baby, Marri Jo; Mrs.
Ionard Moorehouse, Kenneth Co
der, Ralph Houston, Edgar Hiney,
Mrs. Darwin Shipp and baby,
Madeline Kaye; Mrs. Elmer No
land and baby. Vivian Michelle;
Mrs. Lee Campbell and baby, Ke
vin Wayne; Harold Lestico, James
Mess, James Pollard, Roseburg;
Mrs. Tracy Mask, Tamara Dens
more, Reta Osborne, Mrs. William
McClendon and baby, William
George, Winston: Harold Faulkner,
Glide; Mrs. Charles Plummer.
Canyonville: Mrs. Guerdon Goff
and baby, Gregory Guerdon. Rid
dle; Mrs. Alf Hanson and baby,
Dana Rae, Myrtle Creek.
Myrtle Creek Council
Views City Hall Plans
The Myrtle Creek City Council
examined specifications for its new
city hall in a recent meeting. The
council will take bids on the proj
ect later this month.
The council approved a transfer
of liquor license at Loggers Tav
ern from James Lowrance to Mrs.
Frances Churchman, .the new own
er. The council also directed that
an audit of the city's books be
made, according to correspondent
Mrs. nutn tvans.
NEW
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r
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Put your heat where you need if most '
betwttn you end the weather of floor
level. Be warm from head to toe any
where in the room. U. I. APPROVED. ai
I
GENTLEST HIAT IN THI WORLD!
Install easily in new or existing homes. See it today
NO MONEY
DOWN
PAYMINTS AS LOW AS
7.50
A MONTH
Glider Crashes
Killing Pilot
Before Crowd
' SPOKANE (AP) A glider
smashed to the ground from about
loo feel here Sunday before the
eyes of several hundred horrified
spectators, killing the head ot the
Washington state Civil Air Patrol
and injuring a passenger.
David E. Mozes, 47, Spokane,
died in a hospital from multiple in
juries. Falks f. ousiavs, so. was
being treatea ior serious Doay in
juries. .
The crash occurred during a
demonstration staged by the Con
dor Soaring Club, of which Mozes
was president.
Ira Jacobson, club secretary,
said Mozes apparently overshot
the runway when he came in for a
landing. Mozes put the craft into a
turn which Jacobson said ap
peared too sharp. The glider
stalled, nosed over and dropped to
the ground.
Mozes, a CAP colonel, was wing
commander for all CAP squad
rons in Washington and one in
Idaho with headquarters in Seat
tle. He was in charge of about 30
aircraft, 2,000 adult CAP members
and 2,500 cadets.
Officials said the dead man was
to have been host commander at
the Pacific Regional CAP Confer
ence in Seattle next weeLend.
Garbage Truck Fire
Doused By Rural Dept.
Fire in Ihe load of a garbage
truck was put out about 7:15 a m.
today by the Roseburg Rural Fire
Department.
The truck was parked in front
of the State Game Commission of
fice, 3140 NE Stephens St., when
firemen arrived at the scene. Min
or damage was caused to the
truck.
The department put out a trash
and grass fire at 1:25 p.m. Sunday
at 1142 NE Stephens St. The blaze
was caused by a non-permit fire
which got out of hand, firemen
said.
Roseburg firemen put out a
small grass fire about 2:43 p.m.
Saturday in the 100 block on SR
Arizona" St. No loss was reported
in the fire which was burning in
grass and rubbish along the river
bank.
CLUB TO MEET
The Inter Se Club will meet at
the home of Mrs. Charles Doerner,
Rt. 3 Box 1475. Roseburg, for a
1:50 luncheon Tuesday.
HUNT'S PRODUCTS
Now Available At
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1270 W. Hener Avenue
7A
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622 S. I. Jackson phone OR 3-5521