1 Senate Group OKs Extension Of Draft WASHINGTON (AP)-The Sen ate Armed Services Committee Monday approved t four-year ex tension ol the military draft with out change. j Chairman Richard B. Itussel i (D-Ga) aaid that because of the current Berlin crisis the committee decided to defer action on pro-! posed amendments designed to, correct what tie has termed In justice! and inequalities in the military reserve program. He said the vote to approve the House-passed draft extension bill was unanimous, by a count of bands, with only one amendment. He said this amendment would extend extra incentive pay allow ances for doctors, dentists and veterinarians. North Douglas Farm Bureau Hears Iris Helliwell Speak 912 Six RUG CLEANING Only 8.64 Including Tickup end Delivery RHOADS Cleaning Service Phone OR 2-1096 (Behind Richie's Drive-In N. Stephens) By MRS. CEORCI EDII Guest speaker at the recent meeting of the North Douglas County Farm Bureau in Yoncalla was Mrs. Iris Rice Helliwell, coun ty centennial chairman, who gave talk on plans of the Oregon Cen tennial for Douglas County and plans to stress recreation at the Portland Exposition. She stated there are SO parks in Douglas County. Included in her talk were plana made in obtaining a marker for Joseph Lane, the first territorial governor, in Mem orial Garden and the hopes had in being able to have an "All Faiths Service" for the county this summer in Roseburg Park, when all churches would participate. A basket dinner would follow. Table Display Shown A display table with several items was on display, including an old typewriter without any keys. The bureau decided the member ship drive dates be changed from January and February to Nov. 1, when the dues are collected. Paul Flury announced the Farm Bureau will have a new blanket Happiness In Retrospect Is Sometimes Best of All insurance policy coverage in the near future. It was also announced that farm ers wanting fertilizer at a reduced rate may put in their order right away to Farm Bureau secretary Mrs. Alda Brumback, Rt. 1, Rose burg. It will be ordered by the car load and picked up in Roseburg. V. T. Jackson explained a num ber of the bills in the legislature which effect Douglas County farm ers. Word has been received from San Jacinto, Calif., of the death of Fred Blodgett, father of Mickey Blodgett of Yoncalla and C. H. Blodgett of Sutherlin. Blodgett had visited in Yoncalla and was ac quainted with several of the resi dents. Neither of the sons went down for the funeral. During the last meeting of Scotts Valley PTA, the treasurer reported t balance of $276.16. Don Dick gave a report of the legislature. Dick's room won the room count. The following new officers were elected for the coming year. Mrs. Nilda Wise, president; Mrs. Ellis Wilson, vice president; Mrs. Pat Howard, secretary; Mrs. Jane Ap- piegaie, treasurer; Don Dick, par liamentarian, and Mrs. Helen Bal four, historian. An exchange student from Japan was guest speaker. His talk con cerned the education system of Japan and his comparison of the flA systems of the two countries. He had a display table of articles he brought from Japan. The stu dent attends a Eugene high school ana will enter the University of uregon in uie lau. Church Activities '-J k f -vlVat f9 it. I sW.a9 Saul, ftmitimmnd What m beautiful morning this has been such u one rarely eel. The enow is just right, new enough to be still white, old enough to be crunchy. And the sky is clear and blue robin's egg. It's a morning made fn w.llrin.t IH rt. ' ' W I ' i 1' So Mrs. Jam L . L : eson from across the street and I walked to the little store talk ing all the way. Mm. J. said this kind of a day give her pleasure for a long time to come just thinking about it We talked about the importance of treas uring things iia one's heart, of sorting the events of the day and picking out the precious bits to save a spoken word, a glad some incident, a touching scene. One of the reauisites of happy living, we decided is to be able to tuck away inside one's heart the worthwhile things of life to be re-lived and enjoyed. Aunt Bessie always main tained that happiness can't be fully appreciated while we have it. It reaches its greatest heights, she insisted, in retrospect ' in looking back on ttl e As Mr. Jenkins, who owns the store, was checking our grocer ies, he asked for a good recipe for fudge icing "to go on my wife's scrumptious yellow cake," he added. I told htm about my reliable 4-minute icing. I ex plained that it's best when made with Morning Milk, for then it's satiny smooth and spreadable, even on the tendereet of cakes. He said he knew what I meant about Morning Milk. He won't use anything else in his coffee. He says he's found Morning Milk gives more flavor with more convenience and less cost than anything he's tried. So we saw eye - to - eye on Morning MUk! I must look up the frosting recipe right now so I'll remem ber to take it the next time I go to the store. MORNING MILK 4-MTNUTE FUDGE ICING cup undiluted MORNING MILK I squares unsweetened chocolate or 1 cup semi sweet chocolate pieces S'i to 4 cups sifted confectioner's sugar Vi cup soft butter or margarine Heat Morning Milk with choc olate in medium saucepan until chocolate melts (about 3 min utes). Remove chocolate mixture from heat. Add sifted powdered sugar, 1 cup at a time. t Beat in butter. Blend. Spread icing be tween, on sides and top of two 8-inch cake layers. I've often thought that we must develop special sensitivity to happiness lest it pass us by unheeded! Armed Forces Cut Tagged As 'Tragic' FHA Head Asks Housing Survey Tues., Mar. 10, 1959 The News-Review, koteburg. Or. S California Ready To Move In Lawsuit Against Copco Better-blending" In your cooking ) Endless Oaths Jest Of Green WASHINGTON (AP) Rep. Edith Green (D-Ore) stuck her tongue in her cheek Monday and proposed that Congress require an oatn mat any previous oath was taken in good faith. She made her suggestion in a House speech criticizing loyalty oath requirements for participa tion in the National Defense Edu cation Act. Seven schools, including Reed College in Portland, have with drawn from participation under the grant and loan program in protest against the oaths. Mrs. Green said students are discriminated against by being re quired to take loyalty oaths not required of other persons receiv ing federal assistance. At the same time, she said, the provision is meaningless as a weapon against communism because Com munists would not be bound in conscience by an oath. Her proposal that anvone who has taken an oath required by law be required to take a second oath attesting to the good faith of the original was in addition to other tongue-in-cheek proposals to re quire oaths of loyalty and need by farmers, veterans and others receiving government payments. "If my legal advisers are equal to the task," she said, "I hope eventually to introduce a bill which will require a literally end less cycle of oaths, each one guaranteeing to the public and the agency which has custody of these oaths that the previous one was true." PAUL FINKENBINDER, radio evangelist to El Salvador, Cen tral America, will be guest speaker at the Glendale As sembly of God Wednesday at 7 p.m. and will be evening speaker at the Umpqua Sec tion Assembly of God Fellow ship meeting in Drain Mon day, March 16. Finkenbinder was born of missionary parents in Puerto Rico and received his primary education there. After college and seminary work in this country, he went to El Salvador in 1943 ond was active in pioneer and evangelistic work in Central America, holding several im portant positions, including that of director for four years of the Assembly of God Bible Institute in El Salvador. He founded ond directs Gospel Radio network, Latin America Radio Evangelism, which now covers all of Central America. WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen. John Mennis ID-Miss) told the Senate ...,.,, ... Monday the -continued disman-1 . WASHINGTON (AP) Housing tling" of U.S. striking forces is m. Administrator Norman V. .Masoni .. defensible in the face of the Berlin nted Monday lhat loncress not SAN ' rRANC SCO 'API Call- auinorue anv more puonc noue- ui .nau. ing projects until a study is com- said Monday he would move "with plcted on the nation's need for ' out delay" for trial of California's low-income housing and Uie best suit against the California Oregon method of providing u. ! Power Co. over the flow of the His plea was made at the Na-: Klamath River, tional Housing Conference ui ses-! The company, with headquarters sion here. But the conference i at Mcdford. Ore , operates hydro m nia ,m lnroolv 0v hnncin tf I electne Dower nlanti at dam at One division of the Army's stra-j in(( redevelopment ofiicials al-1 Copco, in California's Siskiyou legic sinning lorce ana marine arfv had ..ndorsed sw,.eDine public houini! recommendations voted by the House Banking Com mittee last week. Mason defended the administra tion proposal for a six - year. urtian renewal pro gram, lhis is considerably less than in the housing bills now pend ing in the House and Senate. "The charge has been made and headlined that the adminis tration is fighting inflation when it does not exist," he said. GROTON. Conn. (AP) The I "Of course not you tight in- atomic submarine Skipjack sup-1 flation when you see the symp posed to be the world's fastest ; toms. It's loo late after it ar and most maneuverable began rives." sea trials Monday. i The conference adopted a state- The Skipjack was launched last j ment declaring it is stupid to ae May 26 and has been at her fit-1 scribe urban renewal outlays as ting-out dock here since then. inflationary or irresponsible. crisis. Stennis, a member of the Senate 1 Armed Services Committee, said , it may prove to be a tragic error j to cut the sire of the Army and I the Marine Corps, as he said' the Eisenhower administration is doing. battalion landing teams are being eliminated, Stennis said. Stennis spoke out as other Demo crats renewed their demands for boosting U.S. military strength. Sen. Everett M. Dirksen of Illi- $1,350,000,000 nois, the Senate Republican lead er, said Eisenhower knows what I he is doing in the military field. A-Sub Tests Started County. California claims that operation of the plants has resulted in irre gular river flow, destroying great numbers of salmon and steelhead fish by leaving them stranded and endangering human lite when wa ter is suddenly released from be hind the dams. Suit against the company was filed in Siskiyou County Supenor Court in 1950, asking that the firm be restrained from interfering with natural flow of the river. The litigation was held up twice. The first time was when the com pany challenged the state's juris diction. It claimed that only the Federal Power Commission had authority to regulate operations on a navigable stream. The state Su preme Court overruled the com pany, holding that the Siskiyou County Court may rule on nuis ance issues involving that county. The company and the state De partment of Fish and Game agreed on a river flow fluctuation tet from last July IS to Sept. IS. The company said it would modify the fluctuation to a rate o! nine inches per hour, measured it a downstream gauging station. The department said more than 40.000 fish were stranded along river banks to a point 75 miles downstream from the dams during the test period. The department claimed that the test showed the flow was detri mental to fish life in the stream. Carthaginian warrior Hannibal used wigs. But, strictly as means of disguise. TUESDAY SPECIAL Swiss Steak ATTHI tl 4C HOTIL UMPQUA ?leW WHERE IKE SLEPT ACAPULCO, Mexico (AP) A door to a suite of the Hotel Pierre Marques in Acapulco, site of a re cent conference held by the Presi dents of Mexico and the United. States, says: "Eisenhower slept here." Jehovah Witness Ministers Meet A meeting of 23 presiding and associate ministers of Jehovah's Witnesses was held recently in Cottage Grove. The ministers were drawn from 21 different congregations of Je hovah's Witnesses and will have charge of the various departments of the group's coming assembly to be in Cottage Grove April 17-19. C. A. Stoermer. circuit minister! of Jehovah's Witnesses from south and southwestern Oregon, presided at the meeting. Commenting on the purpose of the meeting, Stoer mer said. "We expect from 900- 1000 persons to be present at our circuit assemDiy. in order to care for the needs of so many, a large per cent will .volunteer their serv ices free of charge. Twenty-three different departments will be util ized in overseeing the activities of those volunteering their time." "Included in these departments will be the cafeteria that will be capable of feeding the majority of the group three times a day. Another feature will be the room ing department, whose duty will be to see that housing is provided for the visiting delegates." Among those appointed to over see a department hi Charles V. 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