The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, May 21, 1959, Page 3, Image 3

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Industry Completes
Tour Of Pastures
The latest knowledge and experi
ence with fertilizer and legume
Pastures was observed this week on
ouglas County's third annual fer
tilizer industry tour Tuesday and
Wednesday.
Those following the tour visited
farms and ranches in the Red Hill
and Driver Valley areas near Oak
land, Glide and South Deer Creek,
Melrose and Riversdale where they
saw a number of experimental
tests plots and demonstrations.
Purpose of the plots and of the
research is to devise cheaper and
more efficient ways of establishing
subclover in pastures, Wayne
Jlosher, county extension agent
notes, Subclover, a winter annual
legume, is the basic plant in the
pasture program in the county.
Legumes can grow with proper
fertilization, Mosher pointed out.
Included in the tests were al
falfa trials in the Red Hills.
For the most part, those making
the tour were connected with the
fertilizer industry in the three
Pacific Coast states.
New Churches Scheduled
BALTIMORE (AP) Churches
at Tacoma, Wash., and Salem,
Ore., are among 25 to be started
this year by the Evangelical and
Reformed Church.
The church projects in 14 states
were backed Wednesday by the
sect's Board of National Missions,
which held a two-day meeting
here.
0.
rF COURSE,
when you buy health pro
tection for your family,
you want the best, most
complete, most reliable
plan your money can
buy. Which one will give
you the kind of protection
you need?
ID
ERHAPS.
the best possible authority
on health protection is
your family doctor. He
work with many health
plane. And, chances are,
he i one of the more than
1400 Oregon doctors who
actually sponsor a plan
specifically designed for
Oregon famUiee Oregon
Phfsteiaoc' Service.
ask your doctor.
You oan rely on hi ecpe
rience and judgment in
helping you select the
plan that's best for you.
And, if he recommends
OPS, remember that
there' an OPS represen
tative ready to give you
full details. Don't wait
you'll be glad you asked!
OREGON
PHYSICIANS'
SERVICE
BLWSHIELD
Sponsored ond approved
by
Oregon State AWdfeol
Society
3 Maranlo Blag.,
Roseburg, Oregon
Benson School Relations
Good, In Deller's View
Supt. M. C. Dcller told the Rose
burg School Board Wednesday
night that he uncovered nothing
but "good working relationships"
in an investigation of complaints
against Benson School teachers
voiced last week by three mothers
from the Umpqua Park district.
He suggested that complaints
against teachers should follow a
"chain of command," with the
teacher first to be contacted, then
the principal of the school involved.
If persons appear before the
board to register such complaints,
Company To Double
Pulp Mill Capacity
PORTLAND (AP) The capac
ity of the Georgia-Pacific Corp.
pulp and paper mill at Toledo,
Ore., will be doubled, the corpora
tion announced Wednesday.
The increase at the Toledo plant
and a similar plant, which the
firm said will be built at Samoa,
Calif., will cost an estimated 30
million dollars.
The Toledo project will start
within 30 days and be in produc
tion by mid-1960, said H. Stuart
Daniels, the corporation's presi
dent. He said the addition will in
crease plant capacity to 600 tons
a day.
Daniels said engineering work
on the Samoa plant is underway
and the construction schedule
calls for production by early 1962.
The California plant, like that
at Toledo, will use wood chips
from the firm's plywood plant in
the two areas.
Georgia-Pacific holds more than
4 billion feet of lumber in the
Eureka-Samoa area of Northern
California. It recently opened one
new plywood plant there and has
another under construction.
Mussels, Clams
In Toxic Season
The state Board of Health today
issued a warning against eating
marine mussels or uncleaned
clams taken from Oregon coastal
waters this spring and summer.
Dr. Harold M. Erickson, state
health officer, noted that clams
or mussels may contain a strong
poison from May through Octo
ber as a result of feeding on cer
tain small organisms. Mussels
should not be eaten and black
portions of clams should be re
moved and destroyed during the
danger period, warned Erickson.
Drunk Bail Forfeited
Kenneth Viscelle Trindall, 50, of
Rt. 3 Box 770, Roseburg, Wednes
day forfeited $75 bail when he fail
ed to appear in Roseburg Munici
pal Court for trial on a charge of
being drunk in an automobile.
COAST OUTING SET
The Young Adults group of the
YMCA will travel to the Oregon
Coast Saturday for an all-day out
ing. Members will meet at 7 a.m.
at the Riverside School. Those
making the trip should bring a pic
nic lunch.
Vital Statistics
Orders
Anna vs. Lonnie Jones. Ordered
that an order of voluntary nonsuit
be entered. Plaintiff moved for a
voluntary nonsuit. Appears to court
that the parties are reconciled and
no longer desire a divorce, accord
ing to order.
Walter F. vs. Goldie Lee Neis.
Ordered that decree entered July
24, 1946, be modified, that custody
of one minor child be awarded to
defendant, that plaintiff pay to de
fendant $30 monthly support of
child.
Decree
George H. vs. Lancet Paroz. Or
dered that marriage of parties be
declared void and no effect what
soever from inception, property
settlement ratified.
Divorce Decrees
Joane from Donald D. Caskill.
Plaintiff awarded custody of three
minor children, $100 monthly sup
port of children.
Barbara from Milton Conrad
Johnson Jr. Ordered that two mi
nor children and $80 monthly sup
port of children be awarded to
plaintiff.
the persons should be asked by
the board whether they have con
sulted the teacher or principal. If
they have not, they should be im
mediately referred back to those
parties, declared Deller.
Unwarranted Publicity Averted
The superintendent said such a
procedure would tend to settle
parent-teacher problems "without
unwarranted and unfair publicity."
Director Harold Hoyt agreed with
Deller's idea, commenting that
school boards .several years ago
welcomed all sorts of public par
ticipation in meetings with the re
sult that the board's efficiency in
tackling more important problems
was reduced because of limited
time.
He said the board should not be
saddled with delving into "petty
discipline problems" when these
can better be handled at the school
level. Only if parents have gained
no satisfaction at lower levels
should such gripes be brought be
fore the board, he claimed.
Fellow board members Arthur
Lamka and Darley Ware express
ed contentions that the public
should feel free to bring problems
before . the board, however.
Hoyt replied that no restrictions
on public participation had been
implied, but that some sort of or
der in handling of such problems is
needed.
Closed Sessions Eyed
Deller said parent-teacher prob
lems might best be handled in
closed sessions similar to those
called for personnel discussions in
cases where board consideration is
warranted.
Benson Principal Jim Hayden
prepared an explanatory report on
the complaints and presented it to
the board, as requested by Deller.
In the report, Hayden said the
Benson staff believes the vast ma
jority of parents in the Benson dis
trict, "regardless of where they
live, approve of and appreciate
the high standards of behavior re
quired and expected of their chil
dren." .
The "petty gripes" against the
school are believed by the staff to
be "the feelings of the women
making them." He noted that one
of the three women has no chil
dren in the school. The real basis
for the complaints was the fact
that "their children are not attend
ing the school of their choice and
that they have been moved sev
eral times," continued Hayden.
Personnel Should Be Apprised
The principal said no attempt
was made by the parents to work
out their problems with school per
sonnel. Such complaints "should
receive no hearing by the board
until individuals can verify that
they were unable to work out their
differences with their local school
teachers and principal," Hayden
concluded.
The mothers appeared at t h e
meeting last week specifically to
request that their children be
transferred permanently back to
Fullerton School, where they origi
nally were enrolled. Umpqua Park
children, because of enrollment
problems in several schools, have
been shuttled from Fullerton to
Rose and, finally, to Benson in the
past three years.
Dr. H. Nels Lindell, director
elect who will take the place of
board chairman Wayne Crooch in
July, said from the audience that
he believes the complaints were
direct emotional outgrowths from
the women's concern over this
problem.
Kindergarten Tots
Set For 'Degrees'
Multi - colored "Bachelor of
Rhymes" degrees will be handed
out Friday to 24 Hucrest-Rivers-dale
area youngsters who have ob
tained an educational head start,
so to speak, on most other Rose
burg area tots.
The lively 6-year-olds have spent
the last eight months in Roscburg's
newest kindergarten, located in the
Congregational Christian Church
building in the Ilucrest district.
The children have been taught ar
tistic and musical skills not to
mention some social graces by
teacher Mrs. Doris Cooksey in
preparation for entering Ilucrest
or Riversdale schools next year.
The Hucrest class, financed by
parents, is one of only two kinder
garten setups in the Roseburg
area. A similar class at Fullerton
School now is rounding out its sec
ond year.
The Hucrest PTA sponsors the
class and parents of children en
rolled pay $10 a month to finance
it. Joe Scallon, principal at Hu
crest School, serves in the same
capacity at the kindergarten.
Graduation exercises in the class
room Friday afternoon will be con
ducted along with registration of
children for next year. Mrs. James
Cave is handling registrations for
1959-60.
Alaska To Send Eskimo
Girls To Oregon Show
PORTLAND (AP) Eskimo
girls will be with Alaska's exhibit
at the Oregon Centennial Expo
sition which opens here in July.
That word came .Wednesday
from Jules Radinsky, personal
representative of Gov. William
Egan of Alaska, here to complete
arrangements for the $25,000 ex
hibit, which will occupy about 540
square feet.
He said the Alaska exhibit will
stress its potential and depict its
colorful past.
Hospital News
Douglas Community Hospital
Admitted
Surgtryt Alfred Boyd, Gene
Stewart, Darlena Mitchell, Ernest
swill, Hoseourg.
Medical: Airs. John Brinkley,
Mrs. oeoigo Lrabtree, Roseburg;
Dinise Guiney, Umpqua.
Discharged
Mrs. Lonnie Strong, Riddle:
George Ingram, Charles Insley,
John Chalmers, Kimberly Mullin,
sirs, uonaia cooper, Darlena Carr,
Leonora Lipscomb, Mrs. James El
wood, Mrs. Burl Baggs, James
Bowles, Roseburg.
Mtrcy Hospital
Admitted
Medical! William LeMastor,
Worth Davis, Roseburg: Rose
Barklow, Sutherlin: Mrs. Wil
liam Fox, Glide.
Surgtry: Mrs. Marion Fortune,
Don Mulkcy, Roseburg.
Discharged
Nettie Ulmer, Mrs. Chester Cook,
Mrs. Alec Alley, Mrs. Roger Ble
vins, Henry Hebard, Roseburg;
Ronda Gardiner, Glide; Mrs. Dan
iel Mclllan, Wilbur; M r s.
Donald Baird and baby, Tara Lee,
Winston.
Elderly Man Found Dead
PORTLAND (AP) i Tests are
being made here to discover the
cause of the death Tuesday of
Ferdinald Schwieger, 96.
A son-in-law found his body on
the floor in his home. His cloth
ing caught fire from an electric
plate as he was fixing breakfast.
Dannioore Hotel
1217 S. W. MORRISON ST.
Portland, Oregon
Rmnritionl by ID Foal nfundll N
requeft ppoi arrival.
All transient guetre. All these
who come, return. Rates not high,
not low. Free Garage, TV's and
Radios. Reputation for cleanliness.
Thur., May 21, 1959 The) News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 3
Warm Springs Tribe
Wins Additional Land
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
House Interior Committee ap
proved Wednesday transfer of 49
acres of federal land to the Con
federated Tribes of the Warm
Springs Reservation in central
Oregon.
The government acquired the
property in 1932 for Indian school
use. It now no longer needs it for
that purpose. The land is on both
LOCAL NEWS
C. S. Inslty, rural Roseburg,
was released from a Roseburg hos
pital Wednesday following surgery
a week ago. He will be recovering
at his home for about six weeks.
sides of Highway 26 and could
be used for residential or Indus
trial purposes.
VODKA MARTINI i
m nnnv mnui
orDLUUUI mAKI 1
Both drinks are best made with smoolh, flawless Smirnoff. Just be
sure you vie the Vodka of Vodkas. ..and fiove it your own way
lis
few "
it leaves you breathless
&
mirnoffiomm
10 ( 100 Piitl. liilillil Iron full. Sis. Piirri Sitiioall ill. (Oii.il Uiiaiiin), HaclfirsJ. till.
Pay Your Bills
WHEN DUE
anal
KeeD Your
Credit Good
Pioneer Service Credit Information is most valuable.
No commissions charged on collections.
All moneys paid direct to creditors.
Pioneer
Service Co., Inc
SINCE 1926
The Merchants' ond Professional Men's Organization
OREGON IDAHO UTAH NEVADA DIVISION
Division Office: Eugene, Oregon
WATCH FOR THE GREEN AND BLACK
HANDBILLS WITH ACCOUNTS FOR SALE
JOHN ROBERTSON ANNOUNCES HIS
25th
n-i
I. j .tfs. - HfBE a - fell
5?)
Instead of "Pennies From Heaven", it's
NICKELS this weekend from John Robertson's
Shell Service! Coma and help us celebrate 25.
years of pleasant relationships in Roseburg.
Free prizes, gifts galore.
2 ISO
Fri. Sat.
MAY
22-23
MM ROBERTSON'S
SHELL SERVICE
ALWAYS 24-HR. SERVICE
Corner Stephens and Oak - In Downtown Roseburg
Phone ORchard 3-8191
DEALER IN
SHELL PROOUCTS