Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1959)
Improved Weather Likely Aid To Anglers By THI ASSOCIATED PRESS ' Promise of improving weather for the weekend brightened fish- ing prospects in Oregon waters i where success has been spotty of late. The Oregon slate Game Com mission in its weekly bulletin said fishermen have been having ex cellent success in some areas. The report by districts: Northwest Salmon fishing fair in the Tilla mook area but lakes in that area have been slow. At Tahkenitch Lake crappie fishing has been very good, bass and bluegill fish ing good but trout fishing slow. Trout fishing has been good in ilunsel Lake, slow but improving in Mercer Lake and slow in Sut ton Lake. Prospects are good on Big Luckiamute, Abiqua and Butte creeks. Little North i'ork of the Santiam ia a good weekand bet. Detroit Reservoir has been fair to good and the upper Willamette and Dorena Reservoir have pro duced good catches of rainbow. Southwest If weather improves angling gen erally should pick up. It has been slow for trout in Korth Umpqua reservoirs. The main Umpqua has been poor to fair for spring Chi nook but the North Umpqua has been fair to good and it should continue good there with best areas Winchester, Idleyld and Rock Creek. Striped bass fishing has been good near Gardiner ill the Smith River. Striped bass angling has been poor but improv- Eugene Wins As Dick Hyde Takes Third NORTHWEST LEAGUE W L Pet OB Salem 16 8 .667 .Eugene U 8 .576 2Vi Wenalehee 13 1J .500 4 Lewiston 12 12 .500 4 Yakima 11 13 .458 S Tri-City 8 17 .320 8Vi Wednesday's Results Lewiston 8, Tri-City 4 Salem 4, Yakima 2 Eugene 5, Wenatchee 0 Thursday's Schedule Yakima at Salem Wenatchee at Eugene Lewiston at Tri-City By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS' The Tri-City Braves will have to hustle if they want to see daylight again. They plunged even deeper . into the Northwest Baseball League cellar Wednesday night with an 8-4 loss to the Lewiston B rones. Lewiston was sharing third place with the Wenatchee Chiefs, who were blanked 5-0 by the second place Eugene Emeralds. The Salem Senators, meanwhile, revenged Tuesday's 5-1 Joss to Ya kima by defeating the Bears 4-2. The victory padded the Senators' hold on first place while Hakima remained in fourth. The Broncs finished the first in ning with a four-run lead, two of the tames coming on Ron Wilkins homer. Wilkins scored another home fun with one aboard in the fifth. The Braves' first tally came In the fourth on Bob Ruck's double. The other three runs were scored ' as the result of errors by Wilkins, the Lewiston rightfielder. it was Ray Hyde's third win as he struck out two and walked three in Eugene's triumph over i wenatchee. J Tie Emeralds scored one each in the first and second I innings and three more in the fifth. ; Salem hurler Bailey Brem broke a z-z tie in the eighth to win his own game when he belted a dou ble with two out and man on sec ond and third. Brem struck out five and walked none as he al lowed only 10 singles. Salem's Danny Holden had i solo homer in the fourth that tied the contest. Yakima had scored in the first and third innings. Sa lem's other run came in the sec ond frame. Sports In Brief BASEBALL PITTSBURGH Pirates optioned first baseman R. C. Stevens to Columbus of the Interna t i o n a 1 League. RACING CAMDEN, N. .1. New Jersey Commission upheld Garden State Park stewards who suspended jockey Bill Hartack for remainder of meeting closing May 30 for un becoming conduct. ORDER NOW PLANER ENDS PEELER CORES OAK GREEN SLAB SAWDUST Dial OS 9-8741 Rose burg Lumber Co. Iron Causes Mortality In Eggs Of Pike CHICAGO (AP) Fishery scien tists looking into the babyhood of northern pike and largemouth bass have solved an angler's question: "Where are all the fish that were here last year?" Concentrating on Minnesota's 535-acre Lake George and its con necting sloughs, the men from the State Department of Conservation University of Minnesota made de tailed observations from 1955 through 1958 on adult fish move ments, egg deposits, and embryo and juvenile survival. They found that a lot happens in the struggle for survival in the na tural production of pike and bass. They found that nursery sloughs are the key to pike and bass pro duction. In their study, Dr. Llovd L. Smith Jr., Donald P. Franklin and Robert H. Kramer observed that these species were influenced by water levels, iron content, wind and temperature changes. They found that increased pike egg mortality probably was caused by iron precipitation on the egg surface and by rapid lowering of temperatures. The numbers of surviving fry and fingerling pike did not appear to be influenced by cannibalism. In the area of conservation, the scientists recommend that sloughs be selected for pike management, that they have a low natural iron content, sufficient water flow to insure continuous lake access and that the bed above lake level have a good stand of vegetation for egg beds. Largemouth bass production fac tors were similar to those that in fluenced pike. ing in Coos Bay and lower Coos River. The Rogue River system has not been good because of weather. The upper Rogue and tributaries that are open have been a bit better on warmer days but generally slow. Salmon catches are improving in the Grants Pass section and the low er river has been fair and holding more or less steady. Central East fork of Hood River has been fair to good in the Mt. Hood area and the upper fork above Cooper Spur has been poor. Kings ley Reservoir has been stocked and should be fair. Bank anglers using single eggs at McClure Lake have bad excellent success. De schutes River evening fly fishing in Oak Springs and Maupin areas has been excellent and bait fish ermen have had some success too. Sherars Bridge has been better with a numbr of jack salmon taken. Wickiup Reservoir has been good on troll and Odell Lake fair with kokanee 14 to 19 inches pre dominating. Suttle take has been giving up limits of rainbow and occasional large brown trout. Och oco Reservoir has been good. Crescent Lake fair, Pelton Reser voir fair to good, lhe Aletolius River has been good in fly fishing areas, the Deschutes above Bend good on troll and below it fair to good on flies in late afternoon and evening. Weather holds the answer in the Klamath area, with im provement needed. 90-to-l Shot Wins At Portland Track PORTLAND (AP) Shock's Urchin a 90 to 1 shot won a photo finish first race over Win Quest Wednesday at Portland Meadows. The horse paid $189 to win, $54.90 to place and $13.90 to show. The daily double, which means picking winners in the first and second races, paid $2,912.80. Only two persons picked Shock's Ur chin and Harbor Chief, the sec ond race winner. The quinella in the first race, which means picking the first and second horse, paid $623.40. Only seven held winning stubs. Alaska Governor In Surgery Again SEATTLE (AP) Alaska's Gov. William A. Egan arrived here Tuesday night for his fourth opera tion since December. The 44-year-old Democrat is scheduled to undergo surgery Fri day to clear up a gallstone condi tion with which he was stricken Jan. 3. Egan was rushed here from Juneau Jan. 19 for an emergency operation. He was given only a 50 50 chance to survive and was not able to assume his gubernatorial duties until April 14. The governor, who was accom panied by his wife, said he hopes to leave the hospital June 2 and return to Juneau about 10 days later. Initiation Rites End In Drowning Of Youth YAKIMA. Wash, f AP) The ini tiation ceremony for a suburban Moxee High School club, being staged in a small pond east of here, turned into tragedy Tuesday when one of the 16 initiates died. Henry Sherwood, a 16-year-old sophomore, and IS other youths dressed in garments made from burlap sacks were being paddled by members of the club, a letter- man's organization, in the water when Sherwood sank beneath the surface. His absence went unnoticed for several minutes. When his com panions realized he was missing, they searched and found his body. Attempts to revive the boy failed. WHEEL ALIGNMENT 50 CORRECTION OF CAMBER CORRECTION OF CASTER CORRECTION OF TOE-IN CORRECTION OF TOE-OUT STEERING INSPECTION WHEEL BALANCE BOTH FRONT WHEELS OR BOTH FOR ONLY 7 4.50 SI DILLARD MOTOR CO. S. E. Stephens ot Dougloe Phone OR 3-6626 Speedway Suffers From Driver Lack INDIANAPOLIS (AP) The In dianapolis Motor Speedway is suf fering from an acute shortage of experienced drivers, with 44 cars still to make qualification runs for the 500-mile race May 30. Only about 30 men with the ability and experience to drive at more man 140 miles an hour were available for those 44 cars. They will get their chance to quality Saturday and Sunday. fourteen cars qualuied last weekend, leaving 19 places open in the 33-car starting lineup. After 19 more cars have qualified, the slower ones may be bumped from the lineup by faster qualifiers. The driver shortage may lead to considerable car hopping in the final qualifications. A car may qualify only once, but a driver whose car is eliminated may try again m another. Three of the 61 cars originally entered have been wrecked beyond repair. Drivers and mechanics pre dieted that 141 miles an hour would make the field. Accidents in practice runs this year have killed two drivers Track officials defended the test ing procedure. Steward Paul John son said 139 drivers have passed the test since he. came here as an observer in 1939, and only two have had a serious accident in their rookie year. Trash To Burn At Cany on ville By VIRGINIA PROCTOR Canyonville residents are encour aged to burn all their trash this weekend before the open fire clos ure goes into effect next Monday, according to Fire Chief Norman Hanson. After Monday Canyonville resi dents may have open fires by per mit only and fires with a permit. Hanson added. Permit fires must be in regulation covered incinera tors. In other Canyonville activities next week. Rosehurg Municipal Judge Randolph Slocum will be the principal speaker at Canyon ville's eighth grade promotion cere monies scheduled for 8 p.m. Wed nesday in the gymnasium. Sue Hoverson will deliver the valedictory and Pat Patterson the salutatory. The Rev. Carl Walker will give the benediction and invo cation. Certificates of promotion will be given by Robert Conley, incoming school board chairman. Canyonville residents have also made the news recently. Mr. and Mrs. Hi Hash, and daughter, Mrs. Rose White, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Smith of Cottage Grove. Hash's birthday was the oc casion for the family fathering. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Hanson and family and Mrs. Hanson Sr. spent Sunday with the Harlan Hanson family at Crescent City. Mrs. Carl Johnson is relieving Mrs. John Carlock as surgery nurse at Forest Glen Hospital, in Canyonville, for two weeks. College Coast Conference Buried -Age 44 SEATTLE (AP) - It wilt be something of a pagan funeral when the Pacific Coast Con ference dies this weekend, age 44. The wake with running and leaping and displays of muscular prowess will come first in the form of the final conference track and field meet Friday and Satur day. Saturday night and Sunday the faculty representatives of the nine member schools, acting as morticians, will prepare the body for burial and bury it. Suffering from a cancer of dis content, the conference scheduled its own demise at a meeting last August in Portland. The discon tent had broken into the open in the spring of 19o8. The University of Washington was placed on pro bation for two years for violation of the rules on payment ot amides. UCLA next drew a three-year probation and Southern California a two-year probation on similar charges. California was tagged with a $25,000 fine. Threats of withdrawal were heard and the conference finally decided to .call it quits. SEATTLE (AP) Five champi ons will be defending their titles Friday and Saturday in the 29th and last Pacific Coast Conference track and field meet, but only two appear certain to repeal. One of the five is a double champ, owning the crowns for the luo and 220 yard dashes. He is Willie White of California, whose best time this year for the 100 is slower than 9.5 seconds credited Roscoe Cook of Oregon. And Bobby Staten of Southern California, clocked in 20.9 seconds. has beaten White s best by a tenth of a second in the 220. Charlie Dumas of Southern Cal ifornia, who has cleared the bar at 7 feet, is expected to retain the high jump championship without difficulty. George Rouhanis of UCLA should keep the pole vault tide. Staten's 46.6-second canter In the quarter mile makes him the favorite to replace Washington s Terry Tobacco as 440 champion. Several others have posted better times than Tobacco this season. Jerry Siebert of California may have to relinquish his crown in the half-mile, where Stanford's Ernie Cunliffe has posted the best time thus far at 1:49.9. Spike Arlt of Washington Stale owns the low hurdle title but Ore gon's Steve Anderson has matched his best 1959 time of 23.1 seconds. Staten, White and California's Cab ron Russ will challenge for the crown. Southern California has won 17 conference chamDionshios and is the heavy favorite to take the last one. Saturday night the faculty athletic representatives of the con ference will begin a two-day ses sion dissolving the 44-year-old PCC. rour schools California, Wash ington, UCLA and Southern Calif orniahave formed the Athletic Assn. of Western Universities, but Stanford, Idaho. Oregon State. Oregon and Washington State will operate as independents. Preliminaries in the meet's field events will begin at 3 p.m. (PST) Friday, with track eliminations starting at 3:30. The quarter-mile alone has 26 entries. Pole vaulters will start Satur day's program at 1 p.m. Half an hour later the finals will begin in tne otner iieia events. The track events will start at 2 p.m. with lhe running of the mile. Tt tt i Akf pThur., May 21, 1959 The News-Review, Roteburg, Ore, 7 A PUfiUC SERVICE Of THE COLLEGE Of LAW, WILLAMETTE UNIVERSITY Mrs. Amy MacDangal's husband made life unbearable for her. They had lived all their lives in Ne braska until she decided to leave him and come to Oregon. After she had lived in Oregon 11 months she started a divorce suit which came to trial about two years after she had arrived. Amy cannot succeed in this suit because she must have been an inhabitant of Oregon for one year prior to the commencement of the suit. The fact that she had lived in Oregon for two years at the time of the trial is immater ial. Her suit was started after only 7 months residence. Although the residence of the wife is ordinarily that of the husband, the wife may establish a separ ate domicile for divorce purposes when the husband hat made life unbearable for her. Amy can start the suit in Ore gon even though the acts of the husband which gave her grounds for divorce were committed in Ne braska. The effect of these acts on the marriage is the important thing. The marriage relationship is brought before the court when ever Amy has complied with the le gal requirements necessary to give the court jurisdiction. Ordinarily, it is not necessary that the grounds upon which the divorce is sought in Oregon be rec ognized in Nebraska as grounds for divorce. Each state has its own divorce laws and there is a great difference among the states, both as to the grounds for divorce and the period oi tune necessary tor tne party to live in that state to give the state court jurisdiction to try the suit. In Idaho and Nevada only six weeks law ia required. The longest residence requirement is five years Farming In Future Told At Fair Oaks Grange A report on farming as it might be 100 years hence was a feature of a Fair Oaks Grange meeting i recently, reports correspondent Barbara Liesinger. Leroy Gerard told the grange as sembly that most of the farmer's work probably will be done by remote control and atomic power a century from now. Poems on Mother's Day and readings were given by Amalie Thornton. Glen Murdock, Dorothy Norton and Vel ma Brauninger and a skit was staged by Diana Lee King. Doro thy Norton won a word contest at the close or the program. A group from the grange travel led to Gunter Grange last week lend for a dinner at the home of Roy Johnson. Hostess for a home economics meeting this week was Jennie Har rison. Naomi Murdock and Virginia Wil liams will host a grange potluck affair next Tuesday al 7 p.m. in Massachusetts (with certain ex ceptions). Thirty-three states re quire a one-year waiting period. This column is to present gener al principles of law. It is not to be taken as legal advice. Slight changes in the facts of a case may change its outcome. Neuberger Introduces National Seashore Bill WASHINGTON (AP) Sen. shore recreation areas on the Ore Richard L. Neuberger (D-Ore) in- o0n COast traduced Wednesday a bill pro- . viding 15 million dollars to buy Th National Park Service up to 100.000 acres for three Jea- would pick the locations. Plane Crashes, Three Victims TOKYO (AP)-A big turboprop transport plane crashed into a U.S. Air Force barracks and burst into flames in southern Ja pan today, killing three persons and injuring 14. Two of the in jured were burned seriously. The four-engine CI 30 was trying to land at Ashiya air base with one engine conked out. It was re turning from Iwo Jima, the U.S. Air Force said. An Air Force spokesman said there were eight men aboard the plane. One of the crew members was reported killed. The other two killed were in the barracks. Feed Mill Being Built. PENDLETON (AP) Construc tion of a feed mill with adjacent feed lots is under way west of Milton-r-'reewaler. Clyde Harris. Pendleton, said they would help make Umatilla County the stale's largest feeding center. The mill will be completed in about four months, he said. The feed lots will cover some 210 acres and will have an initial capacity of 10.000 head of cattle and 10,000 lambs. We rest our case on your first -taste Wl A. if -' m N Here's top quality, mild and mellow Kentucky bourbon. A real value at this modest price. Try it. No bourbon tastes better. ..none is ia better taste. CANADA DRY '45 BOURBON kimiicn hum aowra tiwatv. m roof -cum our minutm. tti tom. l t LAST TWO BIG DAYS! TOMORROW -- SATURDAY 1 1 1 l Former Dillard Couple Parents Word comes from Corvallis that Mr. and Mrs. Charles McKinney, formerly of Dillard, are the par ents of a new baby son, Gregg waiter, 7 pounds 2 ounces, born April 27. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Walt Midlestadt, Dillard, and paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Jim McKinney. Klamath Falls, reports correspond ent Mrs. Ted Peterson. Mrs. Glen Ryder and two daugh ters, Alice Jean and Ruth Ann, have returned to their home in Phoenix. Ariz., after spending sev eral weeks in Winston and Rose burg while Mrs. Ryder was taking care of property interests. The Ryders' other daughter, Glenda Lee, is remaining in Roseburg to complete her school year before joining the Ryder family in Ari zona. Mr. and Mrs. O. T. (Bud) Car ter and two sons, Dennis and Jer ry, have moved into their newly purchased home at the comer of Rose and Jorgens Streets in Win ston. The Carters have sold their ranch and business, the Green Meadows Trailer Court, in Green to Mr. and Mrs. Dale Bernett of Sutherlin. Shop Now for the TCD Values at toseburg swm. Buy Now During TCD for Fathers Pay (Graduation Salem Man Elected TACOMA (AP) The 38th an nual retail credit conference closed here Tuesday night with in stallation of officers and presen tation of awards. Ernest Reames, Salem, Ore., was installed as president of the 10th district (Northwest) of the National Retail Credit Assn., and Mrs. Muriel Jones of Portland as president of the Pacific Northwest Council of .Credit Women's Break fast Clubs. H ELI-ARC WELDING Aluminum, pot motoli, ttaintott tftol and ottir metal t. Your McCulloch Dtolar WINSTON CHAIN SAW Winitoe Phone OS 9-5641 GROUNDS MEN for LAWNS GROUNDS YARDS PLANTS For Moody, tkiHod ottomSoit OR 3-3450 June Brides Outdoor Living Vacation Fun D,