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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (March 15, 1960)
Community Wevs Briefs Clell Laird of Coquille was a re cent business visitor in Itosebur. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Woodruff and family have moved from Wins ton to 833 SE Glenn St. to reside. Mr. and Mri. Ronald Oilar and three sons have moved from Rose burg to their new home on Looking glass lioad. Mr. and Mrs. Al Brown and two children have purchased the Oilar home at 715 SG Terrace. Brown is with the First National Bank of Koseburg, Miss Jan Bahling of Portland Is here visiting her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Spencer, and her great-grandmother, .Mrs. Elsie Young. Mrs. Robert Mieelli has return ed to her homo in Corvallis, fol lowing a trip to Syracuse, N. Y. to visit her husband, who is there on business. Boh is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Mieelli of this city. Dr. and Mrs. Byron Woodruff and daughter, Jeanie, and son, Scott, have moved from SIS Glenn Street to their new home on the North Umpqua Hiver above Win chester. The residence was, for merly owned by Mr. and Mrs. George French, who have moved to New York. w- F- Forrest has returned to , Paul William Tirnell of Seattlel Mr. and Mrs. Chester Thompson his home on SE Kane Street, fol-1 is here visiting at the home of his made a recent business trip to lowing a business trip to Chicago. ' aunt, Mrs. Harry Keasey. ; Portland and Seattle. 66-INCH CABINET SINK Now only $1C95 complete with fittings 2 big drawers! Partitioned undersink cabinets with two sturdy shelves! Chrome swinging mixing-faucet with 5-year parts warranty' No-splash bowls! No-tip, fluted dralnbourdsl All heavy-gauge steel con structionl Baked -on enamel finish! One-piece porcelain-enameled steel top! Over 19 cubic feet of storage space! Gleaming Star White! K&n E22MS! 635 S. E. Stephens OR 2-1616 Mr. and Mrs. Sig Fett have re turned to their home here, follow ing a business trip to Portland. Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Tyler have moved from 2S7 NK Flagg St. to U74 SE Virginia Court to make their home. Mr. and Mrs. William Lander and children of Eugene visited here a short time Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Inman, and family. Mrs. W. E. (Terry) Hercher and sons have returned to their home I in Medford, following the ween here visiting the former's mother, Mrs. Paul H. Helweg, in Laurel wood. Mrs. C. E. Brumwell and nine children of Eugene have arrived here to spend the week of spring vacation visiting her mother, Mrs. Carl V. Murray, and her sister, Mrs. Larue Crain, and family. Henry C. Hansen and Mr. and Mrs. V. F. Sumstine and sons, Chuck and Skippy, of this city spent the weekend in Coos Bay as guests of the former's parents, Mr and Mrs. J. L. Hansen. Mr. Willixm Winafield and daughter, Linda, of Albany, are spending the week of spring vaca tion here at the home of the for mer's brother and sister-in-law, Mr. ana Mrs. Hooeri ivem. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence R. Wiley and family have moved into their newlv purchased home at the cor . ner of Chadwick and SE Cass Ave nue. The residence was for a num ber of vears owned by the late Judge and Mrs. A. N. Orcutt. ! Dr. and Mrs. Dallen H. Jones 1 and children. Itandy and Joy, at tended the 55th wedding anniver , sary celebration of Mrs. Jones' par : ents, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Barker. Sunday in McMinnville. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Curry and daughter, Jill, also attended the party. District No. 11, Oregon Nurses Association, will meet at 8 o'clock tonight, March 15, at Douglas Com munitv Hospital. Guest speaker will be William Williams, who will talk on Special ?:ducation pro grams in the Itoscburg City Schools. There will be no business meeting. Mrs. A. J. Young of Roseburg, who has been spending the winter in Phoenix, Ariz., is leaving this week for Oakland, Calif., to spend a few weeks visiting her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Young, who will bring her back to her home here about the first of i the month. j Dr. and Mrs. Thomas McClintock and daughters, Meagen and Mary Louise, of Corvallis, spent the weekend here visiting the former's uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. L. W. McClintock, and with his grand mother, Mrs. J. E. McClintock. Dr. McClintock. who is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John L. McClintock of Portland, formerly of this city, is a professor at Oregon State Col lege. Negro Singer Draws Penalty In Morals Case ST. LOUIS (AP) U.S. Dist. Judge George H. Moore has imposed the maximum sentence for a Mann act violation five years in prison and a $5,000 fine on rock V roll singer Charles E. (Chuck) Berry of St. Louis. Berry was convicted last week of transporting a 14-year-old In dian girl from El Paso, Tex., to St. Louis for immoral purposes. Moore ordered the 3U-year-old Negro singer held without bond. He has been indicted but not tried on another Mann Act charge in volving a 25-year-old woman and on a charge of transporting an automatic pistol between states. Berry served in a reformatory in 1 1944 in Missouri. The children of Mr. and Mrs. j William Cooke are confined to their home by measles. j Mrs. Washington Hughes is re-i ported improving in health, after being ill of influenza at her home on SE Kane h'treet. I Mr. and Mrs. Robert Anderson and daughter, Leslie, and son. Bob i by, of Salem spent the weekend j here as houseguests of Mr. and -Mrs. Hubert Stubs. j Mrs. F. J. Hermann, Mrs. S i g fett, .Mrs. Lee Williams and Mrs. W. D. Myers of this city drove to Oakland .Monday to attend Oak land Garden Club benefit card party-Mrs. Frances B. O'Neill, who has been living the last three years with a daughter in Fort Lauder dale, Fla., is in Roseburg at the home of her son-in-law and daugh ter, Mr. and Mrs. Harris Whitaker. Mrs. O'Neill's home is in Wheaton, 111. The Douglas County Sheriff's, Posse will hold a box social Satur day, March 19, in the Coral Room j of the Umpqua Hotel for Possemen and their invited guests. After the j box social, motion pictures of the association's trail rides to Mt. Hood, Todd Lake and Brighten bush will be shown, after which dancing will be enjoyed. ' Mr. and Mrs. Everett Partin of this city spent the weekend in Eu gene visiting the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John J. Rogers. Lloyd Claver and son, Gary, of Coquille, formerly of this city, were recent business visitors here. Cla ver is an uncle of Mrs. Glen Cos line of this city. Mr. and Mrs. Al Bishop and children, Jeanmne and Alvin, of this city spent the weekend in Eu gene visiting Mrs. Bishop's par ents, Mr. and Mrs. James Miller. George Felt, owner of Felts Fly ing Field, is expected to return here tonight, following a trip by plane to Gaggerstown, Md,, on a dealers tour of the Umbaugh Kotar Wng Aircraft factory. Mrs. William T. Evans Jr. of this city left last week for El Monte, Calif., where she was call ed bv the death of her mother-in-law, 'Mrs. William T. Evans Sr., who died Tuesday and whose fun eral took place Friday. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Willoughby left Monday for California and Mex ico, before going to Mississippi to visit the latter's relatives and then on to their home in Spokane, Wash., following a visit here since Friday at the home of the former's son-in-law and daughter, Dr. and Mrs. James R. Finlay, and family. j.-. -Mf -rW V it yf t . U Tues., Mar. 15, 1960 Th News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 7 Colonizers Reach Galapagos Safely SEATTLE (AP) An amateur radio operator lias reported the joUcarold wooden escl Alert and her crew of :" colonizers ha reai-! ed the Galapagos Islands ; safely. The Wand Development Co , i sponsor of the ;i.:am mile voyage ; from Seattle to the equatorial is I lands, said here it received a telephone call from the "ham" operator's father at I'almdale, Calif., telling of the Alert's anv I val. The Alert left Seattle in Janu I ary. Equipment trouble and wm I ter storms forced the ship to put ! in at Westport, Wash., and Coos 1 Hay, Ore. She eventually reaehe.l Los Angeles where she picked up more colonizers. Thirty-two per sons were aboard when she sailed from the California port Feb. 25. The development firm says the Western Trader is scheduled to leave here later this week witn about (ill additional persons head ed for a new life on San Cristobal l.-land. The colonizers hope to establish a self-supporting colony by raising crops and farming the sea. )i:ir Ini to 1'OKll.AM) hi 'c t ompletc onh if ) mt have i''i'i. ; iltimcr at NEA Tclcphoto DRAW rAIiTtDNF.il Tt appears that four-year old l.is-a Winkler is having a Run ami holster problem. 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