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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (April 25, 1960)
BSrpt CALENDAR OF EVENTS 'tomorrow Monday, April 25 Reseburg Town and Country Harden Club, home o Mrs. Dale Williamson in Winston, 7:30 p.m. Lilac Cirelo, neighbors of Wood craft, installation of officers at Woman's Club, 8 p.m. BPW, home of Mr. and Mrs. George West, 122 SE Reservoir Ave., smorgasbord dinner, 7 p.m. Fullorton PTA executive board meeting, at the school, 7:30 p.m. itnignis ot rytnias, rytMas Hall, S p.m. Winiton . Dillard Klwanit Club, t:30 p.m. Obedience Trials sponsored bv t'mpqua Kennel Club, Pavilion on fairgrounds, 7:30 p.m. Junior Duplicate Brldg Club, Mrs. Walter Unch director, 7:30 p m. Buckeroos, workshop, at the Darn, 8 to 10 p.m. Hayloft Squares, beginner's pat tern dance lessons, Dude Sibley, instructor, Preschern Barn, 8 to 10 p.m. Umpqua Kennel Club, Pavilion en fairgrounds, 7:30 p.m. Riddle Bethel Job's Daughters, Masonic Temple, Riddle, 7:30 p.m. Women of the Moose, Moose Hall, 8 p.m. Valentine Chapter ft, OES, Myr tie Creek. Roseburg City Council, City Halt, 7:30 p.m. Roseburg Jaycees, VFW Hill Garden Valley Rd., 7 p.m. SO-Plus Department meeting, at the clubhouse, 1:30 p.m. Winston Community Club, 8 p.m Sutherlin Jay-C-Etts, Community Uldg., 8 p.m. Tuesday, April 2 Festival of Bands of Roseburg Schools, in Senior High gym, 7:30 p.m. Newcomer's Club, 12:30 noon dessert-coffee, home of Mrs. Wil bur Walters. 1605 NW Evans. Badoura Club, Nydia Temple, Daughters of the Nile, sewing meeting for Shrine Hospital, home of Mrs. T. C. Fitzgerald, SE Glenn St., 1:30 p.m. Olalla-Tenmile Home Extension t'nu, home of Mrs. Vera Erbe for demonstration on bedroom storage, members please bring drawer with corrigated cardboard to fit and masking tape, 10:30 a.m., sack lunch at noon. Winston Police Reserve, City Hall. 7:30 p.m. Elks Duplicate Bridge Group, Elks Temple, 7:30 p.m. Roseburg Kiwenis Club, Ump qua Hotel civic room, noon. Glide Kiwanis Club, 7:30 p.m. Associated Volunteers card par ty, VA Hospital recreation build in? music room. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Army Reserve, 1614 W. Harvard, 8 to 10 o.m. Alcoholics Anonymous, 241! SE Jackson, for information call OR 3-8608, 8 p.m. Buckeroo pattern dance lessons, at the barn. 8 to 10 p.m. Boots end Calico square dance group classes, Winston Commun ity Hall, 8 p m. Sutherlin Girls Drill Team prac lice. East Grade School play ground, new members welcome, for information write box ai, iu. 1, Sutherlin, 5 p.m. Eagles Auxiliary, 8 p.m. Fair Oaks Grange, Grange Hall, potluck with business to follow, 7 p.m. Roseburg Toastmistress Club, Swedish Dining Room, 8 p.m. Bertha Rebekahs 188, IOOF Hall, Canyonville. Post Partum Class, Mercy Hos pilal, 7:30 p.m. Roseburg Rebekahs, Lodge No. 41. Oddfellows Hall, 8 p.m. Roseburg Rose Society, 7:34 p.m. Winston Chamber of Commerce, fire hall, 8 p.m. Winston Woman's Club study de partment meeting, clubhouse, 1:30 p.m. Looklngglass Grange, No. 927, at the Grange Hall, 8:15 p.m. Golden Age Club, for informa tion call OR 3-3117 or OR 3-7082, 7:30 p.m. 1 001T-YOURSELF PAINTING MIRACLE! 8:00 A.M. Yw run HA.1 1 1 1 11:30 A.M. ssmWiil aw rewel tMtft i cud witt faturtns mm WTDHOl 11TEX PAIKT RofH on smoothly - No lap merkt t - Oeens up in water Dries feet end evenly No "painty" odor 4T- 216 beautiful colore . . Only $6.49 gal. Tin htktnai ULLER PAINT OEALCK GERRETSEN Building Supply Co. Fit geJ Bldg. O'dell St. OR 2-2636 Negro Cleric's Son, Facing Rape Charge, Slays Policeman STOCKTON, Calif. (AP) A young would-be cop killed a po liceman who arrested him for statutory rape Friday. Then, after a running two-hour gun battle that covered 40 miles, the killer held a young mother and her child cap tive before he surrendered meek ly when threatened with 'tear gas. The wild chase sped from Stock ton to Modesto along busy U. S. Highway 99. Returned here from Modesto Friday night and booked on first degree murder charge was Elbert Carter, 23, son of a Negro pastor. Young Carter, who recently qualified for the Stockton police force, was charged with slaying officer George Woehrle, 44, with the policeman's gun. Carter told police he became enraged when Woehrle came to his home and arrested him on a statutory rape warrant, signed by the mother of a 16-year-old girl who became a mother this week. Carter signed a statement that he disarmed Woehrle, seized his car keys and forced him to get into his police station wagon. As they drove south out of Stockton, Carter said, he and Woehrle fought for the gun. A little while later, Woehiie's body, shot twice in the back, was rolled out of the car. . Morse Commends Kennedy For Religious Issue Stand I Mon., April 25, I960 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 7 BALTIMORE (AP) Sen. Wayne L. Morse tD-Ore) Friday com mended Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass) for his statesmanlike handling of the religious issue and said he was sure it would not be decisive in selecting the Demo cratic presidential nominee. Morse appeared as the "fall guy" or guest of honor at a charity luncheon sponsored by the Saints and Sinners Club. He is rated a definite underdog against Kennedy for the 24 Maryland con vention votes at stake in the Mary land primary where both are entered. Morse said he hoped to win. Then he smiled and acknowledged that if he got "one vote less than a majority it would be quite a victory." He said in the May 80 Oregon primary he would be satisfied with 60 per cent of the votes cast. The Oregon senator said if he were not a candidate and went to the Democratic National Conven tion as a delegate he would vote for Adlai Stevenson "one of the great minds of our times." 11c later said his second choice would be Sen. Stuart Symington (D .Mo). Target Of Jokes At the Saints and Sinners lunch eon Morse heard himself de scribed to the 550 persons - pi e sent as "a guy who was kicked by a Republican horse." Morse chuckled. The audience laughed. "If Morse is nominated by the Democrats and elected Presi dent," the speaker, radio and tele vision personality Walter hicrnan began, then wretched at the micro phone. The audience roared. Morse did too. Morse good-naturedly absorbed this and other barbs from Kier- nan at the luncheon, which turned i out to he on the most unusual ! campaign appearances ever made by a presidential aspirant. ' He smiled and grinned through two hours of such jokes about his first name ("named him after a gasoline pump"), his public speak- i ing t ne nuousicrea against tne atomic energy bill for 2b hours and it passed unanimously"), his work in the Labor Department "Not Practical" ("Jiilm L. Lewis used to go straight to the White House be cause there wasn't much use stop puig in at the Labor Depart ment"), and his ability as a I politician :"he knows many things i but one of them isn't practical I politics."). Finally, In an apparent moment of seriousness, Kiernau said: He's a wonderful guy, and all I can say is, if he ever becomes Presi dent, I'm moving to Canada." Morse surprised the audience with a two-minute rebuttal: He told them he enjoyed the Kier nan sketch and those of others, including an actor impersonating him who said "I'm doing my damndest to stop Kennedy." Morse told newsmen he is "not running against anybody; I'm just running on the issues uf this cam paign." "If anything is needed inAmer-1 lean politics," he told the audi ence, "it's a sense of humor. I was happy to see it illustrated , here today." ' PHIL'S APPLIANCE SERVICE NOW LOCATED AT 2741 W. HARVARD Phone ORchord 2-1700 OPENING SOON APPLIANCt SALES FEATURING HAMILTON and GIBSON APPLIANCES SERVICE ON ALL MAKES M J . I I 1 1 T TTF.fiV in If Your Paper Has Not Arrived By 6:15 P.M. Dial OR 2-3321 Between 6 & 7 P.M. Missing Nurse's Case Recovered In Idaho River LEWISTON, Idaho (AP) An overnight case found floating in the swollen Clearwater River Fri day has been tentatively identi fied as belonging to Alice Bur kelt, 25-year-old missing nurse. Floyd Burkett, Corvallis, Ore., said he thought the case belonged to his daughter, who disappeared last weekend when returning from Kamiah to Portland where she worked in the Keed College in firmary. A green shower shoe was found in the case and stickers from an overseas airline were attached to the outside of the case. Burkett said the shoe was similar to pair his daughter owned and that she had once gone aoroaa Dy air. The case was found by two fish ermen about eight miles down stream from the point where offi cials fear Miss Burkett s car plunged into the river. Skindivers and a crew using grappling hooks have been forced to give up their efforts because of turbulent high water conditions and the amount of - silt beir" brought down by the spring runoff. A curtailed search eiiort was expected to continue through Sat urday. LookinggVass Unit Elects New Officers At a recent meeting of the Look ingglass Home Extension Unit, new officers were elected for the ensuing year, reports Hazel Marsh, correspondent. Those elected were Mrs. Charles Schulze, president; Mrs. John Mathis, vice president; and Mrs. Audrey Clark, secretary-treasurer. The meeting was held at the home of Mrs. E. E. OUivant and the study for the day centered around bedroom storage, the utili zation of space and the use and arrangement of furniture. Following up the study of the past month on the project of the use of plaids ana stripes in nome sewing, a number of the members modeled their garment! at the Homemakers' Festival. Lutheran Church Merger Leaves Out National Scene By GEORGE W. CORNELL MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) i The newly unified American Luth eran Church today charted formal ties with interdenominational Christianity on the world scene but not on the national scene. Amid some opposition, , the church planned to affiliate with: the ' World . Council of Churches, ! but it did not seek membership in the National Council of. Churches. "Personally, I can't see much difference," said the Rev. Dr. Fredrik A. Schiotz, newly elected president of the merged church, i However, he added at a news con ference: ; "There seems to be stronger an tipathy to the National Council, j I suppose that's because it is near-! er at hand, and because of the activity of certain groups in the country in maligning the National Council." j He obviously referred to the re-1 cent uproar over an Air Force i manual, linking criticism of the National Council with charges of Communist influence in the churches. Dr. Schiotz, elected Friday to! head the newly consolidated Luth-i eran body, said there was "no i mood to join now" in the Nation al Council, although most depart ments of the new church will con-1 tinue relations with various Coun-1 cil departments. Neither of the three merging bodies, the 1.153.566 member; Evangelical Lutheran Church, the 1.034,377 American Lutheran Church, and the 70-149-member United Evangelical Lutheran; Church have belonged to the Na tional Council in the past. I All three groups have been ; members of the World Council, ; and the plan of union stipulates that this affiliation be continued by the merged church, althoueh there have been some objections to it. Navy, Air Force In Ship Rescue MANILA (AP)-The U. S. Navy and Air Force combined here to rescue 110 Filipinos stranded aboard a fishing vessel that smashed onto a reef in the South China Sea Wednesday. The Navy said the destroyer Arnold J. Isbell picked up 94 pas sengers and 16 crewmen at the scene 140 miles west of Palawan Island in the Philippines. An Air Force plane dropped life rafts, then circled the area until the destroyer arrived. encwr end jfl f courteous? ot I S$? PMW Ftaaee (pJ 664 S. E. Stephens Street ORchord 3-6668 II Farmer In$ranc Grovp Farm and Ranch Comprehensive Liability Diith of Lhmtock pay up to $300 per animal if struck by a vehicle on public highwK. Damage to ear also covered If you are held liable. 2 Property Dimagi protecti you for damage to the property of your farming or ranchiflf operations. Tkon on it ttfth 10 liability and t not. ia6ihly cot met yon eat sit Farmtrt evpeWor -Farm and Ranch Cmprahntht Liability Palief. PUB J HI JIKOWfTH ' MJT fAIH HUINDIX jj CLARENCE V: DeCAMR DISTRICT MANAGER 1602 S. E. Stephens OR 2-261 S 2 is uuy iiw i.ii isiaia.ui ' J 0 vi ! .' a?. i 3 BE HERE TOMORROW 9:30 A.M. 1 I ' ' ' s & iff I FROM FASHION CENTERS . fORTH, EAST, SOUTH, WESTt ' IS AMERICA'S BIG NEWS-FASHIONS COME Y62fil ..... W MM cotloo Printed nylon sheer 1 I back. with lull skirt. Cotton broadcloth f I VI 12 to 20. shirt top. sizes 8 11 Loma's printed Cu- pioni rayon float, s.es 7 to 15. 10 to 20 12.95 Loma's solid nylon sheer Over pnnt. Sizes 7 to b. 12.93 Cotton plaid - shirt top, sizes 1 0 to 20. 5.95 im bossed print bar - sires 7 to 1 5. 10 to 20 Cotton broadcloth shirt top, sizes 8 to 16,. 6.95 &J&l-iL:l.L BIGGER THAN ANY SHOW 1684-STORE PENNEY'S HAS EVER STAGED! ENTIRE DEPARTMENT PACKED WITH NEWSIYOU'LL SHOP FOR HOURS! See cottons in endless variety with jackets, bare-backs, shirt tops, lavish embroideries. See afternoon dork prints and plains in floaty nylon chiffons, lovish cottons, rich Cupioni rayon lace and a sky-full of other style stars. See breezy eosyare fabrics Arnel triacetate in crisp shorkskin or softly blended with cotton, hand-woshable Bemberg rayon sheer, iron-snubbing nylon and more, more, more. Come eorly and often. We'll keep me buys coming oil duriog our Summer Dress Carnival. Ptiofo Above toiy-core COllon Hart- bock, lift 7 to 15. 8.95 print cotton ujue, jack td, suet 7 to 15. 10.95 Mi mi', Jeeiert, Wemn's mm4 HeM Um