Garden Valley Couple Back From Three-Month Vacation Br ADDIE SCHNEIDER )Tucson, Ariz., where Ihcy visited I Mr. and Mrs. Aigos Fisher have : Ueorge and Jean Rice, former I relurned to Garden Valley follow-1 d k..m . j . -k 1 ine a three-monlh vacation. Roburg residents. They saw The Fishers traveled to Southern unany tourist attractions in Arizona! lalilornia first where they were am attended several major league guests of her brother, Hollis:Practice baseball games in Tuc Breedlove. They spent some time son. They also spent several days in the Los Angeles and San Diego in Mexico sightseeing. En route areas viewing various tourist at- "unit? mcy siuppeo ai L.as vegas tractions. After leaving California 1 and Rell- rev- Th,' visited with they made their headquarters in I V w Vi KEEP Oregon $ . i-nritv" on the ?ob...t9uard,n9 H your tox foliar- his brother, Virgil Fisher, in Weed, Calif. Coast Trip Taken Mr. and Mrs. Pele Pon motored to Bandon recently. They came home via the Seven Devils Rd., into Charleston. . Mr. and Mrs. Jess Fowler went to Portland to purchase a new car recently. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Marshal Jones have been her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Charles Schleibuum, of Ventura, Calif., and his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Alyron Jones, also of Ventura. Mrs. Sophie Furman of East Chicago, Ind., has been visiting her son, Adam Kiocek, and family. Pri or to arriving in Garden Valley, .Mrs. Furman spent a month in Arizona. Another guest at the Kio cek home is Frank Silraltowski from Chicago. 111. This is bis first trip to Oregon. Mother Visited Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Wright and James and Jan were recently in Corvallis to visit with M r s. Wright's mother, Mrs. Lyn Brown. Dick Claypool and his brother-in-law. Hyle Hughes, of Portland, recently visited the former's moth er, Mrs. Claude Claypool. State To Maintain Crew At Camas Valley Camp SALEM (AP) - Two 20-man emergency fire crews again will be maintained this summer near Camas Valley in Douglas County, and at Camp Arboretum north of Corvallis, the stale Forestry De partment announced. The camps, to be opened early in June, will be made up almost entirely of high school students. The crews will be available for work any place in the state. "DOCTOR KNOWS 1 BEST. ...ns As Ami1!!! .Mi m pBwipkin pie it the phrase, "Doctor knows best." We all remember this truism from childhood. Yet, in this enlightened day, some people, relatively few in number, attempt to diagnose and treat their own illnesses a dangerous practice to say the least. ' Only your physician is qualified to diagnose and prescribe. When medication is required, our prescription department is equipped to serve your needs. r x 0?$U i Free of Extra Charge - Lei- Ui Deliver or Mail Your Prescription BE SURE TO VOTE FRI. MAY 20 mm- :.i HOW EARLY BASE MAY LOOK This is one concept by U. S. Army Engineers for lunar base facilities in their plan to establish an exploration base on the Moon within the next ten years. Lt. Gen. Emerson C. Itschner, chief of Army Engineers, told the House Com mittee on Science and Astronautics about the project in Washington Tuesday. The base would consist of prefabricated modules designed for early assembly on the Moon. Each module would be transported to the Moon by its own rocket, with empty rockets being used for storage and waste material. A multi-purpose vehicle would perform heavy tasks. (U. S. Army photo) This Year Not Time To Reduce Taxes, Nixon Says HOT SPRINGS. Va. (AP)-Vice President Richard M. Nixon said here Congress should be able to consider tax reform in 1961 if the government shows a large surplus and is meeting its national security responsibilities. Nixon told reporters any tax legislation should be shaped to stimulate investment, reduce some excise rates, and cut higher bracket income taxes. Nixon said he does not at any time in the presidential campaign intend to promise tax reduction in view of international uncertain ties. And definitely, he said. Con gress should not consider tax re lief or tax reform this year, when. Nixon said, decisions could be swayed by political considera tions. He was asked dircclly whether tax reduction would be possible a year hence if the government runs another surplus comparable to the four billion dollar surplus in prospect for the year starling July 1. Nixon, who could be president next year, replied: "lt we had met our responsibilities for na tional security adequately, and had a substantial surplus of that magnitude, a new Congress should be able to consider in a temperate and responsible way a tax reform measure." Stennett Elected Prexy Of Federal Employes PENDLETON (AP) Frank Stennett of Klamath Falls was re elected president of the Oregon State Federation of Federal Em ployes Unions at its annual con vention here Sunday. Mrs. Francis Luquer. also of Klamath Falls, was elected secretary-treasurer. Named as vice presidents were Thelma Kelly of Albany, Arnold Lehelboech of Portland, Melvin Wakefield of Pendleton, Stanley Ausmuss of Albany. Joseph Vier of Warm Springs, Ward Lumpkin of Medford, and Jack Raftery of Crater Lake. J. Irvin Bortbick of Eugene was elected delegate to the organiza tion s national convention in rsew York City. Some 100 delegates attended the two-day meeting. Tue., May 17, 1960 The News-Review, Roscburg, Ore. 5 Hassle Over Columbia Irrigation Aired At Congressional Meeting Traffic Convictions Up tl,000 Over last Year SAI.E.M f AIM There were lti. S2.i persons convicted of liallic viul.itiotls in Oregon in Anhl an WASHINGTON (AP) Author-1 lie said a moratorium is needed increase of l.uoo mer the April, ity of the chairman of the Colum- to study rale struclure.v VJii) figure, the slale Traffic Safe- bia Basin Commission to advise Coo said all he asked was a re- i ly Divisiun revealed, irrigation users not to pay charges hearing because of changes in tin-! The commission also reported provided in a government contract I derstanding engineering problems. : thai the March death rate of 3.7 pending a restudy was questioned I the tremendous sue of the project ' persons killed per lim million Monday at a House subcommittee I and the possibility errors could . miles of travel, was the lowest in hearing. have developed in original plan- i eight months. 11 compares with Rcd. John P. Savior iRPil said : mug valid contract for repayment of I '-hairman Wayne Aspinall (D Colo I of the House subcuiumitt on irrigation and reclamation said residents of the irrigation district had no reason for harsh feeling against the Bureau of Reclama tion. He said any complaint should he directed tu Congress which wrote the laws. Coe supported a Senate-passed resolution which would provide for a twu-year moratorium of addi tional drainage construction charges. II would also permit the Secre tary of the Interior to continue work on the Columbia Basin while an amendatory contract is being worked out. Coe said the Bureau estimates an increase in drainage eonslruc tion costs, will raise user costs from $,Sd to $1X1.50 an acre. The existing contract provides w A cuiMeTlM apt Tl... . a iruucuon oi ttait-i usci s le- Supreme Court today directed . u l""-um that the 19t0 Civil Rights Act, per- drainage construction and other changes had been signed with the Reclamation Bureau. "Yet," Saylor said, "1 under stand from newspaper articles that you advised people in the ir rigation district not to pay the ir rigation charge. What authority did you have to give such ad vice?" He added he could find nothing in the contract which provided for a moratorium, F'arl Coe, commission chairman and director of the Washington Department of Conservation, said he did not believe "we told thein to disregard the law." 6.3 in March 19.W. MENTALLY ILL COUNTED POItTLAND (API There aie nearly 6.000 persons hospitalird for menial illms 1.1 Oreyon, the president of the stale Mcntid Health Assn. said here Friday. The mentally ill oeeuy ncativ half the hospital beds in ihe stale, Dr. Allen Turker said in a speech, as he noted that May is Menial Health Month in Oregon. Willi proper treatment, he said, 7 out of 10 menially ill persons can recover. Court Directs Vote Law Application In Alabama Kennedy, Morse Cool In Face-To-Face Meet PORTLAND (API Sens. John Kennedy ID-Mass) and Wayne L. Morse (D-Ore) came face-lo-face for a moment here in their cam paigning for the state's Demo cratic presidential nomination. lt was at a television studio where, Kennedy was watching the playback of a interview in which he had participated. Morse walked in for an interview of his own, saw Kennedy at the side of the room, and at once walked over. "Nice to see vou." Morse said Nixon said his own nrneram h.n ' extending his hand. They shook not been settled but "I've been do ing some thinking in this area.' K. Falls Man Quilty In Manslaughter Case KLAMATH FALLS (API-Michael Joseph, 52, who was acquitted on a charge of killing one man. was convicted Saturday night of manslaughter for the falal shoot ing of a second man last Septem ber. Joseph argued he shot in self defense when Harry Dcman. 56 and Okie Richards, 34, were killed on the ranch near Chiloquin where Joseph was caretaker. He was acquitted in (he trial in March over Deman's death. A Circuit Court jury as unani mous in convicting him of man slaughter in the shooting of Rich ards. The dale for sentencing has not been set. hands, Kennedy smiling and mak ing a reply that was inaudible a few feet away. Morse then walked over to a vacant chair, and Kennedy re sumed watching the playback. There was no further conversation. Brewster Absent As Board Trial Begins SEATTLE (AP) Frank W. Brewster, president of Teamsters' Joint Council 28, went on trial "in absentia" Monday before the executive board of the 6.000-mein-ber Teamsters' Local 174. Brewster notified the board he would not attend the hearing on charges challenging his manage ment when he was secretary treasurer of the local from 1929 53. ' The charges were brought by flne of Brewster's bilter foes with in the union, George Cavano, the local's present secretary-treasurer and four other members. Brewster, a former hresident of the Western Conference of Team sters, could be expelled from the union, fined or disciplined if the ooara upholds the charges. But he could appeal to the joint coun cil, international executive board or union convention. Local 174 is the union's largest in the state. Joint Council 28 is made up of 47 Teamster locals in Washington and North Idaho. milling federal government suns against states, should be applied to enforce Negro voting rights in Alabama. The high tribunal acted on a Justice Department appeal from decisions by the lower federal courts. The decisions were that no thing in the 1957 Civil Rights Act indicated Congress intended to provide for suits against sovereign states. While the appeal was pending. Congress enacted the new civd rights law which says specifically that states as well as individuals may be sued to protect voting rights of Negroes. The Supreme Court's action was announced in an unsigned opinion. It was unanimous. The effect of Ihe high court ac tion is to send the cases back to Alabama federal courts with in structions that the Slate of Ala bama is properly a defendant in the cases. stances warrant. A repayment contract increas ing construction charges from an average of S85 to SI25 was reject ed by water users in the east dis trict, he said. No agreement had been reached with the Bureau on terms of another contract to be submitted to a vote. i The pending resolution would establish a board to study Ihe question and repurl lo Congress j by Feb. 1, 19(11. I MODERN FLOOR COVERING Big 7th Anniversary SALE FREE Throw Rug 27x54 Throw Rug To Th. Firlt Person In Our Storo Wed nesday from Roscburg. A 17.95 Values From Roseburg's No. 1 Floor Covering Store. SPECIAL MEETING SET Harold Densmore, general chair man of the Oregon State Grange; convention has called a meeting of j all standing committees, chairmen and committee members for 8 p.m. I May 2S at the llelrose Grange! Hall, lt is imperative that all members attend he said. ' JUDGE Warren Woodruff FOR CIRCUIT JUDGE PRESENT DISTRICT JUDGE More than 30,000 cases have come before Judge Woodruff in the last six years. For JUDGE -Choose a JUDGE Pd. PoJ. Adv. Warren Woodruff, Courthouse, Roseburg, Oregon m, CLEAN UP DAY PLANNED The Lookingglass Cemetery Assn. will hold its annual clean up day Saturday. A potluck dinner held in the school cafeteria. Those attending are requested lo bring Ihcir own table service. The pub lic is invited to help and asked to bring tools lor woik, reports Ha zel Marsh, correspondent. CLASS TO MEET The Mid-Week Bible Class of SI. Paul's Lutheran Church will be held Wednesday at the home of Mrs. d. Floew, 513 W. Hazel St. A potluck luncheon will be held al noon with dessert being provided by the hostess. smtnriHi LETS SEND WiiUU U U UU TO WASHINGTON! A YlGOtOttS YOlCe IOK All ORCGONIANS IN IHE V. 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