Summer Savings 2 The News-Review, Roieburg, Ore. Thuri., June 2, 1960 Termed 'Hilarious' Show AT Merely Players Comedy I C CHECK PRESENTATION Robert Hatrerscheid, chair man of the Roseburg Chamber of Commerce's publicity committee, presents to Floyd Wilson, president of the Band Parents Assn., a check for $200 to help pay the way for the Roseburg High School Band's trip to Portland and participation in the Portland Rose Festival. They will leave June 7 and return June 11. (Paul Jenkins) Roman Catholics, Polish Police Clash In Church Property Battle WARSAW. Poland (AP) Ro man Catholics and police battled Monday in a provincial capital in a clash set oft by government at tempts to take over a church building lor a community center. It was the second such outbreak in the Polish provinces within five weeks. Church sources said Stefan Car dinal Wyszinski, head of the church in Poland, met today with Court Reverses Union Ouster WASHINGTON (AP)-The U. S. Court of Appeals today set aside an order of U.S. Dist. Judge F. Dickinson Letts firing . Lawrence T. Smith as a monitor of the Teamsters Union. The court held .tudee Letts fol lowed tho wrong 'procedures in removing sraiui. ' .: i . . . It left the door open, however, for the Judge to try again to re place Smith with former FBI agent Terrence F. McShane. - Judge Letts fired Smith, a New York attorney, after he refused to resign. . Letts had expressed dissatisfac tion with Smith after Smith be gan voting against Martin F. O'Donoghuc, chairman of the three-member board of monitors, on some of O'Donoghue's clean-up . moves against the Teamsters. In its decision today, the Court of Appeals said the consent de cree under which the board was created provided that monitors are at all times subject to re moval by the District Court "in the exercise of its discretion for any cause." The court interpreted this as meaning that prior to removal the District Court should enter an or er directing the monitor to show cause why he should not be re moved for the reasons suggested by the judge. If the monitor objected to be ing removed,- the Appeals Court said, he should be given a hearing and a formal order should be en tered, from which he could ap peal. The appellate court said this Eroceduie was not followed by etis. To the contrary, it added, it appeared Smith's removal was based mainly on representations made to Letts by Godfrey P. Schmidt, of which neither Smith nor the other parties in the liti gation were aware. , Tho appellate court earlier held up effectiveness of Letts' remov al order. This put Smith hack on the job and McSlianc off the board on which be had been a member briefly. Schmidt, a former monitor, rep resents some of the Teamsters who oppose President James R. lloffa of the union. Son Helps Father WOBURN, Mass. (AP) - Patrol man Leo McElhiney, sent on an emergency call Wednesday to help a man trapped in a trench cave in, found the man was his father, James, 65. The father, buried to his chest, was taken to a hospital suffering from shock and a fractured kneecap. CORRECTION Incorrect prices appear in the produce section of our ad in today's paper. These specials are bet ter than ever. THEY SHOULD Red Rip WATERMELONS New White Shorter JA( POTATOES u.s. 10 "...47 SAFEWAY his bishops and other advisers as news of Monday's religious out break at Zielona Gora spread. Zielona Gora, a city of 50,000, before 1945 was the German town of Gruenberg, in Lower Silesia. After Poland took it over in 1945, it was settled by deeply religious Poles from the eastern territories taken over by the Soviet Union. Roman Catholic sources gave tliis account of the clash: Local authorities attempted to take over a building used by the church as a parish hall to convert it into a community center. Work men were sent to begin remodel ing the building Monday morning. A group of women drove the workmen away. Police arrived but could not cope with the crowd, which had grown to several hundred per sons. The crowd hurled rocks at tho outnumbered police. The disorders continued throughout the afternoon. Police reinforcements from Poznan, 66 miles away, arrived early in tho evening. The crowd had grown to about 5,000 persons, and the po nes nan 10 use tear gas Domos to disperse them. There were some reports of In juries and arrests. The outbreak was not believed to havo reached the proportions of similar riots April 27 in Nowa Iluta, a model steel center in southern Poland. There local authorities began construction of a school on a site that had been set aside for the city's first church. Local Fire Chiefs Seek Old Furniture Roseburg fire chief Don Starmer And Rlll-nl fifrt nhinf PHf " - " ..... bum Villi IMiaallUl today issued a joint request for uacu luiuiiure. iney want 10 Durn it tip. That's right, the two chiefs are asking for donations of old, unwant ed furniture to be used in various classes of fire-fighting at the Doug ins rniinfw Pimm,.'. Aoan .Un..I in Roseburg this weekend. I'uuiiK'u irom me Koseourg, Roseburg Rural, Oakland, Sutlier lin, Yoncalla, Drain, Winston-Dll-lard, Myrtle Creek, Tri-City, Can yonville and Riddle fire depart ments will be on hand for the school Saturday and Sunday. Another two-day session will be held June 11 and 12. Tho local, host chiefs requested that persons having unwanted fur niture, including everything from desks to overstuffed davenports, call one of the local departments to donate it to the school. Roseburg Patrolman Called To Shoot Dog Roseburg patrolman Lyle Wes cott ran into another unusual task for the Rosebur Police Depart ment Wedncsda;! He had to shoot a dog which had been critically injured in an automobile accident. The request was made bv Orville L. Gavlor of 1719 SK Mill St. after Wes'pott was called to the scene. The 13-year-old dog had been hit by a car and couldn't use his hind legs. BE 3 By BILL SPARKS Niws-Revitw Staff Writer "You Can't Take It With You." unless you're talking about the side-splitting laughter that'll re main with you after you've seen the Merely Players' production of the Broadway play "You Can't lake it wim xou." The Merely Players, Roseburg's amateur theatrical group, present ed the first of three showings of me ueorge r . nauiman ana moss Hart play at the Fairgrounds Com munity Building Wednesday night. They'll be on hand for repeat penurmances lumgiib nuu inuny night, with the show slated to start at 8:20-p.m. "You Can't Take It With You" is a former Broadway smash hit which attempts throughout some two hours to get serious, but is continually broken up by riotous laughter. Wis Grandpa Heading the cast of the local play is Paul Metzger, who plays the part of Grandpa Vanderhof. GrandDa is a man wise in the ways of love and philosophy who gave up a prosperous business to sit back in the comfort of his own living room and raise snakes. "Too much trouble going down to the office every morning," he said was the reason he gave up Dual ness. "A man should enjoy life." and Grandpa (and those who watch Metzger in the lead role) do. The love life of the show centers around the Merely Players young er set, Martha Chaney as Alice Sycamore and Lowell Slick as the Doss son Tony luroy. Both of these young people turn ed in fine performances on open ing night. While not on a par with the Broadway version, throughout the cast the acting is well above aver age for such a hometown produc tion. Bouquets for laugh-getting have Corvallis Base Gets New Life PORTLAND (AP) There is a chance the federal govern Dent might change its mind and com plete construction of two Bomarc missile bases in the Northwest, the Orcgonian said today. The newspaper quoted Sen. Hen ry Jackson (D-Wash), a member of - the Armed Services Commit tee, as saying the committee fa vored restoring funds lopped from tile Bomarc program last March. If that happened, it probably would mean completion of Bo marc bases at Paine Field, wasn., and Camp Adair, Ore., Jackson said in Washington, D.C. Work at the Adair site, near Corvallis. Ore., was halted March 31 by the Air- Force in the midst or tne initial, zva-munon a 011 a r phase- of construction. The newspaper said the Bomarc construction might be resumed in the wake of Wednesday's suspen sion of work at seven Nike-Hercules bases. Jackson was quoted as saying the Military Appropriations Sub committee favored restoration of funds for tho Bomarc program, following testimony from military experts tnat tne missile does its job exceeding well. Jackson said there would be enough funds to complete two Bomarc bases on which construc tion earlier was stopped. He named Paine Field as one, and added: "There is a good chance the missile base at Camp Adair will be completed." "Adair was about 67 per cent completed when construction was halted . . . Paine was a little over half finished. The committee will meet again Monday to reach a decision on these bases," Jackson said. Jackson estimated it would cost about three million dollars more to finish the missile base at Adair. In all, seven Nike-Hercules con struction projects were halted Wednesday, including those at Hantorci, wasn., ana Mountain Home Air Force Base, Idaho. Doctors Report Mamie. Responds To Treatment WASHINGTON (AP) Doctors report Mrs. Mamie Eisenhower is "responding to treatment and coming along quite well" in Wal ter Reed Army Hospital, the White House announced today. Mrs. Elsenhower was hospital ized Tuesday with acute asthmat ic bronchitis. She may remain in the hospital over the weekend, press secretary James C. Hagerty said. The First Lady has canceled f ilnns to attend with the President lis 45th class reunion at the U.S. Military Academy this weekend, liagcrty said. Hagerty declined lo give medi cal details of Mrs. Eisenhower's illness. Police Investigating Report Of Vandalism Roseburg police are investiga ting a report by Charles Rowell of Springfield that vandals had raised havoc in a houe he owns at 1716 SE Starmer St. in Rose burg. The house was badly damaged inside and obscene writings were on most of the inside walls. Po lice said it appeared that the plas ter board on a bedroom ceiling had been kicked out from the at tic and plaster in the kitchen had been damaged apparently by kicking. Three Roseburg grade school youngsters are suspected. SCHOOL POSTPONED The Winston-Dillard Methodist Church daily vacation Bible school has been postponed until June 20 to July 1, reports Phebe McGuire, correspondent. The event was orig inally scheduled from June 6 17. to be split between Johnny LeDuc and Don Tremblav. ' ' LeDuc appeari as a bewildered Mr. DePinna who' came to bring the ice eight years ago and never left. He and Roger McKenzie, who plays Paul Sycamore, manufacture fireworks in the basement that is until they have a booming acci dent. At one point in the play Mr. De Pinna shows up sans pants and decked out in a Roman toga to pose as a discus thrower for an Esther Geddes Paintmg. Mrs. Geddes takes the part of the mother, Pen elope Sycamore. When not painting she's writing plays. Seems as though someone delivered a typewriter to the Syca mores 10 years ago and she's been writing unsuccessful plays ever Star Reading She comes close to success at one point by getting a theater star to read one of ner piay.i. The star, however, played by Fay Bail ev. walks across the stage on wob bly legs, but does manage to nnd up on the arms of G-Man Larry King en clinging to a bottle and glass ana singing "iraniae ana John nie." Tremblay stands out as Boris iioienKnov, wno spouts propagan da against the Russian govern ment, Including the prediction Khrushchev will even outlaw love, and manages to throw stock brok er Tony Ku-by Sr. (Pick Lanier) on the floor. Grace Porterfield and Jerry Dav enport show up well in brief a pearances as Mrs. Kirby and a U.S. Treasury Department agent who wants grandpa to pay his back The Sycamore family is rounded out by Paula Casebeer who takes the role of Essie and receives bal let lessons from Kolenkhov and Bob Robins as her husband EH. who earned a whole $28.62 last year lor nis salary. Warth The Wait Also on the strong comedy side are Ralph Laux, who's out of work and doesn't want to get back in. He collects his unemployment ev ery month even though it is a prob lem to stand in line a half hour to get it, and eats free every night. As Donald, Laux protrays a truly happy man. Joanne Keel takes the role of Rheba, Donald's girlfriend and the Sycamore's servant. Rounding out the cast Is Anne Roley, who plays an ousted Hus- sian countess working her way up m ui8 new zone waitress circles. Royalty with a kick that adds human- interest and laughs to the overall plot. Don Garrett plays another G Man, with the play directed by Larry Kingen. Connolly Convicted On Burglary Count A Douglas County Circuit Court jury deliberated less than an hour Wednesday before returning a ver dict of guilty in the burglary case against Richard Allen Connolly, 28, of 1451 SE Short St., Roseburg. Connolly had been charged by a grand jury of breaking into the Mobile Service Station leased by Thomas L. Goodman of Winston on Dec. 2. The official charge was burglary not in a dwelling. The Roseburg man pleaded - in nocent by reason of insanity. He said he had blacked out just be fore the incident. Deputy Dist. Atty. Verden Hockett said the man had been caught in the service station to which he had gained en try by breaking a window. The two-day trial revealed that Connolly had been in the state mental hospital but had been re leased as cured. A psychiatrist at the trial said he felt Connolly was legally sane when he broke into the station. He was caught before anything was taken from the station. Arthur J. Subert Arthur. John Subert, 67, of 587 SE Ramp Rd., Roseburg, died Wednesday at a Eugene hospital following a brief illness. Subert lived in Roseburg since August, coming from Rhinelander, Wis., where he had lived since 1940. He was retired. Survivors include his wife, Belie, of Roseburg; a daughter, Mrs. John Hyatt, of DePere, Wis.; a son, Ar thur R., of Roseburg; a sister, Mrs. Roy Springer, of Wauwauto sa, Wis.; and four grandchildren. He was preceded in death by a brother and two sisters. Funeral services have been scheduled for June 7 at Hilde brandt Funeral Home in Rhine lander at 2 p.m. Interment will fol low in Forest Home Cemetery in Rhinelander. Automobilt Rifled James K. Stancliif of Glide re ported to Roseburg police Wednes day that someone had rifled his car last Friday while it was park ed in the U.S. Plywood Corp. lot on NE Rifle Range Rd. east of Roseburg. He said the thief had taken a box of cigars, some keys and a key chain and a hunting knife and case. SAYS DOO POISONED Mrs. Helen Broxson of 5114 SW Dillard Highway, reported to the sheriff's office in Roseburg Wed nesday that her dog had been poisoned. She said she thought it was a deliberate poisoning. The dog was found near Bear Creek south of Olalla. JOHN G. FII 320 N. I. P.ttiHi St. It. OX 2-3163 .It.t J P.M. l.'I.H'MUH.'UMfriH.il THESE ARE SOME OF the trophies which will be presented at the Fat Lamb Show this Saturday. The 16th annual affair will be hold at , the Douglas County Fairgrounds. Shown with the trophies is Lynn Beckley, president of the Douglas County Livestock Assn. (Paul Jenkins). Former Garden Valley Residents Receive Arizona Family Honor By ADDIE SCHNEIDER Former Garden Valley resid ents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Evans and their children, Carolyn, Mary Kay and Robbie, were chosen the AU-American family of Arizona. They represented their state in a nation-wide contest sponsored by the Grolier Society, publishers of the Encyclopedia Americanna. The Evans family now lives in Mesa, Ariz., where he is the Deaf-Mute Sitter Abducts Infant PORTLAND (AP) A deaf mute baby sitter - ran off with a baby Wednesday but was arrested a few hours later in Olympia, Wash., police here reported, The child was unharmed. A warrant was issued charging Mrs. Alva Victor, 46, of Portland with child stealing in the abduc tion of ,20-month-old Alfred Hen- SCll. - Authorities here said extradition proceedings would be started at once. A widespread search began Wednesdav afternoon when Mrs. Alfred William Hensell of Port land told police she had left her son with Mrs. Victor, and returned a short time later to find tne wom an anH the habv cone. Police found a cab driver who had taken a deaf mute woman to the bus station. And at the sta tion, thev found a ticket seller who remembered a deaf mute woman with a baby buying a ticket for Aberdeen, Wash. How did he re member: Tne woman naa serin bled a note asking for the ticket, he said. Authorities in Washington state were alerted, and several Lours later Olympia police arrestea Mrs. Victor as she and the child steDned off a bus there. She was held by Olympia authorities on $5,000 bail. Mr. and Mrs. Hensell Wednes day night drove to Olympia for their son. Steel Workers Head Seeks Shorter Week BOSTON (AP) David J. Mc Donald, president of the United Steel Workers Union, proposed to day that Congress enact a new fair labor standards law reducing the work week to 30 or 32 hours. "For many Industries, 30 hours a week seems appropriate," the labor leader declared. "For steel I would favor 32 hours so that a four-day work week can be instituted." McDonald made his proposal for legislative action to cut the 40-hour week in a speech at the governor's conference on automa tion at the Harvard School of Business Administration. He said that automation "while a great boon to mankind, creates and contributes to troublesome problems requiring bold action and broad cooperation between many forces, primarily labor, management and government." At least 30.000 of the nation's 500,000 basic steelworkers are idle now as the result of recent lay offs, he said. Manila Toll High MANILA (AP) In its final accounting, the government today -.-j 1 -n 1 n.r. sons missing and 6,000 homeless from tne nasn iioous mra swamped parts of Manila and it) suburbs last weekend. Grand Opening Saturday, June 6 Jersey Lilly Your Favorite Beverage On Tap Get In on the FREE PIZZA Sm pninj i In Frl..y't 170 N. I. G.rd?ii VtlUy lit. 'jwi 'te agent for Standard Oil Co. A 16-year-old German exchange stu dent, Tetra Lodmeyer, makes her home with them ' while attending high school. The Evans family ap peared on the Don McNeil "Break fast Club" recently. . While making their home in Garden Valley, they resided where the M. C. Doyle family now lives. He was associated with Joe Dent in the real estate and insurance business. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Hughes and Gorda Lee and Donald and Mr. and Mrs. Jim Evans and daughter. Mary, went to Disston fishing over the Memorial Day weekend. Races Attended Nancy Dunn, Claire Anderson, Val Kloeckner and Sandy Brown went to the drag races at Med ford recently. Mr. and Mrs. Blair Harrington, formerly of Cludesoc, Idaho and who had just moved to Yoncalla were in Garden Valley to visit Mr. and Mrs. Marshal Jones. Harring ton attended college with Jones. Mr. and Mrs. John Hodson and Judy.:and Mike of Grants Pass vis ited with Mr. and Mrs. Henry He bard over the Memorial Day week end. Adam Klocek, who conducts the Barber College at Eugene, recent ly spent several days at home planting garden. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Denton had a successful fishing trip at Dia mond Lake recently. Note To Eisenhower: The Victory Is Yours DENVER, Colo. (AP) Note to President Eisennower: ine vic tory is yours. Shirley Jean Havens, 21, a housewife who sought your advice about political parties, nas tie cided to register as a Republican, For four months she listened thoughtfully to arguments in be half of the Republican and Demo cratic parties. "At times I got so discouraged and confused," said Mrs. Ha vens, who lives with her plumber husband and two children in a trailer near Denver. A letter Mrs. Havens had writ ten to President Eisenhower was quoted by the President in an ad dress he made in Los Angeles last Jan.' 27. She had listened to the address as a special guest of lo: cal Republicans. "The President's speech made me all the more determined to learn all I could about both par ties," Mrs. Havens said today. "One thing that stands out in my recollection of the speech is that the President said neither parly offers all the ideals and ideas tnat everyooay mignt want "In the last few months I have read books and studied all the ar guments I could for both sides before I finally made up my mind. Reed Sets Graduation PORTLAND (AP) Commence ment exercises will be held at Reed College Sunday, with Har vard University economist John Kenneth Galbraith the speaker. Smallest Eyeglass HEARING AID ) Small Than Pririous Ztflflk Adjust To Your Head Shapa 4-Transistor . Parformanct ffNTtt "Ont StW Stmci". Our licensed optometriit en uvtNO SOUNO" alio Drovidt Itnut mIapwn Aiot tnmi fronts and ottitr proftiltoflal linnet! in connKtiofl with Zimtn E)tlail Hlafl A.9. STANDARD OPTICAL DR. 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