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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1960)
12 The News-RevieW, Roseburg, Ore. Tue., June 7, 1960 Umpqua Resident Makes Residence Transfer By MRS. GEORGE MUNSON Mrs. Henry Geistlich af Umpqua left this week for Phoenix, Ariz., where she plans to make her homo now. Mr. D. Fink came to get his two children, who have been liv ing here, and he also went back to Phoenix. Miss Roxie Tallent who has re signed as the .elementary teacher at Umpqua, leaves on Wednesday for San Jose, Calif., where she will now make her home. . The annual Umpqua School Re union will again be held on June 12 at the school auditorium. A pot luck dinner will be served at 1:30 and all are invited. This includes the schools of Day, Millwood, Coles, Rock Creek and Baird, all of which have been consolidated to make the Umpqua school. Mrs. Myron Iverson and small daughter drove to Salem for a few days visit at the home of her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Kalboe. -2,000 REASONS WHY Should we ever be required to prove our interest in community health, we could cite 2,000 , good reasons. Our prescription department stocks upwards of 2,000 medicinal ingredients. They come from every point of the compass. Some are prescribed daily, others only rarely. These drugs ate brought together in our prescription department to help us render competent professional service for the protection of your health. Free of Extra Charge Let Us Deliver or Mail Your Prescription Jr. Legion Baseball Roseburg vs. S. Eugene Stewart Park Wednesday Night, June 8 Burkharts Move From Melrose To Make Their Home In Ohio By NETTIE WOODRUFF Mr. and Mrs. John Burkhart and children have moved from Melrose to Ohio, to make their home. They sold their place on Cleve land Hill Road to Arthur Gaddis of Roseburg. Burkhart had been in Ohio for the past two months where he is employed by a steel com pany. He came back to get his lamily and to . see nis ciaugmer Former Residents Call grauuate iroin itoseourg senior Mr. and Mrs. Fred Alberding ana cnnaren speni a recent week, end in Newberg with her mother The Charles Dondcro home or Shady Lane has been sold to Max owall of Roseburg. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hall have sold their farm on Cleveland Hill Road to Mr. and Mrs. Allen of Roseburg. from High School. Recent weekend guests of Mr. an Mrs. C. A. Coffell were their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Don Coffell. and children, Dana I and Dcnice, and Artel Amos, all of ! Bend. Dcnice remained lor a two i week visit with her grandparents. : Relatives Visit I Mr. and Mrs. Glen Stewart and Tommy, Beverly and Bobby, of Bend spent, a recent weekend with the former's brother, Ralph Stew art, and family. The men's moth er. Mrs. Tom Stewart, accompan ied the two families to the coast one day. The group was also in Eugene to atlendthe wedding of a niece,. Stella Moore, to Vernon , Courtwright of Idaho. The couple will reside in Hawaii after she com pletes her nurses' training in September Life-Saving Try Ends In Tragedy - MESA (Franklin County), Wash. (AP), The attempted rescue of a drowning boy turned into a chain reaction of tragedy hear here Sunday. The youth, his father who went to his aid and a stranger who leaped in to help all drowned in a lake seven miles west of this Southwest Washington community. Encarnacion Valdez, 45, and his son, John, 13, of Eltopia were fish ing in one of the lakes of the Scootenay chain when the boy ap parently stepped off a ledge into deep water and was caught in the swift current from a nearby stream. Valdez .iumped in to help his son and also was caught in the current. Thomas P. Bicart, 43, of Mesa, who was fishing nearby, leaped in to aid (he uair and he. too, became helpless in the swift flowing water. All three were swept away. Skindivers later recovered the 1 bodies in about 35 feet of water, Recent callers at the O. O. Mat thews home were Mr. and Mrs. Gene Horn of Portland, and Mr. and Mrs. Vaclav Bursik and daugh ters, Margaret and Jeanette, of Eu gene. All are former Melrose resi dents. Blake Conn has accepted a posi tion in the office of Greyhound Bus in Roseburg. Judy, Susan and Linda Wulff spent a day at the coast recently with a group of young people wbo belong to St. Pauls' Walther League. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Hurley of Coos Bay have been visiting at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Oliver. Hurley was injured recently while at work. Mrs. Paul Abeel, who with her husband is spending the summer at Diamond Lake, spent several days at her home in Melrose last week while recovering from bruis es and shock suffered in a fall at the lake. Larry Vaughn, small son of the Vern Vaughns, had several stitch es taken in his eyelid recently at a Roseburg hospital. He had been struck by a baseball bat. Annual Girl Scout Awards Ceremony Held At Yoncalla ', By MRS. GEORGE EDES Girl Scout troops 14 and 107 of yoncalla held their annual Awards court recently in the fireplace room of the Yoncalla Methodist Church. Leaders and assistants were Dr. Lydia Emery, Mrs. Wayne Phil lips, Mrs. Edna Nichols, Mrs. Wil lis Everly, Mrs. Raymond Otto, Mrs. Elmer Duppcr and Mrs. Dale Payne. Troop Brownies led the flag salute. Each group put on a skit, fol lowed by the awards. The Brownie group held their "Fly Up" cere mony, each receiving their wings and pin. They were Cynthia Lee, Madalyn Smith, Linda Rychard, Glenda Bragg, Vicki Templeton, Construction Starts At John Day Dam THE DALLES, Ore. (AP) Con crete pouring is underway for the giant John Day Dam, which will bridge the main stem of the Co lumbia River. The work was started Saturday when Mrs. Paul Giannola pushed the button that sent four cubic yards of concrete cascading into a bucket to initiate pouring. She was accorded the honor as the wife of an operator at the batch plant serving the prime con tractors, Montag, Halvorson, Mc Laughlin & Associates. Mrs. Giannola previously had started the pouring at similar ceremonies for The Dalles and McNary dams on the Columbia. Lynn Martin and Christine Math is. Mrs. Wayne Phillips presented all of Troop 107 with second class badges. Other awards given the girls were: Cheryl Huntington, Mary Ann Thornton, Sidney Em ery, Sharon Emory, Irilla Turpin, Bonnie Dupper and Jackie Moore, cooks awards; Cherith Otto, music award; Cherith Otto, Jackie Moore and Shirley; Currier, child care; Irilla Turpin, Bonnie Dupper, Glor ia Roady,' Sharon Emery, house keeping award; Mary Ann Thorn ton, Sidney Emery, Cheryl Hunt ington,' garden flower; Cherith Otto, reading; and Bonnie Dupper, tree. Awards Received Mrs. Edna Nichols, co - leader, presented all of -group 14 with homemaker, housekeeping and cook awards. Other awards given were: Jane Everly, Linda Jo Hoag land, needlecraft; Janelle Payne, Sharon Dupper, Linda Faye Phil lips, Linda Jo Hoagland, child care; Karen Nichols, personal health; Linda Jo Hoagland, Shar- Israeli Police Deny Eichmann Suicide Try TEL AVIV, Israel (AP)-A po lice spokesman today denied re ports that Adolf Eichmann had at tempted suicide in an Israeli prison where he awaits trial. The spokesman said all meas ures have been taken to prevent any suicide attempt by Eichmann, who has been accused of complici ty in the Nazi slaughter of six million Jews. on Dupper, dabbler; Linda Faye Phillips, wild plant; Lynn Wood, Linda Faye Phillips and Sharon Dupper, tree; Jane Everly, draw ing and painting; Sharon Duppcr, Lynn Wood and Karen Nichols, reading; Karen Nichols, Jane Everly, community safety; Linda Faye Phillips, Jane Everly and Sharon Dupper, cat and dog; Kar- Janclla Payne. Janelie en Nichols, Sharon Dupper, Lynn flower. Wood, Linda Jo Hoagland, Payne, athletic; Janelle cyclist; Lynn Wood and Payne, swimmer; Linda Jo Hoag land, Lynn Wood, photographer; Sharon Dupper and Linda Jo Hoag land, insect; Sharon Dupper, home gardener; and Linda Faye Phil lips, Jane Everly, Linda Jo Hoag land and Sharon Dupper, garden Douglas County 14th Annual tfkz mill- JUNE ;0).8&19 SADDLE BRONC RIDING Thrill to the rough, jarring action as the cowboy and bronc come ex ploding out of the chute. 2 P.M. Sat. and Sun. Douglas County Fairgrounds General Admission 1.00 and 1.50 Reserve 2.00 & 2.50 Box Seats 2.50 & 3.00 f is 5 Unittrsity-GradVne continentals! Wash wear, little ironing needed. Every new color! Sizes 29 to 38! Don't waste a second! Hurry to Pcnney's for our slack buy of the season. Penney'j lias combed cotton bedford cords in new beltless continental style and popular plain-front Univeraity-Grad. The tailor ing? Superb I Easy-to-care for . . . they wash and wear, need Utile ironing. Favor ite colors ...vsuntnn, black, 'sntdope, antique blue, ", ""","- . : ' Now, at Penney' ... . ret 2 pairs forjust $71 Planning steady jobs for Northwest people Orderly harvesting and prompt reforestation can maintain an equal volume of timber in all stages of growth at all times. The practice is called sustained yield forest management. It is the goal we seek in transition from old-growth to second-growth timber. The end result can mean a continuous flow of logs to mills, year after year, sustaining production of various forest products. This will help provide steady employment and payrolls for Northwest communities, as well as stable tax support for schools and government. Sustained yield management is vitally important to Washington and Oregon as more than one-half of the region's economy is supported by the forest products industry. We recognize that if we harvest our old-growth timber too rapidly at this time, there ultimately will be a gap of perhaps several years before second-growth timber is ready to harvest -For that period, payrollsand economic stability in the Northwest would be seriously upset. These ate reasons why Weyerhaeuser tree farms are operated under sustained yield principles. It takes 80 years for a Douglas fir to grow to merchantable size. Therefore, for every acre of timber harvested now, there must be 79 other acres with a balanced tree growth that ranges in age from 1 to 79 years. This is sustained yield forest management 10 yMn 1 . utt .,iji Working to maintain a permanent forest industry . A v Weyerhaeuser Company