SlCWS'ttCttieW Fubllthid by News-Review Co., Inc., Charles V. Stanton Editor George Castillo Addye Wright Auiltont Iditor luiiiwu Mon.9.r Member of the Associated Press, Oregon Newspaper Publisheri Association, the Audit Bureau of Circulation Entered as second class matter May 7. 1920, at the post office at Roseburg, Oregon, under act of March 2, 187 J Subscription Rates on Classified Advertising Page EDITORIAL PAGE 4 Th Newi-Review, Roseburg, RAID ON O&C FUNDS By Charles V. Stanton A letter came to us recently, claiming that school au thorities, advocating that income from O&C grant lands be included in funds for state dintribution of money to schools, are not suggesting a "raid." A "raid," the writer asserted, implies taking any of the money out of the coun tv receiving it. I would like to disagree with the writer, who specifical ly said he was not writing for for using a portion of 0 & C most definitely can be construed a ram," in my opinion It is proposed that Douglas County, as one of the 18 land grant counties, would be required to divert 25 per cent of 0 & C revenue to schools. This money then would be calculated in the total amount to be distributed to each countv from the state as a part of the equalization fund Douglas County gets one-fourth of the O & C revenue com ing to western Oregon counties, thus would be the one most affected. Let's assume, for argument only, that our Douglas County court would divert approximately one million dol lars out of the O & C revenue to school districts in the county. That, then, would make one million dollars avail able for distribution to the "have-not" counties from state funds. It seems to me that the plan conforms very close ly to the definition of a "raid." Road Money Needed The Douglas County Court wisely in advancing our program of road construction Koads are vitany necessary lr economy. As we cut more and more of our face timber and must get back into the hills and uplands for our sup ply of raw material, we'll need good roads as a part of a highball logging operation. Logging will be restricted to a comparatively few months. vision for transportation if we are to build large enough cold decks to keep mills operating during winter months. Too, we must constantly build roads into areas where we can set up working circles. If we take a million dollars hack a like sum off the property tax for schools, then we either must turn around and lars for roads, or else go without roads we so badly need to keep up our economy and increase valuations of taxable property. This latter situation, it seems to me, explains what some of our school authorities have in mind. They are alarmed because school taxes are so high. They are alarm ed because property owners are rebelling against high property taxes. They know we can't cut school costs with out impairing efficiency. In fact, our salaries and other op erational costs are so low that we're losing a great many good teachers to neighboring states states that pay more for schools. Would Keep Budgets Up School authorities, therefore, realize the importance of keeping school budgets up. They not only want to spend at the present level but want more money. However, they don't dare put more burden on the already overloaded property owner. Consequently they are seeking ways and means to get the onus of property taxes off schools. In their efforts to get taxes just as far as possible from local control, they're seeking every avenue to get money while lessening taxpayer complaint. So. they uree more money for schools on both the state and federal levels, be cause the farther collection of taxes gets from home the less objection is made. If money can be diverted to schools from the O&C fund, then property taxes won't have to he levied in that amount. If, however, an equal levy must be made for roads or administration, school authorities would have no objection. Schools wouldn't be blamed! It seems to me that the argument advanced in the let ter I received is mighty evasive and misleading. I can sympathize with the viewpoint money. But I can t go along solve the problem by hiding It seems to me that our answer lies in a broadening of the tax base, either through sales tax, a gross income tax, or some other form of taxation, to get everyone into the act and discount a lot of the tax evasions now prevail ing in our state. Sid Moody Sackbut Teaches Meaning Of Really True Loneliness NEW YORK (AP)-You want a hobby uncluttered with people? Want to get away from it all? Take up the jaiz trombone. You'll learn just what true lone liness can be. Lift the slippery slide from its velveteen case. Tap in the mouth niece. I'urse your lips and watch em run the wife, the kids, and then (ah, treachery) the dog. Vamoosed, all. Then blow to your heart's con tent. Until the neighbor calls the lone deal lout The trombone once called the sackbut-is an old friend which came long before the wife, kids .r uux. ...vt ki posca category for thi trip haul the same question put to moun- a)0ard a cargo of beer and piet tam cumbers-why? 1 7P,S ,, (he niuU, m, rtn ,wl(.h Why, indeed. Because afler a ing in disbelief, starta plodding to long, worrisome day there's no I "Up a Lazy River." greater pinnacle of pleasure than to Doint the sackbut ccilincwarH and blast out the soul clearing notes of the first downhill slide to "Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen.'1 That'i how to get even with the world. My wife, deferring In the first blush of young love, took the trombone as a part although per haps not the best of the com plete ME. Customarily I play solo along with such titans of troruhnnia as Jack Teagardcn and M iff Mole. They're on records. I'm on the coffee table alongside the speak er. HI waa never nor. But misery lovea company. So i 543 S.L Molii Sr., Rosebure, Oct. Or. Wed., July 27, 1960 publication. The proposal funds for school purposes is using O&C money quite we are to maintain our We will need ample pro. out of the O&C fund and add a tax of one million dol that our schools need more with the argument that we' the taxes we must pnv. we have band. "We" are mostly journalists of assorted stripe whose paths have crossed in city rooms hither and jon. We're called, if you haven't heard, the "Fourth Estate Sweet Melodies Ja.i Band." We play five or six times a year. Never Iho same place twice. We're no fools. Neither are our hosts. There's one exception. Every summer we charter a mule drawn barge for an afternoon's cruise nn' restored canal near New Hone, Pa. Friends, music lovers ,nd wives-who don't fit either Engineers Say Valdivia Will Be Inundated Soon SANTIAGO. Chile (AP) Armv engineers, trying to evacuate the lat few of 40.000 persons from the flood-threatened citv of Val divia, ay 80 per cent of Iho citv will be under 13 feet of water soon. Water from swollen Lake Itinl hue, 50 miles above the city in southern Chile, began Monday to break through a series of earlh dams formed by the disastrous earthquake! of last May.' In The Day's News iBy FRANK As thii is written, Representa tive Walter Judd of Minnesota has just concluded hii keynote speech at the Republican national conven tion. It impressed me as a mas terpiece. It was more than a great oration. It was a masterly summation of the grave issues that face our na tion at this critical moment in our history. In this 1860 1960 centennial year of the Republican party. Congress man Judd hearkened back to Ab raham Lincoln, the first Republi can resident, and told his parti san bearers: "The gravest issue of THIS cen tury, too, is HUMAN SLAVERY . this time not men enslaved by other men, but MASSES OF MEN ENSLAVED BY GOVERN MENTS." He added: MORE HUMAN BEINGS ARE IN BONDAGE TODAY THAN EVER BEFORE IN HUMAN HIS TORY." Who are these human beings in bondage that he referred to? They are the WHOLE PEOPLES who have been subjugated by com munism. Who is enslaving them? The leaders of communism are enslaving them. The grim objective of communism is OUR WHOLE WORLD in bondage to a reaction ary idea that we in the United James Marhw Republicans First To Back Courts' Segregation Edict CHICAGO (AP) It has taken the Republicans, as a party, six years to get around to saying they think the Supreme Court was right in outlawing segrega tion in public schools. The Demo crats, as a parly, haven't said it yet. The court handed down its de cision May 17, 1954. The first chance cither party had to come out flatly in approval of the court's historic and far-reaching action was in their partv plat forms in the 195B campaign. Both backed away from a flat ap proval. Both parlies of course, had their eye on the Southern white vole. Too hearty an endorsement of the court ruling was a cinch to cost votes in the South for the party bold enough to try it. In their 1956 platform the Re publicans wouldn't go any further than saying their "parly accepts the decision of the U.S. Supreme Court that racial discrimination in publicly supported schools must be progressively eliminated." This was quite a lung way from saying the party approved what the court did. President Eisen hower himself set the pace for such a caution by avoiding saying to this day that he approves the court's action. But in 1956 the Democrats' plat form was even more cagey than that of the Republicans. The Dem ocrats, whose Southern members have been a constant obstacle to civil rights legislation in Congress, contented themselves with Ihis: "Recent decisions of the Su preme Court of the United States relating to segregation in publicly supported schools and elsewhere have brought consequences of vast Importance to our nation as a whole and especially to commu nities directly affected." It was hardly news that the court decision was going to force big changes. Two weeks ago at Los Angeles tho Democrats produced the strongest civil righls plank in their history one which may cost them some Southern while votes hut still avoided flat endorse- ment of what the court did in 1954. Southern delegates at the Demo - The Cartoonist Says: Second in a Field of Two JENKINS i States of America refuse to ac cept. That is the issue we face. It is the issue we will go to war for IF WE GO TO WAR. All other issues are secondary. All our other problems are capable of I being resolved peacefully. This one can mean WAR in the final ex tremity. Mr. Judd dramatized that grim fact for us with grim clar ity. Or so it seemed to me. Who ii this man Judd? His record is far too long to go into here. He started out as a phy sician and surgeon. World War I came along. He served through it in the field artillery. He came back and tackled the job of LEARNING MORE. He has a list of academic honors that would fill the rest of this column. He served as a medical mission ary and hospital superintendent in China. He saw the beginnings of communism there at first hand. He came home in 1938 and spent two years in an attempt to arouse Americans to the deadly menace of communist subversion in China. He was elected to the House of Representatives from Minnesota in 1942, and has served there ever since. He is more than an orator. He is a man who has seen much, who has learned much, and who knows the meaning of what he has seen and learned. cralic convention were unhappy over the whole civil rights plank of the party. Then the Republi cans moved into Chicago for their convention. Southern white Republican dele gales fought against any strong civil rights plank, though Vice President Richard M. Nixun said he wanted a firm one. Negro leaders told the Republi cans that if Ihey expected Negro voles in the November elections, they couldn't afford to come out with a civil rights plant weaker than the Democrats. For days the Republican Plat form Committee at a time when it knew the Democratic plank might cost the Democrats some while Southern votes fiddled around with the idea of coming up with a less forthright plank than Ihe Democrats. In the end it produced a civil rights plank which in some ways was a little toucher Ihan Ihe Democrats' promises on civil rights and in oilier ways was a little softer. But the Republicans' civil rights plank wound up being the strong est the parly had yet produced. And, on the subject of the court's 1954 decision, the Republicans went furlher than the Democrats have ever cared or dared lo go. The Republicans said flatly: "We supported the position of the Negro school children even before the Supreme Court. We believe the Supreme Court school decision was right and should be carried out in accordance with the man date of the court." Season's First Tuna Hits Astoria Docks ASTORIA (AP) - The first albacore tuna of the season was delivered here .Monday. Packers paid $375 a ton. It probably will be late in Ihe week before most of Astoria's hie fishinL' fleet returns to Iho can. neries here, The first load. 1,500 pounds, was delivered hv Malt Korpi in his ! Iroller Defender. He unloaded at I a Columbia River Packers Assn. 1 canncrv. Peter Edson Fourteen Possibilities Counted For Republican Veep Candidate CHICAGO (NF.A) With at least 14 candidates for the Repub lican vice presidential nomination ''J ' Pre,vio"s !f ""l0"' 'h"t Lull '2, ..?e 1 ' Throttlebottom are out, Vice President Nixon refuses to discuss his preferences till he gets his hands on his own presidential nomination. He has stated the qualifications he'd like a vice pres ident to meet. He wants a man capable of be coming president. He does not be lieve either geographical or ideo logical balance are necessary on the ticket. He wants a man who will loyally support his own poli cies and who is not a conflicting personality. Nixon has not yet decided how he will pick his own running mate. Nixon himself was the surprise vice presidential choice of a score or more of candidate Eisenhower's political advisers in a sweaty Chi cago hotel room eight years ago. He will not leave it p to com mittee or a wide-open convention free-for-all. There is something good and something wrong with all the vice presidential possibilities put for ward so far. SO FOR READY reference, here is an alphabelical rundown on the principal characters: Treasury Secretary Robert B. Anderson: Former Texas Demo crat, now a Connecticut Republi can. Personifies GOP fiscal policy. Doesn't want the job. Rep. John W. Byrnes (Wis.): Chairman. House GOP Policy Com mittee. Led overthrow of Joe Mar tin in 1959. Not well known out side his own stale. Sen. Everett M. Dirksen (III ): GOP minority leader, backed by Gov. William G. Strallon. The late Senator Taft wanted him made Ike's V. P. in 1952. Rep. Gerald R. Ford Jr. (Mich.): would greatly help GOP in a key state. Strong Nixon supporter. A Oregon Delegates Postpone Selection Of Veep Nominee CHICAGO (AP) The Oregon ka. Colorado, New Mexico and delegation has called upon the GOP National Convention to hold off choosing a vice presidential nominee until Thursday. They unanimously adopted a resolution to that effect Tuesday after Oregon Gov. Mark O. Hat field said his state will not make a vice presidential choice until they have had a opportunity to consider the candidate in caucus. Hatfield told the delegation he had conferred with party leaders and has "every reason to believe" the vice presidential nomination will be put back a day. He called a caucus for Thursday morning to consider the candidate or candi dates. The youthful governor also ad vised the delegation that he is con vinced New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller will not accept a vice presidential nomination and that they should now disregard him in their consideration. Hatfield took the leading role during the convention in attempt ing to change HocKcieuer s nuna about shutting the door on a vice presidential nomination. He head - ed a deleeation of Republican gov ernors that conferred w;th Rocke feller. Hatfield will nominate Nixon for President tonight and he dis - closed to the delegates his speech will reauire onlv 3'i minutes to deliver. It has been cleared by Nixon. He also urged the delegates to back a strong civil rights plank of the type sought by Nixon if a fight develops on the convention floor. It appeared 'arly today none would develop. The delegation caucused after joining with delegates from Alas- comer, hut not vet ton well known nationally. Sen. Barry H. Goldwater (Anz.)r The conservatives' con- servative, also a presidential can-1 didate. But he'd drive away labor votes. Sen. Jacob K. Javits (N.Y.) Plugged as a good bet to help GOP carry critical big states and win Jewish support nationally. Not a likely choice. Sen. Kenneth B. Keating (N.Y.): Twelve years in House, rode to Senate victory with Rockefeller in 1958. May lack West and Midwest appeal. AMBASSADOR Henry Cabot Lodge (Mass.): Battling Russia in U.N. gives him national standing. Lost Senate seat to Jack Kennedy in 1952. Labor Secretary Stephen P. Mitchell (N.Y.): Would have strong appeal to union labor and Catholics. Republican old guard thinks him too liberal. Sen. Thruston B. Morton (Ky.): Outstanding as GOP National Chairman. High on Nixon's list. From Democratic state, but would appeal to the South. Charles H. Percy (111.): Smart young business executive who heads GOP platform committee. Otherwise a political novice who never ran for office. Atty. Gen. William P. Rogers (Md.): One of Nixon's closest friends and advisers. Would prob ably prefer Supreme Court appoint ment. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller (N Y.): Most Republicans would like to have him on the ticket as V. P. But he says "No" and so now is taken at his word. Interior Secretary Fred M. Seat on (Neb ): An original Ike man. Well known in West and farm belt where GOP can use strength. Less known in East. IF ANY KIND of a floor fight develops Wednesday, vole on vice presidency may be delayed till Thursday. Arizona in meeting Nixon. The vice president urged the full cooperation of all Republi cans in the campaign ahead. The delegates held their second caucus of Ihe day at the interna tional amphitheater after their convention session addressed by President Eisenhower. The governor reported that Shirley Field. Oreeon reoresenta- tive on the platform committee, does not expect a floor fight to,vvinn-. an,i'this is her first DreaK out on the civil rights issue. Editorial Comment NEW ROADS ARE SAFER Albany Democrat-Herald That the average automobile driver is safer on a controlled ac cess freeway than on a two lane or undivided four-lane joad hard- 1 nfeds reaffirmation but the greater safety of the separated;1"''. nignway is emphasized by the American Automibile association. The AAA keeps statistics on traf- !" accidents and cooperates with ; the National Safety Council in tal- ; 'inB nnsnaps, aiong wun ine au reau of Public Roads. Its con clusions are that despite greater speeds allowed on most modern freeways the new "super-roads are twice as safe as cily streets and three times as sate or ordinary highways." The public roads bureau is quoted as having found that the fatality rate on the four-lane U.S. Highway No. 1, on which the op posing lanes are not divided and to which access is not limited, is 10.6 per 100 million vehicle-miles. while the nearby Shirely divided highway, both near Washington, D.C., had a fatality rale of less than one for each 100 million vehicle-miles. So Ihis divided, con trolled access route was ten times safer than the older road during the period at which the counts were made. n-t..L t. j nidi uie newi-i luauwdis aie safer is obvious but the degree to which safctv is enhanced by divi- eei ui ""Vi V u j sion of lanes and limiting of ac- board foct ,f he.mlock a"d 'ncr cess is apparent only through com- Pec1"' '"'T 0Ve. 2 oT ' parison of statistics. The Douglas f.r brought $36.95 per The AAA notes that not a single ! 'I,,""snand board' the other specles fatalitv occurred on America's 16 - i, ,. . , , tnnnnn major turnpikes during the Me l. '' . , ale was for 3M,000 monal holiday of last year. when,ard feet from Swastika Salvage some five million motor vehicles i c,- J, thf.. A- and A,'H Rg ?-?n traversed them. . .of Culp Crock, includins 2.0.000 i u... I.... .. board feet of Douglas rir and 30.- conclusion that the sometimes ridiculed and criticized federal sup - erhishwav nrooram will be worth hs cost even if as some have charged there has been hunaline ."j P. L" . " "Jjr k mill WMC I" Il ."-" - Should there be foundation for these accusations, the remedy lies timner anout w nuies casi oi .ot not in curtailing or delaying tillage Grove. . program but in correcting the er rors. Death will still stalk the older and the narrower roads hut the more travel is diverted to the new roads the lower will be the incid ence per million miles traveled on all roads. Of course not even a new free way can guarantee life to a care less or incompetent driver but it can greatly widen the latitude of incompetency toleration by afford ing limited prot ction to the fool hardy they cannot get on the old er roads. Polly Rakes Okinawa TOKYO (AP) Heavy rains and 60 mile winds kicked up by Ty phoon Polly raked the southern part of the big V. S island base of Okinawa today, the I'. S. Air Force reported. There were no immediate reports of damage. Melrose Pair Return Home Following Gideon Meeting By NETTIE WOODRUFF lhome in Los Angeles. Calif., fol Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Arensmeier : lowing a visit with Mr. and Mrs. : have returned to their Melrose home on Doerner Rd., following a trip to Los Angeles, Calif., where they attended the Gideon Inter- national Convention. Reception Planned A farewell reception will be held Sunday evening following church : services to honor Pastor and Mrs. Calvin Harrah and family, who will soon move to Washington Everyone is invited. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Smith and son, Douglas, of Reedsport were recent weekend guests of her moth er, Mrs. OUie Houston, and family. Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Rhoden and Mrs. Ruth Rhoden attended to business in Portland recently. Mrs. John Wellpot of Vista, Cal if., and her granddaughter, Shirley Parrish, a teacher in the southern California school system, have gone on to Seattle, Wash., follow ing an overnight stay with Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Frost and sons. Mrs. Wellpot is a former Melrose resident. Harraht Vlsittd Mr. and Mrs. Charles Page and Patricia of Port Angeles, Wash., were past weekend guests of the Calvin Harrah family. Mr. and Mrs. Don Lash and son, Frank, have left for their Canyonville Police Force Night Officer Replaced By J. Spencer By FLORETTE McGt E James Spencer from West Vir ginia has been hired as night offi cer in the Canyonville Police Dept. to replace Marvin Miller. Miller has been transferred to the sewer department to supervise the plant, but is working on pipe in spection with the engineer until the plant is finished. Families Attend Camp Several families from the Can yonville - Days Creek area are at tending the Seventh-day Adventist Camp at Gladstone this week. Weekend visitors at the camp were: Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Harter, Dr. C. W. Campbell, and Dr. Rol lin Falk. Those staying for the week are J. Axt and family, Mrs. C. W. Campbell and family, -Mr. and Mrs. Bevins, Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Weaver. Mrs. Rollin Falk and family, and William Bom. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Proctor and r - .nn.nnj nt ZJTkl ' " " Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Dunn from Tyler, Tex., have been visiting for the past two weeks at the Loson Winn home. Mrs. uunn is Mrs visit h(,re in 19 years. 1 Mrs. Ralph Weaver, .Mrs. trmei ' Briggs, Miss Florette McGee and Miss Jo Ann McNeil spent three days at Fish Lake last week. Supervisor Replaced i Mrs. Carl Johnson, Canyonville. is the new nurses' supervisor at Forest Glen Hospital. She replaces . i iur. ana Airs, nonaa oiaiuey ana Mrs. June Shipman, who will go,two cludl.en (rom Eugene and Miss back on floor duty. Jl.awana Edes of Gresham visited Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hughes and , at the Joel Jackson and George son. Tommy, from Lima, Ohio, i Kues home recently. Thev were en were recent visitors of the Ralph jroute nome afler spending a week Weavers. While here the Weavers ;en(j a( Crater Lake, took them to Crater Lake and to Mrs. Eldon Lee and Illean Pon- tne coasi lor a uerp-ea usning ip- Mr. and Mrs. Norman Graham Three Small Sales Conducted By USFS Three small timber sales were conducted under direction of L' mp- qua National forest otlicials on Monday Thev included 600.000 board feet of timber sold by Holland Mea dows, 37 miles east of Cottage Grove, in 20 acres of clearcut land. This timber was sold for the ap praised price of $8,949 to Bohemia Lumber Co. Inc.. of Culp Creek. It included 180.000 hoard feet of Douglas fir and pine and 420.000 feet of white fir and other species. The Douglas fir and pine sold for $24.75 per thousand board feet and white fir and other species for $10.70. The second was sold by I'inara ! Butte Salvage, also 600.000 board feet, for the appraised price of S19,- 815 to M. and L. Lowing Co. of " . ... Efw; nnn u .j ; F"?cn' ' included 500 000 board I wu Doaru 11 " '"r'"r "" 1 ".'P"'-.1' old 'or ,he aPP"'fd ' Pnce of 5, 692 and was scattered i through 470 acres. The Douglas fir brought sj7.oi) per tnousana noara I feet, the other species $10.70. Tl. 1 " u oro f, Here is Your FOR AN AIRLINE CAREER MEN AND WOMEN, Qualify NOW for on Airlin Corttrl Trtmcndoui rtcint growth hai created many openings with good pay, security, advancement. Fly on FREE Travel Passei, Positions as: Station Agent, Hoitess, Space or Flight Control, Reservations, Operations or as Travel Consultant with Travel Agencies, etc. TRAIN WITH NATIONAL, America's best-equipped Com. mercial Airline and Travel Training Center, Keep your present job during short, low-coit training. Includes charm and beauty techniques, for Women. Accredited by NHSC. Nationwide placement service. Are YOU H. S. Graduate, 17-39? Then write TODAY for qualifying details (no obligation), giving age, address, phone. Inquiries confidential. Airline Personnel Troining, Notional School of Aeronautics, Boi 1 69, c o News-Review. Dick Oilman and sons. Mrs. LeN'oir Kruse and daughter Lynetta, are spending this week at the Adventist camp meeting at Gladstone. Kruse and his son. Lyn den, attended the meeting during the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Herrman and Mr. and Mrs. Jake Jacohson enjoyed the Fleet Days festivities at Reedsport recently. Mrs. Ethel Hageniock and Mrs. Peggy Riesner have returned to their homes in Bakersfield, Calif., following a visit with their cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Herrman. Bradley Recuperates Robert Bradley is recuperating at home following surgery in a Roseburg hospital. Mrs. George Johnson of Win lock, Wash., was here for the 1940 high school class reunion at the Elks Club. She also visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Mat thews. Sixteen young people from Mel rose attended the junior camp last week at F'ir Point. Teen-agers having returned from a previous week at the church camp are Carol and Don Isakson, Linda Faulkner, Sylvia Fenn, Mike and Jeff Johnston, Richard Rogers, Joyce Morgan and Larry Totton. visited relatives in Dunsmuir, Calif., over a recent weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Guy McGee, Flor ette and guest, Jo Ann McNeil, at tended the McClain-Aulphin picnic in Abany recently. On their re turn they brought Mrs. Gregg Mon roe, sister of Jo Ann, to Tiller to visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. McNeil, for a week. Clarks Visit Mrs. Karl Clark and two children from California visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ermel Briggs before tak ing Gloria Clark to Montana to vis it Gloria's father's relatives there. They will be in Montana for about a month. Mr. and Mrs. Ermel Briggs at tended the Oregon Historicai Jam boree in Jacksonville recently. Hayhurst Group Plans Food Sale By MRS. GEORGE EDES At a recent meeting of ihe Hay hurst Stitch and Chatter Club, plans were made to hold a cooked food sale in Yoncalla in the near future. Money derived from the sale will go towards buyinj cloth ing for Sharon Williams, who will be a princess at the North Doug las County Fair. Edes, Jacktons Visited Mr. and Mrs. Ronad Stanley and nms spent last week attending a wsib conference at camp Mcoru- ;der near Tillamook. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Mulkey left recently to spend a few days with relatives at Waldport. Mrs. Sarah Wertz has returned home after spending three months visiting in Denver, Colo., South Da kota and Kockaway, Ore. The Rev. Raymond Otto attend ed the boy's camp at Dead Indian : Snrin i.s U'elf , Huntinatont Visited Recent guests at the Collis Hunt ington home included Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wolf and P. Smith from San Pablo, Calif.; Mr. and Mrs. Nor-' man Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. W. Asplund from Coos Bay; and Mr. and Mrs. Don Brown and family from Vancouver, Wash. Mrs. Charles Barrett and three children from West Covina, Calif., are visiting at the Loyd Emery home. Mrs. Barrett and Mrs. Em ery are sisters. Miss Pat Eggers of Santa Ma ria, Calif., visited at the Russell Wamslcy home last week. Khrushchev Hits Latest Western Arms Proposal MOSCOW (AP)-Sovict Premier Nikita Khrushchev has attacked the latest Western disarmament proposals as an attempt to keep stockpiles of weapons handy for aggressive purposes under the guise of disarmament. "Instead of a concrete l educ tion and limitation of anna- ; mcms, nnrusncnev wroie nrmsn j Prime Minister Harold Macmillan and Canadian Prime Minister John G. Dicfenbaker, "the United i states proposes to nave states store a definite ouantity of arms I .K.l. - ,nr .-io n,l, h - supervision oi international con Rollers. . OPPORTUNITY