r American Students j Fri.f July 29, I960 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 1) To Continue Tour 13 n If Of Mraf inra Mooijp ninnliAn v. ' i h A FARMER'S FANCY Krnest Burc adjusts lianiess on his tram of straw liursis at I!a inia, S. 1). He faOu'ims farm Hnatv for parades by using com stalks, oats, grasses and sweet clover. A mechanism driven by power takeoff of tractor "animates" the tcun. VSntJSt John Todorovich, pastor of the Sutherlin Seventh day Adventist' .d r tJ rLJua e Nic ilson. had been mission member, were present to w,.nc,s; lXwS'Scturef Leading out in the ordination i service was Kldcr V. A. Striven,! president of the North Pacific L'n-j ion Conference of which Oregon is a part. The charge to the minis-1 t r y was j; i v e n by E Id t r V . B . ; Ochs. vice president of ihe Cen- eral Conference. It. Allen Ander son, secretary of the Miniilevial Assn., of Seventh - day Advcnlisls, was the sneaker. i Klder Todorovich was born at ' " IScSiS willn1 rhovflh's Witnesses iion's wa' Ia wal.a 'MTc"": Open District Meeting tered the ministry in Portland. , . serving as an assistant in evan-ei- PORTLAND (AP) - The Dis ism Itrict Assembly of Jehovah s il Follovvin" a period of studv in the chinch's Theological Seminary i in Washington, D.C., he served lor two veai s as nastor of the Silver- ' ton district churches and for the past year has been the pastor ofj William K. Jackson, convention t lie Suthcrlin anil Yoncalla church- chairman from Watchtower So-os- I cietv headquarters in Brooklyn, Elder Todorvich married the for-1 N. V., keynotcd the opening, mer Beverly Peterson in 1949 and ,ljs subjrct was .pCace-Pur-has wo children Dora.n, age t. : suilll. Christians Assemble." and handy, ape 4 j K(j . c Kcnnedv Oregon cir- UlUaiUCU Willi lOOOrOVlCn WaS Arvin W. Winkle of Silverlon. Story on Korea Given At Oakland At a recent meeting of the Worn-' cn s Assn. of the Oaklaim Com-1 ft.. I milllUfl in I CUI niunit"' Presbvteiian Churr-h, Mrs. I Ksthef Pealer presented the mis-j CORVALLIS (AP) Gifts, sionary story on Korea. i grants and scholarships to Oregon Devotions were led by .Mrs. Lyle 1 Slate College during the past vear Stuwe. It was announced the an- ranged from SI to S273.50U. OSC nual Sunday School p'inic will he - president A. L. Strand reported held Aug. 21. (lames will be play- j Thursday. Thev totaled S2.730.75:). I'd on the school ground in the i Dr. Strand said S2.273.193 was afternoon, followed by the polluck 1 for research and training grants, picnic at the church in the eve-j and SKI4.022 was for fellowships Ilm8- ' and scholarships. ihe tome "The Moving Thought": T,e largest grant, he said, was was led by .Mrs. Jesse Lee with S273.500 from the National Science discussion by Ihe members, re-, foundation, so OSC could cam ports Edith Dunn, correspondent. out an jnsjiute for science anil SERVICE CONDUCTED -alhemal.es teachers. A group nf young people from the Med.lord Presbyterian Church recently conducted services ;t the Oakland Community Presbyterian Church, reports Kdith Dunn, cor respondent. In the group were Pat : Carter. Billie Wood, Dave Hartley ; and Dick Comm. ' i No installation costs! only Choice of 5 Colors or White! Converts to a Built-in Anytime! Take with you if you move: 630-643-658 S. I. Roie OR This buiincsi it home-owned . . ,..-rj k ,, . .. rr s-v. . . i . . r r ft v 1 r ' -e-fcj, -K Garden Valley Church Visited By Speakers Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Nicholson. ; missionaries of the World Wide v ; , Nicholson is an Oregonian, com- iny from Klamath Kails. After leaving Oregon they will ro to Texas near the Mexican border where their knowledge of Spanish will aid them in a radio program and school to help Mexican Chris tian leaders. The Garden Valley Church helps support the World Wide .Missions. nesses opened Thursday night in Multnomah Stadium with 9,.ib8 area, i nman said, "llns meet-1 persons present. They came from'""? should be helpful to the com-: all over the Northwest, including , British Columbia ,,:. .;n:cinl. tftl,I ,- am,m "thn j family circle is the basic unit of I human society and must maintain , its unity." I College Grants Total f n -y nl v KANSAS PICNIC SET The annual Kansas picnic will , he held at F.leanor Park in Albany Sunday. A potluck will be held at I noon. Collee will be furnished. All I former Kansas residents are i vited. Wash and rinse water, too hot to touch, 5Air,s soils aAjy! YOU LOAD EVERY THING - EASILY M FROM THE FRONT in big Roli-To You Racks. Holds a full day's dishes for aver r;e Family. Complete with Chopping Block Top M Ttrrr.j if dCiirtd t I 2-1616 635 S. E. Stephen . the varningi it ay in Roseburg ' I r.,i ' in $2S995 , , ;-, 5 t v " Ulimsn Attends Outdoor Meet BAKER, Ore. fAP) Rep. Al Ullman (D-Ore) said Thursday he will meet with the National Outdoor Recreation Resource Re view Commission starting today for the next five days. The second district congress man, who seeks re-election, said he is the only remaining Oregon member on the 15-man' commis sion. The meeting is at Jackson hole. Wyo. The late Sen. Richard I.. Ncuberger was a member of the group. Commission Chairman I. a u r ance Rockefeller has set up a pro gram concentrating primarily on western federal resource policies with first-hand inspections of for-1 Burns. Frank McCurry has returned est. national park and recreation' The Cockrells are former Riddle from a two weeks visit with rel areas. I residents. The young couple will atives in Lindsay and Bakersfield, Richard McArdle Forest ?,.rv. ' ire chief, and Conrad Worth. Na tional Park Service director will participate. Ullman said he had formulated a number of recommendations wiin respect to federal handlini ol its outdoor recreation potential, j we neon a break I hrnoy h on ieucrai ininKing in this important mission anil advisory council : members in pointing up drastic i need for long range coordinated ! action to preserve the develop I our recreational potential." C! ,f x l s--V COMING INTO a lu-licnptcr as she stcarm Italy. The 3:l,0U0-ton, 701 t ' V fv1';'- llBmfWfji.mCr . r: -if .- . . PIT? ; - - 2 fiMX aan, iwii'ima am,fc Cl T.. - Z?i'3jm&jL BASKING BASKET Jennifer Cwin finds that a larffe wicker basket is a splendid place to enjoy the sun In Melbourne, Klo. Auto Hits Bicycle; Vale VALE. Ore. (AP) A boy rid in a bicvele was struck and killed bv a car on V. S. Highway 2ti in the suburbs north of here Thursday .MOSCOW (API Inofficial re ports today iiuiicutrd a group ui 'lt'ni bludouls arri-sleti fur dts trihutnii "Amorikii" mu.e;i?me will be permuted tu continue their tour (if the Soviet I num. ' The students inclmlin four or, five Americans, were held tor f.iui hours Thursday by Soviet police! who accused them of distiti -Inn!" the peace. The students were later told to leave the country iuiiue-l diatcly hut are still here. The Americans involved in the' ica.se remain unidentified. Hoth I'uhhe Health Service. Another 20 1 1 S. and Soviet sources refued , million have received only one or to ilivuke their names. One was two of the four recommended Salk 'said to be a t;irl. .injections. The students were arrested' since January, polio has struck i while distributing the magazine in n!ore lhan Americans, crip I front of a downtown -Moscow , !lmS 3:0. And PHS doctors say : hotel. The masazine, published bvIllc will kfv'P climbins until the 1'. S. State Department, is everyone sets vaccinated, (officially distributed in the Soviet! SilrKeon (leneral I.eroy Burney j Union under a reciprocal asree js particularly worried about un ment which permits distribution of vaccinaU'il children under five. He (the magazine "L'.S.S.Ii." in the! explains that this as;e Kroup ac I United Slates. i counted for 43 per cent of last The students obtained evlra ! vt'ar s 8-57' I'0,io casl's of which copies of the magazine from the i . S. Kmbassv and were handing them out in the street. Portland Wheat Export Gains 11.7 Million Bu. SALEM (AP)-Export of wheat from Portland totaled 71.7 million! PHS statisticians recently de bushels in the year that ended 1 signed a snnplilied survey system June 30. a gain of 11.7 million to locate within four days the bushels over the preceding year, number of unvaccinated persons the state Agriculture Department in a community. They are now said today. j teaching the system to state and The record was 73.6 million in the 1956-57 fiscal vear. Export grain business at Astoria was l'.B.OOO bushels, about 10 pet cent tinder the previous year's loadings. Three From Riddle Motor To Burns To Attend Event Sir. and Mrs. Loren Bowman and Larry Cnckrell of Riddle were i in Hums last week to attend t lie I wedding of Beverly Corkrell. I five-weeks air trip to brotland. daimhlcr of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Mrs. Kinlayson taught in the Rid Cockrell. to Harold Hotehkiss of I die schools several vears ayo. remain in Bums until he resumes his studies at Oregon Technical Institute at Klamath Falls in the fall. Grandson Returned Mr. anil Mrs. Ralph Duncan drove to Corvallis recently to take home their grandson. Byron Peter- son. who had been visiting here. they were met in Corvallis by Byron s parents. Mr. and Mrs. Mervvyn Peterson, who had driv- en over from their home in Seaside Mrs. Florence Helms returned i recently from spending a month i in Idaho where she visited her I son, Ray Kskeridge, at Paul, and News On The Water Gets r1 1 iv r f jew ' i. y'v vt i-si tm- fcs . PORT The luxury liner Leonardo Da inci it tnrt-d liy up Nt-vv Vtirk harbor to complete the maiden voyaRe from Crnoa, foot long tmbo vevvcl iv the new HaRvliip of the Italian Line. i i j? iyi' at 'V 1 Vi.-EP V.'- V - ffc Youth 8, Dies ! The victim was Jerry Dean Knudson. . of Vale : Stewart Howard (iriffin of rural ' Vale was the motorist, state po- I lice said. To Hold BV JERRY BENNETT Nwspipr Enttrprist Ajin. .WASHINGTON tNKA Thf f'Rhl aninst polio is only half won 8s 'he If!) season begins, Almot !0 million of the nation's ISO million persons still need vac- cinations. say olficials of the U.S. 5,ti94 were paralvtic "There are still 8.5 million chil dren under live who have not com pleted the required number of shots," he warns, "nineteen per cent of them have had no vaccine at all. These young and vulner able children still lack optimum I protection against a disease that ! niav cripple them for life." city health officials throughout the nation. ine polling lecnnique nas an important psychological effect, one health official explains. "The majority of unvaccinated a sister, Mrs. Frank Finlayson at Shoshone. Mr. and Mrs. Kin- layson had just returned lrom a I Calif. Yellowstone Trip Taken Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Wallace have returned from a vacation trip through Yellowstone National 1'ark. -Mrs Leonard Dawson recently I spent several days in Portland with her daughter. Miss Irene Daw-1 son. Dawson later flew up to join : thein. with Mrs. Dawson returningi home with him bv plane. Mrs. Darrell Carter and Mrs. J. L. Aikins have left for Moscow, Idaho, where they will visit Mrs. Carter's son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Oerald Myers. f f ' ysrtJslAm . i KwU- Corrugated Cartons May Outmode Onion Bags CORVALLIS, Ore. ( AP) -Some 100 million pounds of onions are shipped out (( Oregon each year and Oregon Stale College is work '"! nn a new wav of packing them In corrugated cartons rather than Hesearchers at the school found that wilh the boxes, 43.00U pounds or more could be shipped in a smule railroad car, with virtual ly no damage. They learned that when Ihe onions arc shipped in mesh bags, only about 30.000 pounds can be put into a rail car. With heavier loads, the onions started bruising. Conveyor Belt Kills Operator Of Tractor PENDLETON (AP) A con veyer hlt caused fatal injury to John William Clark of Pendleton Thursday when it pinned him to a tractor seat. The 34 car old man was an equipment operator and was driv ing a tractor for Hetcher Sand and (iravel Co. a mile east of Pendleton at the time of the ac cident. 'Ihe tractor lot one leg of I Ion land one nan conveyer neu anu : toppled it down on Clark. He i died a few hours later at a Pen- flieton hospital. Back Elisiiig tCr, ..s'- V'L'i,, v , ROCHESTER, N.Y., schoolchildren ore fed the Sabin live polio vaccine in controlled field tests of the substance which Russia has given orally to more than 60 million. Polio Chairman Says Large Fund Spent On State's Polio Victims Portland A total of $27,977.02 . health department at once and was spent on 72 new polio pa- make arrangements for the vac tients in Oregon during lli.ill, it has 1 cine. Osteusoe said Iho .e who have been announced by Donald Osten-1 had three shots should discuss with soe of Portland, chairman of the ! their physicians the possibility of Oregon New March of Dimes. I receiving a fourth, or booster shot. Ostensoe also pointed out that t state March of Dimes chapters paid out $105,594.25 during the past year for the care of 224 patients who contracted polio prior to 195i!. there were several chapters in the stale which were unable to EiS 'Kit ffi!Tf;Hflhway 20 Association Dimes funds have been exhausted, Oslonsoe said. Unpaid bills lor tho care of 1959 polio patients amount to 31,070.34, he said. Also beintf curried on the books of hospitals and thernpy centers am Slti.itll. ti9 for the care of patients who hnim ill with nnlirt tirinp Id KIMl The slate chairman pointed to ! Iwecn the summits of tho Cas Ihe apathy being shown toward the cade Range and tho Coast Range. K.-ilk nnti.nnlin v:ii'cino in miMilinn- 'the Orpiion lliehvvav 20 Assn. inLi Hie 72 new cases in 1959. "Most ; i0f these 72 neonle need not have become ill with narnlvtic nolio hnd they heeded the warning of mem- i hers of the medical profession audi received their Salk shots, Osten- soe said. lie urged every Oregomun who has not ha.-l at least three shots of Salk polio vaccine to contact his lamily physician or hm county Attention M. ; raFC -''"-(, i i irrf -a 1 DAMSEL IN DISTRESS On the Potomac River, ofT Alex andria. Va., Lillian Hatcher demonstrates a new small-boat daytime distress signal Authorised by the United States Coast Guard, the signal is made by slowly nd repeatedly rmsino ind lowering outstretched arms Sure to bring help - 26, r -'' nil W '"ft 'in. aULuatt! fiat SHIP LIFT Two huge ISO loot ryhmitn, capable of hoivlin a I..l."i0-lon vliip, are part of tin rrnovalinn o( Ihe Dortmund Lms canal at llciiiiilicnburg, Ncit Cemiany. Tide Ihe polio season has started in Oregon ami it past records nnui true to form August and September will be dangerous for those who have not had the vaccine, ho said. Seeks Four Projects CORVALLIS (AP)-Tlie Oregon Highway Commission will be ask ed Aug. 19 to schedule four im provements on Highway 20 he - said imnrovonient of the highway at the South Santiam Pass, where ; the hiehwav annually is damaged by slides, is at the lop of the list, Also sought: A hridgu over iley creek east of Sweet Home 1 in Linn County, straightening of i the highway at Little I-.lk Moun tain in the Coast Range and at Gellatly Canyon ahout 10 miles 1 west of Corvallis. fii j,-"" -w s, J,i 4 '' ' A I J (1 1 - is ' - " Of Polio persons live in poor areas of town." he explains. "Of course, these areas are always easy to spot. Hut to have documented proof that there arc so many hundred unvaccinated people in a neighbor hood usually intensifies a vaccina tion drive." As polio protection campaigns get going throughout the country, scientists are still working to im prove the vaccine. Merck Sharp and Dohme Research Laborator ies recently announced develop ment of a' highly purified killed virus vaccine which requires only two shots given a month apart for immunity. The PHS has approved the first batches for distribution to high polio rate areas in the South and Southwest. Immunity with Ihe Salk killed virus vaccine, used since 1955, re- ' quires a minimum of three shots with a fourth recommended for extra protection. The first t vv o shots are given two to six weeks apart followed by another injection ' seven months later. The fourth shot is given a year after the third. Tests also are underway on three live virus vaccines that ara '. reported to provide greater and faster immunity than the killed virus types. Live vaccines, which can be taken by mouth, have been . used extensively in Russia. Latin America, Africa and several Eu- ; ropean countries. Before PHS experts license live . vaccines for use in the U.S., they want to be sure thnt the weakened viruses can't regain their strength and become dangerous. Trial live virus vaccination pro grams are now underway in Dado County, Fla., Waco, Tex., Cincin nati Ohio, Minneapolis, Minn, and . New Haven, Conn. I'liS otticials believe it will be at least a year, before they can guarantee the vac cines satety anil ettectiveness. - ft!-s 4 ' v jilt tv -ft- V s - J LIONS LEADER 1' IIM1 Li Duvii uf I.uuis villc, Ky.,. va elected prcsi dent of Lions Internal i on nt At the service organization's an nual convention in Chicago. Accidental Pistol Shot Wounds Girl SALEM (AP) - A 7-ycar-old girl was in Sulcm Memorial Hos pital today suffering from an ac cidental pistol wound. The bullet passed through her lower lett chest. The hospital said she was in surgery for some four hours Thursday night, but they did not have a condition report on the child. Marion County sheriff's depu ties said the girl, Laura Hopper, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, liny Hopper. Deputies said she was wounded by a .3220 caliber Colt pistol that accidentaly discharged while in the hands of Dennis Baddcr, 13, a neighbor of the girl in the town of Marion. The deputies said the boy had found the pistol in his father's drawer and inserted a round in the chamber. It discharged, they added, as the girl walked between the gun and the wall. The boy was displaying the gun for some 12 children at the time, they said. Four Prisoners Quit Malheur County Jail VALE, Ore. (AP) Four per sons have fled from the Malheur Counly Jail at this Eastern Ore gon town during the past three months. The latest to flee was Bobby Williams, 38, of nearby Nyssa, who walked away Thursday. He was being held on a charge uf assault and battery. The sheriff's office said Wil liams had been outside, working as a trusty, when he made hii getaway. False Premises Charge Issued By Grand Jury SEATTLE (AP) Samuel Is rael Blackerman of Portland Is accused of obtaining money under false premises in interstate com merce. A federal grand jury Indicted him here, accusing him of obtain ing $1180 in telegraphic money or ders from Jan. 28 to April 20. The indictment held that the money, sent from Seattle to Port i .nti wm claimed lo be for use for legal expenses in tho estates oi liiacKerman parents. o -Utr.i'j v.i r'Krt mitii aVtili'