. n era RULING FOBC in irci ES TAX Mil Ml ISO ft las. 1 It -ill ; ' 137 S' "f. SHOWN HERE REIGNING OVER the Myrtle Creek Foil Festival is Queen Betty Moodie of Myrtle Creek, surrounded by her princesses, Janet Hazelton, Linda Streitberger, Janice Wright, and Linda Ulam, all of Myrtle Creek, and Linda Porter of Canyonville. They appeared in the Saturday parade, (News-Review Staff Photo) Dancers, Grangers Get Festival Float Honors Mor. Pidm on Pans 5 Another Fall Festival festive fun-1 arama full of frolic and features j has ended at Mvrtle Creek. I The big dav was Saturday and : a parade wended its way through i Ihe winner, with Western Aulo Sup Ihe streets of the Douglas County ply in second place and the Super -itv u-ith vat-inns winners eiven I Y Market third prizes. I The Tri X -Square Dance club ... ... ...i t i. .1... i-i i wun lis vna Nuiuau in uie .-tuue and the Mvrtle Creek Grange. ! with "Cinderella", tied for first place in the civic caleeorv. The . 1 : Train Crash Injures Six ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) A i freight train smashed head oni into a Burlington passenger train today, injuring six trainmen and blocking the main line wuh w reckage. i me passenger irain mane an ; emergency slop. Freight crewmen j said they did not see Ihe other train in time to halt. Burlington oflicials said they were investi gating to determine why the trains were running on Ihe same (rack. The. passenger train was running from Kansas City, Mo., to Omaha, Neb. Three crewmen remained hos- pilalizcd with culs and uriascs. Wonthor't llltt DlltklP tteUUICr JUl ummc ln The Roseburg Area Rain, rain, wonderful rain. ii lasi ureguii, dnu in mi ui-mui Roseburg, seems like that good,!whcn tne cigarette lighter develop-1 old. damp, cool place everybody jd a short. His 19.i6 car was de- kn,"ws-. , . . ... imolished. In Ihe past 24 hours Roseburg i This morning. Oscar Hillman of nas nau .Jo inciies oi rain ami mr -Glendale also escaped serious in most people the jangled and jarred , mrv Kw his car skidded into a nerves caused by Ihe summer heal; have been soothed. Actually today's rain is not the ; first this month, but most persons jnt0 the skid while he was en were unaware that earlier in Au-inule to work at Ihe Tiller ranger gust .01 inches of ram tell. Occur-j station, lie sulfered onlv cuts lo ing mostly while everyone was fasti his face. asleep, the .01 inches broke Rose-1 burb drv spell of over 70 davs. ! , The Roseburg Weather Bureau at J $. ACCUS6S S0VI8tS ine an pol l nas pieuicieu scaiiereu showers throughout today with de creasing cloudiness tonillllt and Tuesdav. The five day outlook calls f.. !.,...., i ...,.. 0, .,.n l,l..... ..rm,i 0iihh ih.o",..iTl i, o slight warming trend. Some possi bility of scattered showers is in sight later in the week. Restaurant Robbed KV YORK (AIM A marker! gunman held up Sardi's restaurant; Acting U.S. Delegate David H. I C(l- early Sunday and escaped wilh; Popper satd that unreaonahle So- On Saturday the two depart $.1,000. Harry Valentine , nishl viol demands lend to hamper the ' ments fought a Krass (ire in the manager, told police the holdup1 talks at every turn on the problem ! 3100 block on Diamond Lake Blvd. man forced him to open a sate m i of eflective international control j Cause of the fire, which resulted the third-floor office. 1 and inspection. ( in no damage, was not determined. Proposed County Welfare Budget Hits S2.9 Million For Biennium A tentative bud jet ieure nf $. 9.'.1.2'.8 for the lin;i-6.'t biennium is soon to be submitted to the state by the Douglas Count Welfare De- partment. If the proposed budget is accept- ed. it would co-t Douglas t ounty aooui 5iu ti"u more per jear our- ing Ihe 19HI-6.1 biennium than the county is expected to pay out dur Til- AeUtr ine Weather AiDDnDT Dcrnonc daconSc:5"" Highest temp, last M hour. 70 Lowest temp, last 24 hour, 51 Highest T.mp. any Aug. ( 601 103 dti Iron, lasl month, primari v ,'"' --' "l-e.is.s. fernatmnal l ivestock I'av n. 1 square. r Chief Don Blakely. was near the Lowest Temp, any Aug. ('561 41 becau-e of seasonal harvest work. . At Ihe present time Hie depart-j Commen.d Bernstein: "This Is j "Her hu-band was about SO feet PORTLAND (AP. - The grand portion of Ihe mill which burned. Precip. last 24 hours .35 He said the department has been ment is providing old 2e assi-t- (hp fj ,,mp , ,.an remember ahead, on Ins lawn. I award of the American Philatelic It probably was caused hy saw Preeip. from Aug. I M "'King lo have every emplojahle anee to 42 persons, general assist- p h,.(J ,k, ,,... turn,., arum ,, ()okn Society's exhibit here Saturday dust which smoldered since the Precip. from Sept. 1 30.62 l'f--"n Hi" welfare rules work- a nee of 219 families aid to the .h, ,n.rr,vi,in a skipped - at her. stunned bv Ihe noise, ami was won by Col C. L. Ma -son. 'earlier fire. Ihe mill had not been Esctss from Spt. 1 .27 m me summer narw-ung. bund to 9 persons, aid to the o:- jnd (h, pr,ram vliorlened a bit , then he started to run hack. The ' Sixikane. He had a display of 1S!0 used since the previous Ware, re Sunset tonight, 7:05 p.m. Welfare Casts Up ahled to 218 persons, and aid to 0 Hie orchestra could make next one hit him before he got first issue ulamps from (I r e a t ports correspondent Mrs. G. B. Sunrise tomorrow, 5:27 a.m. The welfare administrator s a i d dependent children, 272. I plane connections for Havau there," Slone said. ' Britain. Fox. Honored During Festival v .... Wl'sr . , : t z A ,l":imnfii rlirU wilh lar llarl I A Little Lamb", raled a third-1 place ribbon. ln Ihe commercial category, Ihe California - Pacific Utilities Co. was i Among other competition staged ; during the dav. Pamela Warren i. .t.- ' i ' i j ji iook me ajo wnicn was uouaieu in the form of a doll dressed with ! dollar hills, but the Myrtle Creek ! swimming pool fund was Ihe real I t-i" .i j .1.. ... lforthatuurno.se A vKilur mm lu anil ash o ..-.V-.T.'. i. Garv W. Melton, Krabhed Ihe hon-lpwt on his brakes and slid cross (ns "in winninu a trip lo either I wise into the oncoming car. : Timberline l.oclye or the Ort'ton j To Study 1 Coast. Sharon Davidson of Myrtle This latter car, a pickup, was iLreek took the camera awarded, i and Don Anderson of Myrtle Creek, j the transistor radio. Queen Beltie Moodie and her ; court reiuned over tha . two-duv-i event, which also included dances j and various concessions for the I amusement anil amazement ot me i thrones which visited the city for ihe affair. 'Men Slightly Hurt I . ! . Ifl AUTO ACCldeilTS inmi- Bi vson of Wolf Creek es-' t.aped Wlln ,mnr scratches and; ! bruises Sunday night aboul a milei iand a 1,alf s"u111 "f ,ne Jlendale' ,Juneli0 despite a plunge ofl25 feet i over a bank in his car, reports cor respondent Mrs. (i. B. Fox. Krvsnn drivine north, lost eon- !i,.n ,',f ihe vehicle when he tried in Dui nut a ire on his dashboard bank and turned over about four miles easl of Days Creek. He said tlio car hit a slick spot and went ; Of 'Hampering' Tactics jr..sr. GENEVA (AP) The lnited States accused the Soviet I nion of hampering deadlocked three-:1" " "urnen ny me company, power nuclear lest ban talks. ; Cause of the blaze was not known, which went into a five week re-! Earlier Sunday the Roseburg ru cess today, alter the 21iilh session. I ral and city departments jointly 'I he Soviet l nion retorted lhat it ; put out a grass lire at Geddes is the "militarists who are block-1 m progress of a ban. ing this year. I'nder Ihe proposed 1 huduet tlie countv would nav S.VI2.- 7ii. or IS 1 per cent lor the two year period. Hie state would pay SI. 242. 192. or 42 1 per cent, and the federal government would pay SI, 725Xo. or D9.8 per cent. Revision Possible . .. . , . - ,. ,, ") , Z the budget figure is onlv tentative. i",mert,eld"sa,d .he proposed !bud..t would be sent to the State " enure ouunei lomimuee ami Ihcv niyv rnvi.n il hffnre refine Pt. ,,,r im . Nummerlicld said that the ease load tor the month ot AiimM i .t - . U t x v ., Roseburg Youth Dies In Crash Bonald Roy Baker. 23. of 3M1 Hooker Kd. KOSeburg. WaS latallV ' l"red ln a two-car collision on Highway 42 near Remote Saturday about noon. He died at Mast Hos- P"al in Myrtle Point at 5:35 p.m. that niglii. Operator of Ihe car in which Baker was riding was listed by rmice ai tuquiuc as canyon West Easton, 24. of Sitkum lit. Muilln Pninl V :tAn cnfff!i-l mi. ..m....... nor injuries. Baker reponcaiy was ' pinned in the car. The investigating officer report-1 h n.ni t'xiiin vfa iiipmni n to pass another car on a curve. When ! anuuier car tame iniu vnw, lie operated nv Harry Leonard V em- pern of California. With him were his wife and daughter, but no one in this car was injured, except for very minor culs and bruises, said the officer. The State police said no charges have been filed but lhat the lnfor- malion wilt be turned over to the district attorney'! office. Funeral services for Baker will he held at Wilson's Chapel of the iioses Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. with the Rev. (iuy Zehring of the Conservative Baptist Church offici ating. Concluding services and vault interment will follow at the Itoscbure Memorial Gardens. frem Nebraska uak(,r was ! April 19. 1937, in Hastings, Ntbr. He moved 'to' Rose-1 )llrg in 1948 from Nebraska, and! attended local schools. lie is survived by his parents. Velina Vacca, Burbank, Calif., and .lames Baker of Roseburg; two sis- i-rc n i in,i Kirhv rtn.. burg Snpry) Bake., Burbank, and his grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Herb Beach, Portland. . Firemen Kept Busy With I limhoi- hll-O A fire in at the L.S pile of scrap lumber, Plywood mill kept Roseburg Rural Fire Department crews busy for almost four hours this morning. The fire, which started Sunday evening at 10:28 p.m. and was fi nallv put out at 2 a.m. todav. 'ausen no damage, as the scrap mmucr nan just piled up waiting Park., near the Veteran s Hospital properly. Ixo damage was report- that he expects lhat Ihe number of cases on the weltare roles will go up next month when dependent children return to school and the harvesting ends. However he said -.the department hopes to off set Ilus increase somewhat hy trying to dependent motners with school I children or with onlv one child employed during the coming '"'"" , I'unng the month of August. Siim.nerl.el. said, over half o the v " . mc niie oe pannicm are on airt to the a tied. xu, un '"V. '""J ex - ." "''"' 01 P,u t n ., i . i.f , ,,-. nur. iiiiiirTrTMifrm.wwiiMyMWiLLJBtLi-.i-.JL Established 1873 12 Pages ROSEBURG, OREGON MONDAY, AUGUST 22, 1960 194-60 PRICE 5c i United Nation m 111 Steps Okayed By Congolese 1.KOP01.DV1LI.E, the Congo (API The Congolese government t,.!-,,. t. if l.rl Iha .l..i-.n,l it has 'been trying lo impose on the Lnited .Nations Congo operation. 1 In a sharp reversal of ils pre-1 vious position, the government an- nounced it "sees no reason lo press its demands" in view of the a est SeeiirilV I Olint'll IlieeUnil Oil the fnn.'o " ' Policy Rooffirmtd The Security Council, in effect, i"', - ... , , , reaffirmed Ihe policy pursued by ,"e of, hls n,os lal"1"1 " .1. i' v c..Mt. -....i nj i phshmenls was the preservation llammarskjold. He has been un-1 rier lire bv the Conaolese who ac- i cuscd him of "blackmail, treason and plotting." Today, in a statement which neutrals in the Congolese capital, a Congolese government spokes man told newsmen: Government Satisfied "The government is satisfied lhat Belgian troops will be with drawn. The government considers lhat the atmosphere is good." Among the demands made by Premier Patrice Lumumba were withdrawal of all white United Nations soldiers from Ihe Congo, a supply of planes by the li.N. to transport Congolese soldiers to .1 I ...;t nnlitinal rl i CCHn Inn in the interior, and the appointment called blue sky law to protect in of an African-Asian committee to ! vestors, and guided legislation foi advise Haminarskjold. , Lumumba had threalened that I unless the Security Council bowed I to his demands he would appeal j . ,u n,. .i it h-w nir a.u i y""";" .V", iV-r "mluir umihl h the So the o hei power would ik iii' M viet Lnion. which has been gain- mg more ground daily in this uwunu The government'! position was communicated lo newsmen by Serge Michel, a left-wing expa triate Frenchman of Russian ori gin who has been acting as Lu mumba's chief press aide. Outboard Capsizes; 2 Fishermen Drown ASTORIA, Ore. (AP) A 14-foot outboard inotorboat went down in a storm in the Columbia River Sunday, and both men aboard were drowned. The body of Robert J. Meyer. 24, of Aloha, Ore., was washed ashore Sunday night at Chinook, Wash., just across the river from Astoria. The Coast Guard reported that 'he body of the second victim, Andrew F. Malhison, 55, of li- gard, Ore., was found on a beach at Baker Bay, Wash., near the mouth of the river, this morning. Both men had come here Sun day to fish, and had gone out into the river in their small boat. After they went out, a storm lashed the area. A commercial fisherman. Eu gene (loodell of Rosburg, Wash., found the outboard boat in his Rill nets early today, the Coast Guard said. A life jacket was on Meyer's body. He had been in the water four to six hours, the Coast Guard said. The area around Ilwaco i nd Ihe inoulh of Ihe Columbia River h3,H hit h umHsmi m Sun. dav and early '.Monday. The Coast' Guard said winds up to 50 miles an hour raked the area. Two Traffic Deaths Listed On Weekend By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Two have died in weekend car sm,ashups in Oregon, pushing the slate s death toll tins year in traffic accidents to 2.1. The deaths of Delbeil K. Green, 72. of Portland and Marion II. Ste phen. 4.1. of Gearhait raised Ihe Associated Press count of traffic viclims this month to 26. Stephen was killed Sunday when his car struck a retaining wall at a railway bridge just west of Ihe Vernonia Junction near Portland. Police said Green was killed when his car hit a tree at South east 57th Avenue and Southeast Flavel Street in Portland. Witnesses said he slumped over 'the wheel of his car before lhe;Cessive bolts of lightning killed a auto hit the tree Traffic Jam Delays Philharmonic Concert I PORTLAND (AP) A .,l n" traffic lam caused an hour', de- I ?V v 'h Ph th!rTe r.r ! the New York Ph''J'rmir; ' ch " I orlland Saturday , ,, ,..i. (u 4.tr; 1 , "' "- r ... Bern.. jaill Wd llir Ulllinua a i 'di'iuv , d h7e llo the ,n,...r. .... the Portland In. n m ir w v v s or a a v tar xr v v - ir -. jr -f -xzr Colorful Oswald West, Dies POHTI.AND (AP) - Former Gov. uswald West, whose lorcelul i hand molded a lasting imprint on i Oregon's government in one term I 5 years ago died here lo.lay. j .". ,' ".."'"";, lur sol"e l,l"le- a"li d'01' 111 sl,;'P ,at llls lu'"u'- '" ,11S one l0, m !ls governor, i , ,"V .i .',. . .. -"- m- ne an(1 pol'eies thai slill are au . miegiai paiL 01 v.iego.1 govern- uf, t''egon coastal beaches for the , I"'1."" West shcpherdwl lliruuuh the Legislature from 1911 to 1915 much of the state"s most progressive social legislation: The workmen's compensation law. protection of women and children in employment, reserva tion of the beaches for the people, the honor system at the stale peni tentiary. West wrote the oriqinal draft, setting up the state Hoard of Con trol, the top-level administrative agency composed of the governor, stale treasurer and secretary of stale. West appointed the first High way Commission, sponsored a so- for ', creation ot state boards ot r ish, I (Jame and Forestry. ! "I was 50 years ahead of my time, he remarked a few year s ( HKU III d llf .VAIIIdll. Seven Youths Die In Crash WINOOSKI, Vt. (AP)-'When a priest comes to your house al 7 in the morning, .you know some thing has. happened." That was how Florence Mcdir- rcau, widowed mother of J L chtl dren, learned her youngest son, Earle, 19, was one of seven youths killed in a predawn automobile crash Sunday. The accident was Ihe worst single-car crash in the state's history. The seven, all born in Ibis small community in the northwestern corner of Vermont, grew up to gether and graduated louether from Winooski High School last June. Six were dead when stale police reached the crash scene at 3 a.m. The seventh died minutes after ar rival al a Burlington hnsoital. Their lll.it sedan had skidded 500 feet on a rain-slicked hill at South Hero and wrapped ilself around a maple Iree. Edward Foley also heard the priest s knock. His son Ldward, 20. was another one of Ihe seven. "1 answered the knock. It was Msgr. (Charles D.) Towne (of SI Stephen's Catholic Church. He said he had had news about my son. 1 was stunned. 'Why, my boy s upslairs in bed, I lold him An,' Ihe monsignor said, your boy s nearer heaven Retired Army l.t. Col. Richard Daigle heard the news in church. His son. .lames. IN. wms alsn in the car. I went lo Mass at 7 o clock be- fuf. I always get up with Ihe ms, the father said. "There was still 10 minutes before Mass began when an usher tapped ine on the shoulder and said Msgr. Towne wanted to see me outside." Winooski's two Catholic church ei aren't big enough to hold all the mourners at a single joint service so there will be two herv- j ices. A solemn high Mass of requiem will be olfered al 9 a m. Wedne ; day in St. Francis Xavier church ' mr r.arie net arrenu, nunaiii Hog 20, and Maurice P. Soulicre, Two hours later, al SI. Ste phen's, Mass will be olfered for Foley, Uaigle. Norman E. Pa fpietie. 19. and William L. l.an dino, also 19. Lightning Bolts Kill Michigan Pair BAY CITY. Mich. fAPI-Suc- man and his wile Sunday. I The furious electrical storm ! felled Marjone Shook. 22, then killed her husband. Kotiert, 27, as j he ran lo her bodv. Ihe couple ilelt three young children. Mrs. Shook was vi.ilmg neigh - Knr. ,n rt. . n linun,.. u.h,.n "' " ' su"""" I "I've got lo get home lo mv 1 kirfishTtoM "lr .rMr.. i Chalfee. She ran out inlo the utorin Hi""' . niminsi ."in.U"M i wrao n a, e raincoat a mm, ! her when ih. first hall hit her Former Governor, West stepped out of active kale , polities m l;tl .". ami moved to Port-1 land to resume his law practice, i A heart attack in llil.i forced Innl to retire, but he had remained "" iiu.ue me incxsiiuu . s""' pasl years-doing research on in a case thai went all Ihe way i 'e sli"e a"1' writing scores of lo Ihe slale Supreme Court. , newspaper arlioles and w illy, Inl- j Another tune, a convict escaped , 0 .iuiiui imanu- mr wmu .iuu two daughters, .Mrs. Helen Stone i of San Francisco and .Mrs. Frank Mclliigh of Portland. West was a lile-long Democrat one of Ihe few members of his i party elected governor in the state. W hen he ran in the tall of ! 1910, Republicans oiit-iniinbered Democrats in Ihe state bv about 1 four lo one. But West won by ti.uuu i votes. j In recent years, as he worked at his home on the history of Ore-1 gon banking, and fired off letters; lo newspapers, West loved to chat with newsmen. "I've always voted Hie Demo cratic ticket, down the line, even for Harry Truman," he remarked to one reporter. He was a staunch foe of alcohol, and a supporter of prohibition dur ing the nation's dry era As he; explained it: "1 spent about three years of mv life as a bov silting in Iront 1 of a saloon behind a team of; horses wailing lo go home, and ever since it has been my ambi- tion to shoot a bartender." W est's years as governor gave the slate unprecedented advances in social legislation. He also gave Ihe governor's office a bit of vesve unmatched before or since. lle had a mission for law and order and during his term or - dered a slate of marlial law to clean up the wild litlle town of Conneiiield in Baker County. The lown was Idled with saloons, gambling halls, and vice ran unchecked. West sent in I lie Vets Hospital Medic Dies DR. FELIX VECCHIONE .... succumbs n,- Voliv V-tliruli.t-n V'nnr-hiiinu KR r!ir...t,.r nf nrnfi.ttinnu 1 sir. ices at the Hoseburg Veterans Hos- pilal died Sunday at a local hos- ltal He' was horn Sept. 11, 19011 all East Douglas, .Mass. He attended Tufts ('olk'Ke al HoMon, Mass., and was graduated from Boston University Medical School in 1942. He served as a captain in the U.S. Army during World War II. lie was married at Washington DC. March 17, IU44 to I'ri.scilla Hastings. He came to Roselmr" j from North Hampton, Mass., about1 a year ao. ife was a coinmuni-l cant at St. !eorge s Kpiscopal Church, a member of Ihe Ameri can Medical Association. American Psychiatric Association and the Koseburg Country Club. Survivors include his wife, Pris cilla; four children. Paul, Prised la, Felicia and Daniel, all of itose burg; four brothers. Fred Vec chione of Fort J.auderdale, Ma.. John Vecchione of Panama, Dal vatore Vecchione, Fautield, Calif., and the Itev. Felix Vecchione of Lafayette, Ore.; three sisters. Mrs. C'ea sai Oldoni of Hevere. Mass . Mrs. Warren llulke. Whit tier, Calif , and Mi s William Jack son, hast Boston, .Mass. Funeral services will be held at St. (ieorge s Kpiscopal Church Thursday at lu::m a m. with the 1 Kev. Alfred Tyson, rector, offiri - I a I lllll 'f.m.lnn inff inrvii... anI in. terment will follow at Willamette! National Cemetery in Portland. i V Vi'. jW Wfjl. f I i ontriDutions In a memorial at hi. i morning to put out a lire which I (ieorge's Kpiscopal Church may be burned a conveyor bell at the old made. His body will lie in stale at'dayward mill near the edge of Long St Orr Mortuary Mondav, j (llendaie. Tuesday and Wednesday until l(n u wll, nperaled by the Patterson P,m ll.iimlM'r Co. until the major part of ' Snob in Mm Wint 1 In Sleep National Guard to, as he put it:j'"'1' ownirs "c the """y m 1W8. "Burn up Hie gambling equipment Revision Needed and seize the hou.e." i Bvrd, who last week sent a let- The order was carried out. but : ier 'to 'the stale Tav rnmmUsinn saloon keepers tiled a S:iO,OoU Milt ' prison, ami ine aim West the governorl armed wilh ;i(i-.:iO rifle went j out anil tracked him dow n in Ihe i lulls and relurned In in to the pern- tenltary. W est as a young man was a messenger for the l.add and Bush Bank of Salem, and studied law on the side. In IIHi.l he was ap miinled a slate land agent, and helped recover SWU.Ouu acres of land lor the slate. "Over 4U0.000 acres had been obtained by forgeries and the rest on application by land bums," he once sail In 1907 he was appointed lo the state Railroad Commission. He was elected governor in 1910, but declined lo run a second term. As he explained it recently lo a newsman: "1 accomplished nearly everything I set out to do in one term." Barbara Powers Seeks T Meet MOSCOW (API Barbara Pow- Prs decided todav lo appeal di Irecllv In Premier Nikila Khru- siuhev foe elemencv for her hus- ; band Gary Powers. I -.she has decided it would lake l)n hing lo await the outcome of her anueal lo President J.eonid Brezhnev." said attorney Frank W. Rogers of Roanoke, Va. Mrs. Powers, 25, brunette wife of the :il-year-old American flier sentenced lo 10 years' detention for espionage against Ihe Soviet Union ear her had lold reporters she would await the outcome of this formal appeal before trying lo sec Khrushchev. The Soviet Premier is vacation ing in Yalta on the Black Sea, and just how she intended to go aliout seeing him was in doubt. 11 is known that the pilot's father also intends lo press ahead with efforts lo see Khrushchev, hut his attempt did not appear to be co ordinated wilh that of his daughter-in-law. They also were report ed to have disagreed on the word ing of an appeal. There was no indication of the points in dispute, but lawyers who accompanied the family lo Mos cow for Powers' espionage trial last week said the flier's wife and his parents had not been able to agree on Ihe wording of the mercy petition they had planned to sub mit to Brezhnev loday. The lawyers said there was a possibility two petitions would be submitted one from Barbara, and one from the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver W. Powers of Pound, Va. The American pilot was sen tenced Friday lo three years in prison and seven more of "de privation of liberty." presumably in a labor camp. Powers has said ,lR UOCS nOl llllllR I1C lid IIIUCll uwme ,ul vivintuij. Mikhail Griniov, Powers' Soviet defense lawyer, told Ihe pilot's family it usually takes about a month for a clemency plea to be ' acted on bill that it might be fast er in this case because the fam ily is in Moscow awaiting the out come. Many Fair Entries Closing Today This is fair week in Douglas County. The annual Douglas Counly Fair and Kxposition. replete with new buildings and a thou sand new features, gets under way Thursday morning. Many entries are being closed loday in preparation. Others will have until Wednesday to make their entries. The fair will continue through Sunday night when Ihe finals of the talent conlest will be staged. Glendale Lumber Mill's - n I. nl 1 lOnVeVOr Dell DlOZeS f: endale vo unleer firemen 1 were called about 3 a.m. Sunday it burned early in June. The site of the blaze, according lo Fire $300,000 Refund Due Timberlands Background story, page 2 All property taxpayers except limber owners will probably be get ting an extra tax bill this year as the result of a Supreme Court de cision hist week. Sherilf Ira I'. Bvrd. Doudu i County tax collector, and Asses sor Morris Bowker are the men whose departments are caught in the squeeze which resulted from the difference of opinion between the stale Tax Commission and tim- akinft what to do about the Su- preme I ourt decision which over- rled the Tax Commission, today reimrled he had received an an mr In Ihe letter, the key to the job hnd for the numur anH i n..i. lector is this- -Th. unrrfmo r decree indicates that you are red in your presumption that the entire tax roll will have to be re vised." The letter was written bv John C. Mull, state Tax Commission at torney, it says that refunds for excess taxes paid must be made to an taxpayers on timber in the 1958 year. These refunds will be paid from the county general fund. But all taxing districts or tax levying bodies must reimburse the general fund "by Ihe amount of refunded taxes received by it." $300,000 Rafund This means Uiat an estimated S.KW.000 must be refunded to tim ber owner taxpayers in the county with an additional 6 per cent in terest on the money. But that S-Ton . 000 must be made up by taxpayers un an oiner types ot property. They will have lo pay g per cent inter est on the money. Tax collector Byrd calls it a sit uation unique in the United States. Interest Question Byrd says many questions are still unanswered desDite tha three- page letter. He says he has asked the district attorney for an opinion on the 8 per cent interest which win be charged to all taxpayers but timber owners. He also re ports he will request a meeting with slale Tax Commission person nel lo determine proper procedure in the job of righting tha record. He points out that the physical job will be titanic. Ha says all tax rolls for the 1958 year must be made up and corrections made on every lax bill. Compounding the problem, Byrd says the tax collec tion department is now entering its heavy time of Ihe year. He es timated cost lo the county in just carrying out the job will run into the thousands of dollars. The change on lax rolls will in volve only the 1958-59 tax year. Light Plane Safe; Two Still Missing By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ono of the small planes missing on flights in various parts of tha country was found safe today. Carrying a family of four, it had made an unscheduled landing in Tennessee because of bad weather. Searches went on in New Eng land and the central states for two other planes, bearing seven persons. Tha Civil Air Patrol reported thai a four-seat single-engine plane which had failed to arrive in Atlanta, ('.. Sunday on a scheduled two-hour hop from Bowling fJcen. Ky., had been found at McMinnville. Tenn. A missing plane was flown hy Rodman Carey, member of the Do Kalb, 111., police department, on a vacation trip with his wife and Iwo children. The plane took off Friday at Montpcfier, Vt., for a one-hour hop to Manchester, N. II. Those aboard included William K. Martin, 5.1. a veteran pilot of Concord. N. II., hired for the trip by two officials of First N.itional Stores, Charles MacFarland of Wobiirn, Mass., and Oliver Whit comb of Wilmington, Mass. Air and land searchers ranged over an area from northern New York lo Oklahoma, seeking a missing Oklahoma City family of four. They left Teterhoro, N. J., lasl Tuesday morning for Okla homa City. Okla. Henry Griffing, 51), president u( Video Independent Theaters, Inc., was flying the plane, accom panied bv his wife, Josephine, and daughter Linda, 20, and son, Phillip, 21. Grants Pass Woman Injured In Portland PORTLAND (AP) Two cars collided in Portland Sunday, and a Crants Pass woman was pitched from one nf them onto Ihe street: Good Samaritan Hospital later reported that the injured woman, 43 year old Mrs. Faye Deters, was in satisfactory condition. She suffered chest injuries and a pos- sible jaw fracture Levity Fact Rant By L F. Reizenstein It il laid "To err ii human, to for give divine"; So-o-o-o "Jail term Impended on payment of fine."