The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, August 23, 1960, Page 2, Image 2

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    2 The New-Review, Roteburg, Ore. Tue., Aug. 23, I960
Communists
Into Congo
Said Pouring
Capital City
I.EOPOI.DV1LLE, THE Conso
(AP) Communists and "anti-imperialists"
of uncertain doctrinal
background are pouring into Leo
plldville. Hardly a day passes without one
of the Soviet planes unloading dis
heveled visitors of vaguely Slavic
appearance. .
Soviet Ambassador M. D. Yak
ovlov has rented an embassy on a
street named after the haled Bel
gian colonialist Leopold 11 and he
will have no trouble staffing it.
It is only a short distance from
the Cicch Embassy, which has
Missing Plane
Found In Canyon
EAGLE, Colo! (AP) Four Mis
sourians three men and a wom
anwere alive today alter ineir
single - engine plane bashed
against the rocks of a deep can
yon in the snow-swept Colorado
Rockies.
The men reached safety Mon
day and Monday night. A rescue
team was to bring out the woman
today.
A. W. Blue, 31, of the stale hos
pital at St. Joseph, and T. L.
1'ursley of Nevada, were brought
out by jeep and ambulance short
ly before midnight. Wue was
identified as the pilot.
Ellis Lynn Shults, 24, also of
the stale hospital at St. Joseph,
plodded through 20 miles of dense
forest, reaching the ranch home
of Tom Currier at mid-afternoon
Monday when he summoned help.
His wife, Bonnie Shutts, 24, cri
tically injured with a back injury,
lay at the crash scene during the
night in a shelter of boughs and
nylon tenting. Medical aid which
reached the site by jeep just aft
er dark remained with her.
Blue and Pursley, who suffered
hroken legs, were hospitalized at
Glcnwood Springs, Colo. Their
condition was described as good.
Shutts suffered cuts, bruises and
a sprained ankle.
The crash of the Tri-Pacer Pip
er occurred Sunday about 30 min
utes after the San Francisco va-calion-hound
party had departed
from the Eagle airport. Shnlls
said he thought the plane was
caught in a dowmlraft.
been in business here as a con
sulate for months.
If Premier Patrice Lumumba, as
he threatens, turns to one of the
Communist slates for "disinterest
ed assistance" he won't have to
turn very far.
Lumumba's office has begun to
look like a Communist reading
room. His written statements, cor
respondence, and radio orations
have acquired a polished French
flavor unusual in a nation with 16
college graduates, only one of
whom is in Lumumba's Cabinet.
Most revealing of all. corre
spondents for Soviet and other
Communist journals have turned
up in surprising numbers. There
is even a correspondent from the
Soviet literary publication, Liter
ary Gazette.
One of Uic new journalistic ar
rivals has been showing around
a booklet entitled "Hands Off the
Congo." It presumably is being
distributed among the Conglese
population, about 20 per cent of
whom can read. 11 contains most
of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush
chev's speeches concerning the
Congo, up to and including one on
Aug. 8.
Sunday, 25 Czechs arrived. They
were described as embassy staff.
The Czechs were reported prepar
ing to supply the Congo the hun
dreds of French-speaking teachers
it requires to open the schools next
month.
The U.S. Air Force brought a
good number of Communist-indoctrinated
persons when it flew in
Guinea's soldiers a few weeks ago.
Each company had its political
commissar.
Gen. Lansamas Djane, who be
came a general only the night be
fore he left for the Congo, took
off his uniform soon after arrival
and now is a civilian adviser to
Lumumba and the government. It
is believed that a good many other
Guinea U.N. soldiers have become
civilian advisers.
Another prominent figure in Lu
mumba's entourage is Mrs. Andre
Klouin, who was expelled from
the Congo by Belgian authorities,
before independence, for her left
wing activities. She is chief of
protocol and takes a hand in writ
ing scripts with a distinct anti
Western bias for the Congolese
radio.
Drunkenness, Vagrancy
Counts Draw Sentences
Lawrence Earl Blakcr, 50, Port
land, Monday was fined $150 and
senlenced to servo 10 days in Hie
Douglas County jail on a plea of
cuiltv to drunken driving in the
court of District Judge Warren
Woodruff.
In other district court actions
Monday, Robert D. Fadncss, 27,
of Kelso, Wash., was fined $25 for
vagrancy and sentenced to serve
five days in the Douglas Cuunty
iail.
Doris Blomberg, 35, of D r a I n
pleaded innocent to a drunken
driving charge and asked for a
jury trial. She was arrested earlier
by Stale Police. However, Charles
Dndd, 30, Roseburg, arrested with
her on a charge of being drunk on
a public street, changed an earlier
plea of innocent to guilty and was
fined $40.
Interim Group Asks
Death Penalty End
PORTLAND (AP) The Inter
im Committee on Criminal Law
says it will ask the next Legisla
ture to approve a ballot measure
to delele Ihc slate constitutional
provision for a mandatory death
sentence for persons convr1'. of
first degree murder.
Sen. Carl Francis (H Dayton 1,
chairman of the 20-mrniher com
mittee, said Monday the commit
tee will urge that only a person
found guilly of treason or of mur
der cuinmiltcd while (he person
is in prison for a first degree
murder conviction may be exe
cuted. A slim majority of the commit
tee members, mostly lawyers,
also urged a minimum of five
years for felony convictions. It
reasoned that a year or less in
prison did not provide time for
rehabilitating Hie convict.
Among other proposals to he
presented to the Legislature was
one to allow wire tapping by
police In narcotics cases.
Missed Turn Fatal
To Everett Woman
THE DALLES. Ore. (AP) A
car missed a turn and plunged
clown a 00-foot embankment Mon
day, killing Mrs. Elmer Kudeen,
68. Everett. Wash.
State nolico said she was thrown
from the vehicle and killed out
right in the accident four miles
nnrlh of Tvgh Valley.
Three Other occupants of the
ear were iniured.
Taken to The Dalles General
Hospital in fair condition was Mrs.
Rudeen's husband and Mrs. Ellen
Brown. 78, of Portland, whose con
dition also was described as cnli-
p:il
Doctors at the hospital treated
Pamela Edith Barber, 16, of
Edmonds. Wash., for minor cuts
and bruises.
Mrs Rudeen's death was Ore
gon's sixth reported traffic fatality
since last Friday.
Funeral Service
Set For Oz West
PORTLAND (AP) Funeral
services will be here at 11:30 a m
Wednesday for former Oregon
Gov. Oswald West, who died Mon
il.iv at the age of 87.
Private commitment will be
held later in the day at Salem.
The lit. Rev. Benjamin D. Dag
well, retired hishou of the Euis
coual Diocese of Oregon, will
oflicialc at the services.
Bids Called For Five
County Road Rollers
Bids will be opened Aug. 30 at
10:30 a.m. at the courthouse by
the Douglas County Court for pur
chase of five two-axle rollers lo be
used for road maintenance work.
County Engineer Al May says the
county is paving roads at (he rate
of about 30 luiles a year, and mure
equipment is now needed to main
tain them. The rollers, weighing
from four lo six tons, will be used
for patching.
New County Historical
Motor Club Announced
A club has been formed in Rose
burg for the purpose of restoring
old-time cars to running order. It
is the Cascade Historical Motor
Club, with a membership of about
12 antique ear owners.
The public will get its first view
of the club's work at the Douglas
County Fair and Exposition this
week. H will have a display of
three refurbished ears, a 1S23 Rco
1028 Dudue and 1913 Model T Ford
Charter officers of the club arc
Gordon Larson of Roseburg, presi
dent; Fred Young of Myrtle
Creek, vice president; Alice Lar
son of Roseburg, secretary-treasurer;
anil Jack Biisenbark of Rose
burg. nublieilv chairman.
The next meeting of the club is
scheduled Sept. 9 at the home of
( in lis Byrd, 1863 bis Douglas Ave.
Roseburg.
Ex-U. S. Airman
Seeks Cuban Job
HAVANA (AP)-A dishonorably
discharged U.S. Air Force ser
geant who once tried to defect to
the Soviet Union said today the
Cuban air force is considering his
application for a job in Fidel
Castro's intelligence service.
Paul D. Wilson, 31, of Indian
apolis, Ind., said Castro's secre
tary, Juan D. Orta, wired him the
air force would get in touch with
him.
Wilson told newsmen Monday he
hoped to join Castro as a "loyal
Cuoan patriot.
Wilson said he was in the U.S.
Air Force 12 years and tried to
defect to the Soviet Union while
serving in Germany but was
caught by U.S. military police. He
subsequently was sentenced to
three years in prison and a dis
honorable discharge for desertion,
larceny and forgery. He was freed
after serving part of his term in
federal prison in the Lnited
States.
His former wife, Loyce Sims.
and two children, Ralph 8, and
Paula, 4, live in Indianapolis. His
mother lives in North Miami
Beach, Fla.
Another new defector from the
United States, Polish-born U.S.
Army Specialist 5th class Vladi
mir Sloboda, "had lost a lot of
money gambling" and had been
very depressed, according to the
British wife he left in Fnnkfurt,
Germany, with their three chil
dren. The Soviet government news
paper Izvestia announced Sloboda
had crossed into East Germany
and asked for asylum in the Sov
iet Union. Ho had been a U.S.
citizen for only two years.
A U.S. Army spokesman said
Sloboda, 33, although attachel to a
military intelligence unit "flt
Frankfurt, served as a linguist
and clerk and had "only very lim
ited access to any security information."
Shakespeare Fete
Draws Big Crowds
Records are being set ilmost
nightly al the Oregon Shakespear
ean Festival's current 1960 season
in Ashland. On Sunday evening
(Aug. 21), Richard Risso's staging
of "Richard II" established a new
mark for chronicle history produc
tions by selling out and playing to
standees. Total audience for the
night was 1,172, 28 over capacity.
This broke the record set by the
same show on Aug. 13 of this year
when 1,117 were on hand. This was
the first time in Festival history
that a chronicle play has soid out,
and it happened on a traditionally
low-count night, with unseasonably
cool weather.
Sunday was the fourth sell-out in
a row for the very successful Fes
tival season. Never before have
productions sold out consecutively
at the Elizabethan theatre. Heavy
advance sales indicate more to
come, with ten over-capacity nights
already in the books. Patrons who i
have not made their reservations
are advised to do so immediately.
Best seating is still for the last
round of plays, starting Aug. 30.
The final "Taming of the Shrew"
performance, however, (Sept. 1)
has been sold out. Standing room
tickets for $1.20 are available for
all sell-out nights.
After seven complete rounds of
productions, audience totals have
reached 28,098. This is 2,678 ahead
of last year at this time. The 1959
total of 36,593 was a new all-time
high for the theatre. "Shrew" still
leads at the box office, having now
reached a total of 8,328. Second is
"Julius Caesar" at 7,217. "T h e
Tempest" has moved into third
with 6,323 and "Richard" has been
seen by 6,230. All four major pro
ductions have now sold out at least
once. The season continues night
ly through Sept. 3.
Gem Show Attraction
i -.M.jirr-ri-i I. 111 "
i h ' . W- 't -r T y t ' "
WJ i iMHIiW
AFRICAN BELLE is one of the outstanding gem stone works ot Mrs. Ulive m. iomour or
Seottle, who will be featured with this ond other works ot the Gem and Mineral Show of
this week's Douglas County Fair ond Exposition. Mrs. Colhour is nationally known for her
carving of fi're agate. The tiny figurines are mounted on driftwood. Her work has been
featured in the best gem and mineral magazines and "Gemcraft" a new book, uses seven
poges of her carvings. Hand-made jewelry of silver and gold, which Mrs. Colhour has
designed and done all the silversmithing and faceting of stones, will also be featured at
this exhibit. She will be on hand for oil four days of the fair.
Bids Called For Two
Forest Service Jobs
Bids are now being invited for
two U.S. Forest Service jobs in
Douglas County.
They will be opened at 3' p.m.
Sept 15 and the same time Sept.
16. The first calls for surfacing the
Steamboat Ranger Station Loop
Rd. The second consisls of con
struction of two single-story frame
buildings at Tokelee Ranger Sta
tion. The first job on which bids will
be opened is the surfacing. It calls
for 465 cubic yards of crushed
gravel and 30 tons of bituminous
preservative treatment.
The second job, on which bid
will be opened Sept. 16, calls for
one building measuring 28-uy-62
feet and the other measuring 30-hy-80
feet. The first will be used
for a 10 man crewhouse and the
second will be for equipment
storage.
A pro-bid conference will be held
Aug. 30 at 1 D.m .and the site will
be shown. The bids will be opened
by the regional contracting officer
in Portland.
Mother Seeks Word
From Missing Son
GREAT NECK, N. Y. (AP)
the mother of an American stu
dent cxoelled from the Soviet Un
ion for taking pictures termed the
action "utterly ridiculous."
However, Ann D. Andrews ex
pressed concern because she has
had no word from her son Joseph,
21. or American authorities as to
his whereabouts or the situation chargei presided.
Night Openings, Freight Rates Get
Consideration At Chamber Meeting
concerning him. She learned ot
the expulsion from news reports.
The U. S. Embassy in Moscow
was informed Monday that An
drews and two other American
students had been booted out of
the country, the latter for driving
on a side road off limits to foreigners.
Guilty Plea Withdrawal
Denied In Circuit Court
Leading Oregon Banker, Former
Newspaper Publisher, Dies At 79
PORTLAND (AP) Ernest Boyd
MacNaughton, a leading banker,
publisher and college president
for many years in Oregon, died in
a hospital here today of cancer
after a three-month illness. He
was 79.
MacNaughton was president of
EVER SEEN
Mr. Hedge's
Hogs?" A
f SCADS OF EXHIBITS
DOUGLAS COUMTY
FAIR
III
AUG. 25 . 28
the state wide First National B;mk
of Oregon from 19:i2 tu 1S47, and
then became chairman of the
board.
He also had been president of
the ri'Kninn Publishing Co.,
publisher of the Portland OrcKou
lan. from 1UI7 to 1950.
In addition to his other inter
ests, he became president of Keed
College here in VMH, and in the
four years he held the post helped
solve some of the school's press
ing financial problems.
At the time he became presi
dent of the smalt liberal arts cot
lejie. he remarked: "I'm only
here to hold Heed College together
and to keep it educationally sol
vent until an educator is picked
out as new president. ' He suc
ceeded. He worked hard at (he job, giv
ing scores of speeches and con
ducting fund raising campaigns.
In the spring, he often walked
around the campus, chatting with
-
Robert Lister Burnett, 35, of
Medford was denied an opportu
nity lo withdraw a plea of guilly
to a charge of contributing In the
delinquency of a minor and have
his case submitted to the grand
jury.
Judge Elilon F. Caley Monday
denied Burnett's motion. He stat
ed in his order that Burnett had
previously waived all rights and
had pleaded guilty in open court
to the district attorney's informa
tion.
The judge continued his order
that Burnett he transported to the
Oregon stale mental institution for
psychiatric examination prior to
imposition of sentence.
Guilty Plea Entered
' In 3 Separate Charges
James Earl Robcrson, 21, of 21M
NE Malheur Ave., pleaded guilty
to three separate charges and
drew a 30-day jail Urrn and fines
totalling $235, on appearance in
JHoseburg Municipal Court Mon
day. Judge Randolph Slocuin fined
him $150 and sentenced him to
serve 30 days in the Douglas Coun
ty jail for assault and battery; $75
for reckless driving and 510 for
driving with no operator's license.
Robcrson was accused in a pri
vate complaint of William Prank
Steele, Myrtle Creek, of having run
him off the road and then striking
him through the window of his car.
City police made the. arrest Satur
day night and the further charge
of driving with no operator's li
cense. Judge Slocuin suspended Rober
son's right to apply for an oper
ator's license for another 60 days.
Several topics ranging from
trucking freight rates to conven
tions and night openings were dis
cussed at a meeting of the trade
development division of the Rose
burg Chamber of Commerce Mon
day noon at the umpqua Hotel.
Bob Curtis, vice president in
O. L. Stewart, Southwest Ore
gon Shippers' Traffic Assn., Inc.,
executive secretary, called atten
tion lo a hearing Sept. 1 by the
Public Utilities Commissioner of
Oregon on proposed trucking rale
increases. Petition for an increase
in intra-state charges for motor
carriers has been filed by the Pa
cific Inland Tariff Bureau.
Brush With Semi
Injures Woman
Iris Dahlke. Bandon. suffered
bruises and lacerations and was
taken lo Douglas Community Hos
pital for treatment, after her car
was involved in an accident with
a tractor towing a low-boy semi
trailer. According to Stale Police, the ac
cident occurred on Highway 42 2.9
miles west of Camas Valley, at
3:30 p.m. Monday.
The tractor, registered to Paul
son Truck Line, Roseburg, and
operated by Delbert Leroy Wisbey
of Roseburg was headed east on
Highway 42. As it rounded a curve,
the second vehicle, operated by
Iris Dahlke, was apparently in the
east bound lane of traffic, police
said. The Dahlke car was struck on
the left side.
NEWRENAULTS
WHOLESALE
Full Price
$1393
Known The World Over A$ The Most Economi
cal 4-Door Car
Most popular and one of the oldest European
made cars.
Trade your old "gas burner" on one of these
fine small cars.
HANSEN MOTOR CO.
students and pelting stray dogs.
Among his other activities:
Irustee of the American Assn. for
the I'nited Nations, national lav
moderator of the Unitarian
( hurch and a director of the Port
land branch of the Federal He
serve Bank of San Francisco.
Survivors include the widow
two sons, Boyd and Maleom Mac
Naughlon, both of Honolulu, and
a daughter, Mrs. Stuart Kerr of
Portland.
MacNaughton was born in Cam
bridge, Mass., worked his way
through college and came lo Port
land shortly after the turn of the
century. He went into Ihc con
struction business, and by 1928
hail acquired an interest in the,
bank and been named Us vrv
president.
lie had been active for more
than 50 years in a wide range of
civic projects in Oregon. He had
been head of the Oregon Cancer
Society, president of the Oregon
Roadside Council and a top offi
cial of the American Civil Liber
ties. Union.
MacNaughton also was a mem
ber of the stale Mining Board.
One of his most lauded achieve
ments in later years was his work
for Heed while president of the
nationally recognized college.
Many credited him with preserv
ing the school's future.
Once asked about his wide range
of interests, MacNaughton said:
"Businessmen must get their
noses out of their account books
and take a long look al human
values."
Innocent Plea Entered
In Interference Charge
Rex Holland Roberts. 1397 Reser
voir Ave., entered a plea of inno
cent to a charge of interference
with police in Roseburg Municipal
Court Monday. He did not appear
but was represented by an attor
ney. City police filed the charge
against Roberts ' early Sunday,
along with a second charge of
failure to stop at a stop street.
Action on the non-stop charge was
continued until Wednesday.
Trial on the interference wilh po
lice charge was set by Judge
Randolph Slocum for Oct. 12. Rob
erts bail, set at $100, was continued.
Labor Bureau Starts
Recruitment For Men
Norman O. Nilsen, commission
er for the state Bureau of Labor,
announced that recruitment is now
being conducted to fill a vacancy
in the Civil Rights Division. The
position is thai of field representa
tive and involves close contact
wilh various management groups
in Oregon to eliminate and pre
vent discrimination because of
race, religion, color, or national or
igin. Additional information may be
obtained by contacting the Oregon
Civil Service Commission in Sa
lem.
Glendale Gets
New Water Line
Carl Lilja
Carl Lilja. 39. born and raised
in Canyonville. who served in both
Ihe Atlantic and Pacific theaters
with the Navy, died Saturday aft
ernoon at the Naval hospital in
Oakland, Calif.
He is survived by his wife,
Marjoiie; four children, Charles,
Carol Anne. Linda and Ralph: a
brother, Donald: two sisters, Miss
Helen Lilja and Mis. Louis Van
trot; and his mother, .Mrs. Pcda
I.ilia, of Canyonville.
Funeral services have not been
announced according to Virginia
Proctor, correspondent.
Nellie Lucille Henbest
Nellie Lucille Henbest, 56. died
Monday night at a local hospital.
Funeral arrangements will be an
nounced later by Wilson's Chapel
of the Roses.
Burglaries Reported
R. A. Kroon. 459 NE Winchester
St., reported to cily police today
(he theft of a new automobile bat
tery from his I960 model car some
,... hi.. Q n , ViinJ.iv anH
lime u.in..,. i.t,. ..,. ......
s -.to a.m. Mondav. The car was!
parked in the lot at the rear of his
home.
Wos Jackson reported the theft
of hub caps from his car parked
at the U.S. Plywood parking lot on
Rifle Range Road some time Mon
day. He lives at 114 SE Templin
Ave.
Kenneth Stout, 43G V. Harrison
St. reported to officers a burglary i
at his home early Saturday. A Iran-1
sistor radio and six dollars in bills
were reported missing.
Water department employes com
pleted work on Glendale lines on
Mondav and turned the water from
Mill Creek into the city reservoir,
according to Ralph Place, Glen
dale mayor.
The reservoir is full and ci!y wa
ter pressure as well as water sup
plies arc now fully adequate, ac
cording to Place. Water officials
are satisfied thai it will no longer
be necessary to pump any water
from Cow Creek.
Another hot spec! might make it
necessary to pump, part - time,
from the spring which has furnish
ed a part ot tnc water supply.
Even that, at the present time, is
unnecessary. t
GROUP TO MEET j
The Winston - Dillard Toastmis
tress Club will meet at the home
of Mrs. Fran Allen in Winston Wed
nesday at 7 p.m. for an outdoor
barbecue and to discuss plans for
the coining year. Also plans will
he made for the Council Eight
meeting which will be held Sept.
U at Camas Valley, reports Phebe
McGuirc, correspondent.
He advised that opposition to the. of-stale cars,
increase should be expressed in
letters to the commissioner. He
said the increase would add con
siderable to costs of merchandise
in the Roseburg area and add to'
other transportation expenses.
Dick Smith, assistant manager of
the Umpqua Hotel, reported that,
while half a million dollars were
spent in Roseburg from conven
tions in each of 1958 and 1959, the
amount will be down considerably
because of fewer conventions in
1960. Next year will be even worse, ;
as only two conventions are bilbd
for 1961, he said. One of these will!
be a major convention, that of the
state Lions Clubs, which will at
tract more than 1,000 persons.
Smith said that several things
have happened to cut down on con-,
ventions. Two new hotels in Port-;
land are going all out to bring con
ventions to their city by hiring
agents to attend conventions and
promote Portland as the site, and
a remodeled hotel in Salem is do-
ing the same.
Favorable Spot
But fundamentally, he stated, I
whether a convention accepts
Roseburg as a site depends on
whether the members of the re
spective organizations want them
here and are willing to work lo
make a bid for the convention and
do what is necessary to put it on.
Roseburg is one of the few cities
in the slate with facilities now
available to put on the larger con
ventions. The retail trade committee un
der Jack Davis, wholesale trade
under Paul Jackson, conventions
under Aaron Boe and tourist pro
motion under A. (.. (Mike) Mc-
Lain met separately to discuss
their respective jobs.
Friday Opening
Friday night opening continua
tion was discussed by the retail
trades division, but no action was
taken. The openings ate being con
ducted Friday nights this month
experimentally to determine popu
larity and need.
r'air Week bumper strips and
number prizes were also discussed
ine merchants have been giving
away bumper strips promoting the
fair, and will be awarding prizes
to persons having numbers on their
strips corresponding to numbers in
tnc various stores. A grand prize
win oe awaraeo.
Brackets to hold holiday decor
ations, courtesy tickets for out'
tourist information
signs and magazine advertising
were other topics brought up in
committee discussions.
4 wjls
Hearing"
SCHOLARSHIP
CONTEST
THE exCIIINO i
CONTEST YOU'VE
HEARD ABOUT ON GARItOWAY'S "
today SHOW NSC-TV
PIUS
k 8 BIG WEEKLY CONTESTS ) "
200 WINNERS
25 EACH WEEK
"HELP A CHILD TO HEAR"
SCHOLARSHIPS ;
NOTHING TO BUY
--yfftiTH "Living Sound"
Hearing Aids
COME IN AND ENTER
CHAPMAN'S
PHARMACY
663 S. E. JACKSON
OR 3-4533
(PlifJ Aflvtftnefflfnt)
W. T. "Aly" Allen
Consultant
for
OREGON
FUNERAL PLAN
Coll btfort 1:00 a m. r after 6:00 p.m.
ORchard 2-3273
1535 N. E.JOHN
I : ,- J JU" v
RUMMAGE SALE PLANNED
A rummage sale will be held hv
Ihe Winston Dillard Skating Club
Saturday from 9 a m. lo 5 p.m.
at the Winston Fire Hall, reports
Phone Mclluire, correspondent.
Anyone having rummage is asked
to phone OS 9SS07 for rummace
pick up or leave it al the Fire Hall
in Winston.
I;!.1 Only 8.64
RUG CLEANING
9x12
Sii
Including Titkup and Dtlivtry
RHOADS Cleaning Service
Phont OR 21096 (Behind
Richit'i Drivt-ln N. Srtphcni)
SAVE
CASH
with
OVERTIME
PARKING
See
Thursday's
NEWS-REVIEW
. .. .1
EBBnKV Anticipated
V Dividend
-iiiiiM
4
L9iiffl
hi
am
ia.vVa'