The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, September 09, 1960, Page 14, Image 14

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    14 Th Newi-Review, Rouburg, Or. FrJ., Sept. 9, 19601 r
Washington Residents Visit
Melrose; Girl Breaks Arm
By NETTIE WOODRUFF
Recent weekend visitors at the
Ken Trindall home were Mrs. Bet
tv Murphy and family of Eaton
v'ille, Wash. Donna Murphy, 15,
fell from a neighbor's horse and
ractured her arm while they were
here.
Air. and Mrs. Lee Glad of Port
land were also holiday weekend
visitors at the home of his aunt,
Mrs. Trindall.
Htif.r Won
Leta Busenbark won a thorough
bred heifer at the fair. It was given
by the Don Ouer's dairy. Leta ex
pects to go to the State Fair at
Salem to participate in a dairy
judging contest. She will accom
pany Fran Von Borstel, 4 H club
agent, and other contestants.
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Rhoden
spent last week rock hunting in
Eastern Oregon and later fishing
at the coast.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Conn and
two sons of Grants Pass spent the
holiday in Melrose with his par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Creed Conn,
and other relatives.
Coming for the funeral services
of the late Mrs. J. F. Bonebrake
were Mrs. Nilcs Leach and Mrs.
Bonnie Miller and family of Cres
cent City, Calif., and Niles Leach
of Port Angeles, Wash. Bob Bone
brake has left for his Air Force
Base in Georgia after being here
for the services. Mr. and Mrs.
High Court Upholds
Tax Case Ruling
SALEM (AP) The State Tax
Commission cannot tax certifi
cates of earnings in a farm co
operative' until cash or payment
is received, the Oregon Supreme
Court decided Wednesday.
The high court upheld a finding
of Marion County Circuit Judge
Val D. Sloper who had ruled
against the commission in a case
brought by James E. and Faith
W. Kuhns.
The Tax Commission had con
tended that patronage dividend
certificates are reportable as peri
sonal income in the year they are
issued rather than the year they
are paid.
Such certificates cannot be sold
or applied on the debts to the
operative and have no cash value
until some time in the future
which may never come to pass,
the court said.
It noted that such patronage
dividends are not included In fed
eral tax returns until the year
when the funds are payable.
MUSICAL UPS AND DOWNS
DENVER (AP) Leslie J. Fore,
who runs an elevator at the Colo
rado Historical Museum, is a for
mer dance band leader. He esti
mates he has 50,000 pieces of sheet
music in his collection, including
107 that have some reference to
Colorado.
YOU CAN
HELP
Dick Bonebrake and family of 11c
Minnville were here also and vis
ited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W.
F. Bonebrake.
Frank O'Brien and family have
moved to the former Burkhart
place on Cleveland Hill Road.
Daughter Visited
Mr. and Mrs. George Williamson
and Linda of Brownsville spent the
holiday with their daughter, Mrs.
Dick Gilman, and family.
George Larson spent the Labor
Day weekend bow and arrow deer
hunting near Deschutes.
The Bob Tjomslands and Bobby
spent the holiday weekend in their
trailer at the coast.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted fleece and chil
dren spent the holiday weekend in
Portland with relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Armstrong
and daughters have returned from
a weekend visit in Portland with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Bug
bee. Mr. and Mrs, C. E. Reece and
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Strickling
spent Labor Day at coast points
going over the Coos Bay Wagon
Road and back by way of Kellogg.
Woman Visits
In Lookingglass
By HAZEL MARSH
Mrs. Leslie Lone of Namoa
Calif., recently spent several days
at LooKinggiass renewing acquaint
ance with former friends.
Mrs. Long, nee Frances Welsh,
spent her girlhood days in the val
ley with her parents and family
and was graduated from the local
school. She reported that her lath
er died about a year ago. the vie
tim of cancer, and that her mother
resides with one of her daughters
in Red Bluff, Calif.
Mr. and Mrs. Jon Wilson drove
to Sisters over a recent weekend
to bring back their two children
who spent the summer with their
grandparents, Jtir. and Mrs. John
Wilson.
Miss Darlcne Ollivant, who re
cently graduated from the Nursing
School of Sacred Heart Hospital in
Eugene, is spending some time
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
E. E. Ollivant and family prior to
her marriage to Curt Hurley, which
win take place sept, it in Looking
glass.
Mrs. Fred Southwock', assisted
by Mrs. Grant Nielsen and Carl
Ellis, took a group of intermediate
age youth to the Loyal Temperance
Legion Camp held recently at
Camp Myrtle wood near Bridge.
Young folk from Coos and Curry
counties Joined those from Doug,
las for the two days of temper
ance training and recreation pro
vided by the Women's Christian
Temperance union.
Going from Lookingglass were:
Nancy and Bruce Elliott, Freddy.
Grogory, Handy and Loretta
Graves, Nancy and Bill Haire and
their visiting cousins, Mclvina and
Uarv wonser. ol urants Pass.
Cathy and Donna Greer, Dorothy
and Terry Schmidt, and Barbara
Thrasher. Five speech contests
were held with three of them won
by Lookingglass youth. Freddv
Graves and Dorothy Schmidt each
won blue ribbons and Donna Greer
won the first bar for the bronze
medal. Mrs. Southwick, slate WCTU
speech director, had charge of the
contests and served as a counsel
lor at camp. i
i 2
JUMP FROM ON H I GH-Cspt Joseph Xirtinger,
USAF, dives from balloon toward clouds over New Mexico at
start of 20-mile jump. Cord to start parachute timer (rails behind.
Melrose Teachers Return
To School After Vacations
By NETTIE WOODRUFF
The same group of teachers as
last year were on hand Tuesday
for the opening of the Melrose
School after a summer of varied
activities.
T. L. Mcehan, principal, and his
wile spent several weeks vacation
ing in California. They visited their
son and family at Costa Mesa and
enjoyed the Jul Alai games in Mex
ico. Mrs. Lou Basset, first grade
teacher, visited relatives in Grass
Valley, Calif., and went sightseeing
at Squaw Valley.
Mrs. Krug and Mrs. Max Pcnnic
enjoyed a 12-day tour of the North
west by chartered bus, traveling
over the old Oregon Trail. Airs.
Krug also took a camping trip up
the north Lmpqua ana Diamond
Lake and a trip to Portland and
Yachats. Mrs. Pennie later visited
her daughter and sister in San
r rancisco, Calif.
Court Token
Mrs. Laura Ware took a two
weeks course in health at the Uni
versity of Oregon in Eugene. She
visuea later wnn ner aaugmcr in
Klamath Falls, where she joined
her son and family for a return
trip with them to Omaha. Neb.
She went on to Minneapolis and
St. Paul, Minn., to be with her
sister and fished at Long Lake in
northern Minnesota. En route home
she stopped at Williston, N. D.,
where she had taught school for
several years preceding 1935.
Mr. Naugle. fifth grade teacher,
and his family visited their former
home in Greeley, Colo., for two
monlhs. While there he was em
ployed by Massey Ferguson. Later
t lie tamiiy spent a week at cstes
Park, Colo., and visited a daugh
ter at Colorado Springs.
Mrs. Jackie Talker and daughter.
Annie, have bought and moved to
the former William Pecrman place
on Cleveland Hill Road. Mrs. Talk
er is a nurse at the VA Hospital.
sue was educated at the Edith Ca-
vell school of nursing at Brussels,
Belgium.
Mr. and Mrs. Morris McKibben
and family were out-of-town visit
ors at the home of his sister, Mrs.
Business Spokesmen Differ On Imminence Of Recession
By SAM DAWSON
AP Business News Analyst
ktui vnRK (API Business
spokesmen differ as to whether
Ballroom Rioters
Meted Sentences
PORTLAND (AP) Fines and;
jail sentences have been given two I
persons involved in a riot at a
Portland Ballroom last weekend.
William Overall, 22, CorvaUia, j
was sentenced to six months in
the Multnomah County Jail and ,
fined $100 on a disorderly conduct!
charge. ' I
Miss Billie Rose Smith, 19, drewl
a $35 fine and 60-day jail term !
for disturbing the peace, but half!
her jail term was suspended.
A third person, Jasper N. Clay
ton, 26, forfeited $1,000 bail when
he failed to appear.
Six other persons asked for
postponements.
In all, 19 persons were arrested
during the riot, which started
Saturday night at a dance hall
when it was disclosed that singer
Ray Charles would not be able to
appear. His plane was grounded
at Seattle.
Wayne Helms, and family during
the holiday weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. David Schrader
and girls and Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Schrader spent the Holiday week
end at Summer Lake. They took
the latter couple s trader house
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Young and
sons and Terry Chitwood spent the
holiday at their cabin at Diamond
Lake.
10 Lines Compete
For Added Service
WASHINGTON (AP) The
Civil Aeronautics Board heard ad
ditional argument today in the
competition of 10 U. S. airlines for
additional operating authority in
the Pacific area.
Competitors presenting their
cases were Trans World, United,
United States Overseas and West
ern Air Lines.
The board heard Wednesday
the appeals of Continental, Ha
waiian, Northwest, Pan American
and South Pacific Airlines and
the Flying Tiger Line, an all-cargo
operator.
All seek to provide additional
services between mainland cities
and Hawaii and the Far East,
except TWA which seeks exten
sion of its routes in Asia.
Listed to appear later today
were representatives of more
than a score of cities from New
England to the West Coast. They
will reaffirm earlier pleas to the
board for faster and more con
venient air transportation to Ha
waii and the Orient. v
Former Gold Beach JP
Permanently Disbarred
SALEM (AP) A former Gold
Beach justice of the peace was
permanently disbarred by the
Oregon Supreme Court Wednes
day. The court said that William A.
Fuller had admitted taking a Iron I
$5,750 which had been in his trust
while he served as justice of the
peace and had failed to keep
proper accounts.
The board of Governors of the
Oregon State Bar had recom
mended the disbarrment.
a recession is under way or in
the offing or unlikely. But many i
executives appear to be taking tiie
same measures now they would
if an actual one were here.
They are cutting inventories to -a
minimum. They are holding up!
new orders. They are trimming I
payrolls. They are giving price!
concessions to hold customers.
They are clipping overhead costs'
at every opportunity.
Slipping sales volume has in-1
spired some of the belt tighten-1
ing. But in many cases the spur;
has come from dropping profit j
margins. Rising operating costs
have turned record sales into
smaller net income. And manage
ment is going after those higher
costs.
The slowdown in ordering and
the trend to lower inventories has
put a crimp in the output of sev
eral basic industries one of the
few signs so far that anyone could
point to as foretelling a recession.
Some of the cost cutting is
hailed as trimming away over
head fat that crept onto corporate
muscles during the lush days that
followed the 1957-58 recession and
again during the rebound from the
steel strike. And some cost cut
ting is long range, aimed at in
stalling more efficient machinery
in more economical plants.
But some economists warn that
hasty cost cutting can cause more
trouble for a company than it
cures.
For example, care has to be
taken in laying off workers. You
may lose a skilled man altogether,
one you would sorely miss later.
And also you would lose the cost
of training a man and have to
start all over when you rehire.
Too, layoffs or salary trimming
can hurt morale and sometimes
lead to a bigger loss in the long
run.
A favorite cost-cutting device in
slow times is to drop less profit
able market areas and customers
who add little to your total earn
ings. This often pays off in higher
profits. But here care must be
taken. There is the loss of the in
vestment in building up the poten
tial market and also the question
of whether it might later turn into
a very profitable one.
Many business managements
are weighing these procedures.
As profit margins drop, corporate
accountants study salesmen's ex
pense accounts very closely. Some
firms are buying tourist tickets on
planes instead of first-class tick
ets. Purchasing agents are under
pressure to get the lowest possi
ble price for needed materials
but here the warning is against
the risk of lower grades and un
tried materials that could cut
product quality and hence torpedo
sales.
North Roseburg Kindergarten
1553 N. E. Vint St. ORchoro 2-J06J
Morning Seiiion 9:00 to 11:30
Standard Pre-School Program
Number Fun
-fr Creative Art
Mgw'e 4 Rhythm
k Supervised Play
Readiness Far
First Grade
Limited
Registration.
Religious Meet Raided
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) Six
persons were killed and three
wounded in a 157-man armed raid
on a religious meeting in a vil
lage in West Java last weekend,
Antara agency reported today.
II II 1 " OJ .III
& NOTION
1229 SE STEPHENS
ROSEBURG, OREGON
OR 2-3651
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Hot Tin Roof
CP.ICKIIOWELL. Wales (AP-
A tin-roofed movie theater caught
fire at an army camp Wednes
day night soon after a showing
of the Elizabeth Taylor movie
"Cat on a Hot Tin Roof." The
stage was badly damaged and the
building's tin roof glowed red hot.
Keep His
Courage In Congress
RE-ELECT
Charles 0. Porter
i
Democrat
U. S. Representative
4th District, Oregon
HcAN HELP BY: 1
I ( ) Sending literature to friends I
( ) Putting bumper itickert en car I
I ( ) Permitting uie of my neme In
j publicity I
( ) Helping In precinct work
I I ) Roiling fundi I
( ) Moklng finonciel contribution '
I ( ) Speaking at meeting! i
I ( ) Typing oddreiMl ond Hulling
. envelopei
I ( ) Making telephone colls I
I am a ( I Democrat ( ) Republican
J My occupation Is I
I Noma w I
Addrett I
I Telephone I
No obligation of any kind in-
I volrad. Moll this coupon re: I
Sid Lelken, tax J62 '
Sutharlin, Oregon. J
Re-Elect Porter for Congress Commit
tee, Robert Van Leer, Manager. 1 106
Willomett St., Eugene, Or.
Mm. )gM
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7 ,9
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