2 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. Tues., Sept. 13, I960 Fire Destroys Two Glendale Area Homes Fire destroyed two houses a mile west of Glendale on the Ruben Rd. early this mornins, according to Mrs. (i. B. Fox, News-Koview correspondent. The flaracj were discovereu, shortly alter i.M a.m. "y "", pants ol the larger house, the Rob ert K. Williamson family. Williamson awoke and discover H flames in Hie li villi loom and on the front porch. 'J lie house was: full of smoke and flames spread! so fast by the time he got three of j ihf children Robert, 11, Ronald 10, and .Michael 7 down from upstairs where tiiey were sleeping lie had I singed his hair and burned his face slightly. Two other children in the family, I.eeAnn 12, and Von, 2, anil Mrs. Williamson were saved from the downstairs portion of the house. According to the Douglas Pro tective Association, Warden Wayne liorico, the roof of the house had fallen in when they arrived from the station 10 miles away and flames had spread to a smaller house 70 or 80 feet behind the larg er one. They were unable to save the smaller house after the blaze had spread through the house. Two other cabins of either side of the second house were prevent ed from catching fire although they were fairly close together. The second house was not oc cupied, although it contained at least a refrigerator and an elec tric stove, the fire warden said. Cause of the fire was not known. "The Williamsons had some insur ance on the furniture, have lived at Glendale for a year and a half, and he has been working at the box factory at the Dollar mill. The Williamson family is staying tem porarily at the (jiadc O Neil home. Explosives Transport Asked By Flury Supply Oregon Public Utility Commis sioner Jonel C. Hill today said a public hearing will be held Oct. 10 on an application by the Flury Supply Co. for a permit to author ize motor contract carrier trans portation of explosives for the Hercules Powder Co., their suc cessors and assigns, to and from the powder company magazines, located approximately four miles north of Jlosebiirg. The hearing will be at 1:30 p.m. at the Douglas County Courthouse. Coffees For Nixon Slated Thursday It's "Coffees for Nixon" on Thursday fur Douglas County sup porters of the Republican vice president for the presidency. Groups in the county will meet at 10 a.m. Thursday and then at 11 a.m. will hear a television pro gram, at which time the GOP can didate will address various groups by television. Each group Is designed for 11 guests and the hostess, and in some cases combination (community) coffees will be held. Coffee hours are scheduled for groups in Rose burg. I.ookingglass. S u t h e r 1 1 n. Glendale, Winchester, Glide, Oak land. Myrtle Creek. Yoncalla, Klk ton, Canyonville, Tiller, Tenmile, Azalea, and Garden Valley. In the Tenmile area the coffee hour will be held at the Woman's Clubhouse In Tenmile, and all local candidates have been invited to the meeting. Coffee will also be served at the new Republican campaign head quarters at 442 SE Jackson Sr., Roseburg, with all Republicans in vited to attend. The Republicans are taking advantage of the op portunity to hold open house at (he GOP headquarters from 10 a m until S p.m., and many local can didates will be present during the day. Green Area Mothers Seek Car Speed Limit Mothers In the Green area south of Roseburg are mobilizing to force car speed restriction! in the Green section. The action is Teing taken as the result of an accident which killed 8 year-old Stephen Grant Thomp son Sunday morning near a church while he was walking along thi road. A public meeting has been sched uled for Wednesday night in t h e Green School at 7:30. Principals FREE LECTURE ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT LECTURER PLACE TIME HOW CHRISTIAN SCIENCE HEALS FEAR RICHARD L. GLENDON, C.S. of Los Angeles, California Membor of tha Board of Loctureihi'p of Tht Morhor Church, Tho First Church of Christ, Scientist, In Bolton, Moss. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1124 S. E. Douglas Avenue Roseburg, Oregon TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13th or 8 P.M. CARE FOR SMALL CHILDREN WILL BE PROVIDED ALL ARE WELCOME Georgia-Pacific Gets Corvallis Mill CORVAM.IS (AP)-Georgia Pa cific Corp. has bought the entire holdings of Plywood Products Co. here in a transaction involving more than $4 million in slock, it was disclosed Monday. The entire slock of Plywood Products was sold to Georgia Pa I cific for 75,000 shares of Georgia j Pacific slock, Bob Lee, public re i lations man for G-P, said. The transaction was effective as of ' last June 30 when G-l stock was i valued on the New York stock ex change at $57 a share. This would put a total value of $4,302,500 on the stock. The holdings include a plywood plant at Camp Adair north of here and a glue-up plant at the Corval lis airport. Jack Brandis and Gerald Robin son, both of Corvallis, have head ed the Plywood Products opera tion. Brandis is senior vice presi dent in the Georgia Pacific Corp. Death Driver Pleads Innocent At Hearing EUGENE (AP) Warner Rich ard llibberl, Ti, Springfield, plead ed Innocent in Lane County Cir cuit Court Monday to three counts : of negligent homicide. He is accused of negligence In . a two-car head-on crash on High- way 0!) near Goshen which killed Arlcne Moodey, 28, lteedsport, and two of her sons. The collision oc ; currcd July 6. No date was set for the trial. Eugene Man 25th Highway Fatality EUGENE (AP) One man was killed and another seriously in jured when their car went out of control and skidded to a crash on Highway 99, just north of Eugene Monday evening. Slate police said the fatality vic tim had been tentatively identified as Jim Boshell, about 25, Para mount, Calif. Police said the man had no billfold on his person and identification was not positive. Injured was Willie B. Boshell, 49, who suffered cuts and a pos sible concussion. He was incoher ent when police attempted to ques tion him at the hospital. Police said his address was listed as the Capital Hotel, Salem, on a traffic citation which had been issued to him earlier Monday. Police said they did not know which man was driving the car. This brought to 25 the number killed on Oregon highways this month. Victim Of Shock Dangles From Limb SALEM. Ore. (AP) A man semi-conscious from an electric shock, hung for nearly 30 minutes Monday near the top of a 75-Ioot Douglas fir tree with only one leg hooked over a limb. The wife of Lloyd A. Swanson, 32, came home after shopping and saw her husband wildly swinging his free arms and leg. XJapt. Charles Charlton of the Sa lem fire department scrambled up the tree, secured Swanson and brought him down by an aerial ladder. Swanson suffered the shock when an uninsulated wire he was putting in the tree for a radio aerial apparently touched an elec tric wire. at the meeting will be Sheriff Ira C. Byrd. one of the Roseburg resi dent State Police sergeants, Coun ty Engineer Al H. May and pos sibly a representative of the Board of Speed Control from Salem. the action is being spearheaded by the Green PTA. Also taking a hand is the Green Mothers Club, which met today in preparation for the big meeting Wednesday. Wednesday afternoon, the moth ers will post placards throughout the Green area calling for the post ing of a speed limit and will take a house count to determine the population, youngsters walking to school and churches, etc. Spokesman Mrs. James Medford said individuals and groups in the community have tried several several times to get action, but have not been successful. Grimly she said, "I think when they start dealing with mothers, we'll get some action." She said the mothers hope to have the Green area posted as a, resiuenuaf area wun a la-mue-per hour speed restriction for vehicles. She also said the PTA is planning a patrol of mothers in the area of the school to help enforce restric tions she says have been ignored in. ine pasi. Lodge Campaigns In West Virginia HUNTINGTON, W. Va. (AP) Republican vice-presidential nom inee Henry Cabot Lodge moved into the coal-and-steel areas of West Virginia, northern Ohio and western Pennsylvania today to press the theme that the GOP is the best prepared to cope with cold war problems. Lodge flew to Huntington today fresh from a rousing ovation at the Ohio Republican convention in Columbus where he asserted: "America is still the primary I symbol and force for human pro gress, wnat tms nation stands tor is slill the greatest hope of man." The veteran of countless de bates with Soviet representatives in the United Nations said Uie 1960 presidential campaign is a basic life-and-death contest between Communists and those who insist on being free. It was Lodge's first major cam paign address since his resigna tion as U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Sept. 3. ' SCOUT MEETING SET The cub scout committee for all Wilbur-Winchester dens has been set for Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Willard Pease home, 184 NE Pleasant St. in Winchester. Cecil Sherwood will be school represen tative for the group this year, reports Mavis Bintliff, correspondent. Porter To Visit Roseburg Thursday Charles O. Porter, D-Ore., will be in Roseburg Thursday, accord ing to Sidney Leiken, Douglas County chairman of the reelect Charles Porter campaign. County Democrats will hold a no host luncheon for him at the I mp qua Hotel, starting at 12 noon. The public is welcome to attend. . Representative Porter will be at the Democratic headquarters dur ing the afternoon to meet county residents and answer questions. State Rep. Al Flegel, Roseburg candidate for the state senate, has been named to head Porter's cam paign. Both Flegel and Leiken wilt ue on hand Thursday to introduce Porter to the public. Porter will ODen his camnaien for a third congressional term Wed nesday. He will speak in Coos Bay Wed nesday, Medlord Wednesday eve ning, Grants Pass Thursday morn ing, and then in Roseburg. Grants Pass Youth Fined On Liquor Count Leslie Mode, 22, of Grants Pass, pleaded guilty Monday in District Court to giving alcohol to a minor, specnicauy a n-year-oid gin. Judge Warren Woodruff fined him $75 plus $5 costs or 15 days in the Douglas County jail. He paid his fine and costs- and was releas ed. Mode was arrested by Siitnerlin City Police. Larry Van Scoyk, 19, of Glide pleaded guilty to a eharge of tres passing and was fined $25 plus $5 costs. A previous charge of bur glary against the youth was drop ped and the lesser charge substi tuted. He was accused of tres passing on the lands of II. E. Kelso, of Route 1, Roseburg. In another district court action, Judge Woodruff dismissed a charge of statutory rape against Willie O'Neal Hicks, 21, of Winston. Dis missal was on motion of the dis trict attorney. Hicks had asked for a preliminary hearing on arraign ment last week and the case was dismissed during the hearing. Inspector General 0( Air Force To Investigate Case 0( Defectors GLEN SENIOR RESIDENCE A HOME FOR DOUGLAS COUNTY OLDSTERS mm t n S JWw. . BlittT CI FOREST GLEN SENIOR RESIDENCE Canyonville, Oregon YOUR YEAR OF DECISION- OLDSTERS FACE A YEAR OF DECISION. Someone has said that after all, the age of sixty is the real year of decision. It It then we decide what to do with the remaining years of life. It is then we face the problem of how to meet the years ohead-the problemi of security, care and the threat of long expensive Illness, not to mention loneliness. One Out Of Every Five Will eB Unfortunate. One out of every five of us who reach the age of sixty can expect a long, disabling ond expensive illness. This is a sobering fact. Of course we may be optimistic and say it will be the other fellow, but there is one chance in five you will be wrong. Can you afford to take thot chance? Others Are Thinking Of These Facts. Our churches, our fralornol orders and our govern ment are are aware of the pressing needs of the aged. New homes are bling developed every doy to meet these nccdi in part. The problem has been compounded by modern advancements in medicine. Science has bet towed added years, but industry retires us from active life in spite of our improved health and metal alertness. Science has given ui longer years to graze, but industry has not provided any pasture. Add to (hit the skyrocketing cost of medical care, drugs and convalescence homes and the oldsters really have cause for concern. The retire ment home seems to be the only answer. The nest egg wt considered thirty years ago for our retirement needs, hardly pays the grocery bill today. What Does The Retirement Home Offer? First and foremost, the retirement home offers the elderly person security. The oldster is free of the worry of living costs, medical and hospital care, property worries and dependency on others. The home offers companionship. While one's opart ment otters privacy, yet at oil timet there it available the companionship of others of our own generation with the same backgrounds and experience. The home offert variety. The activities of a senior home are many and varied, You can participate in hob bies with othert, or choosa your own. You will have an opportunity to serve by making clothing and other articles for hospitals, schools and orphonages. You will have var ied programs in music, motion pictures and lectures that keep the mind alert and sustain a healthy interest in the life you live. Yet you have the independence of a hotel. You can come and go as you wish. You can entertain your family and friends. Being located in Douglas county you have constant access to relatives and old associates. But at we advance in years those who were close to us in our active life have one by one passed on. The old er we become the more isolated we become for the lack of friends and the inability to gat outside and make new ones. At Forest Glen there are friendt at hand alwayt. That is a comforting thought. YOU WILL HAVE GOOD CARE AT FOREST GLEN. A fully equipped and modern hospital with a full staff of nunet and three doctors in attendance ore at your immediate call if you become ill. Members of the staff will be in conttant contact with you. You need not fear falling ill alone and unatteded. For information write Forest Glen Senior Residence, Canyonville, Oregon or call Jefferson 2-4211, Canyonville, for personal interview. WASHINGTON (AP)-U. Gen. Joseph F. Carroll, a former FBI man now Inspector general of the Air Force, has been assigned by the Pentagon to investigate the defection to the Soviet, Union of two National Security Agency em ployes. The Defense Department an nounced that Carroll would con duct an intensive probe, probably lasting several months, of the flight of Bernon F. Mitchell and William H. Martin. The agency itself, engaged in communications and secret code work, also will come in for attention during the investigation, which will, be inde pendent of two House committee proDes opening later mis ween. The Pentagon announcement re affirmed its contention that nei ther Mitchell nor Martin had any known record of homosexuality. But it said the department had been wrong in ruling out any otn er form of sexual abnormality. A defense official said Mitchell during screening before his em ployment by the security agency n 1957. admitted that "during his teens he had engaged in certain abnormal sexual practices." "He gave no details. Mifrhpll Knliinf n.rpd this information, he said, and be cause he gave assurances that the practice had not been repeated since nis aaoiescence, ue was in considered a potential security risx. Homosexuals are classed as se curity risks because they might be subject to blackmail by for eign agents Hep. rrancis c. nauci, u-i a-, repeated over the weekend his al legation that one of the two defec tors was a "notorious homosex ual." '. .. The Defense Department said Carroll's task will be specifically concerned with how Mitchell and Martin made contact with Soviet agents and whether anyone else in the security agency was in volved in their flight from this country. Durante's Pianist Dies SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) Jules Buffano, for 18 years musi cal director and pianist for come dian Jimmy Durante, died Mon day at St. John's Hospital of a stroke. Burglary Count Holds Young Sutherlin Man Thomas Alvin Brown. 25. of Suth erlin, arraigned in District Court on a burglary charge Monday, waived preliminary hearing and was bound over to the grand jury. He was accused of breaking inio a residence in the Collage Court in Winslon Sunday night and frightening three women. Brown was arrested by a sheriff's deputy alter ne was louna niciing under a eas service container on the properly. Joseph Thomas Devere Smith, 19. Winston, has hppn rharfpH uilli rape, and asked to see an altorncy whan Drraiunnrl in Tltcfi-il f'mii.f Monday. He is being held in the Douglas County jail under $1,500 uau. i wariaiu cuargiiig me crime was served after investigation while ha was in init auiiilinir at. tion on an illegal possession of game (deer meat) charge, to which he pleaded guilty Monday and was fined 50. Frederick R. Schulz Graveside funeral services for Frederick Robert Schulz, age 1 month, will be held Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. Ttev. John Scaiuoni of the Lookingglass Community cnurcn will olliciate at tne look ingglass Cemetery ceremonies. He was born Aug. II, 1960 In Roseburg to Mr. and Mis. Robert Schulze of Lookingglass. He is survived by his parents; his grandparents, Mr. and M r s. Fred Schulze; and Mrs. Ruby Vance, all of Roseburg. Wilson's Chapel of the Roses is in charge of arrangements. COMMUNION PLANNED . Women of St. George's Episco pal Church will hold corporate communion at 10:30 a.m. Wednes day. A business meeting and lunch eon will follow in the parish hall. II I i a WW 1Y vI ' .' Family plans for a new home, college for' the children, maybe travel . , . are more than promises. They're dreams come true for the family that wisely chooses systematic savings to achieve them. Start a savings plan for you and yours today with us. The earn- ings we add to your savings will help you reach your goals sooner. ANTICIPATED I Qfi 7&m Carl Lilja Tllir-ill EmUe tn P..1 T llin ! who died Aug. 27 at Oak Knoll Naval Hospital, Oakland Calif., were held on Thursday in Golden Gate Cemetery, San Francisco, Calif., following a private funeral there. Lilja. a lifelong resident of Can yonville prior to his Naval service. was survived by his mother, Mrs. Charles una. of canvonvi le as well as his wife and four children i of California. Reception Scheduled A family potluck dinner to be followed by a reception for all Kiddle elementary and nigh school teachers will be featured at the first Riddle PTA meeting to he held Thursday at the elementary school, beginning at 6:30 p.m. F.aeh member is asked to bring a hot dish and salad or dessert and own table service. A short business meeting conducted by Mrs. Carl A. Rose, PTA president, and the reception will follow the dinner, reports Erma Best, correspondent. Man Gets Probation Inhnia Phillin rnnner 20. of Rid dle, has been released fiom the Douglas County jail on one year s probation. He pleaded guilly in the Circuit Court of Judge Charles Woodrich Friday to a charge of receiving and concealing stolen property. He was sentenced to serve a year in the county jail but was released on probation. Drunk Driver Fined) William Rex O'Keefe. 44, of Klamath Falls pleaded guilty to a drunken driving charge on arraign ment in Roseburg Municipal Court Monday. He was fined $150 and committed to the Douglas County jail for five days by Judge Ran dolph Slocum. O'Keefe was arrest ed by Roseburg City Police. NATIONWIDE Mobile Home Moving SEE or CALL NATIONAL Trailer Convoy, Inc. 2071 N. E. Stephens Phone ORchard 2-4181 Roseburg, Oregon Penney's Store Hours: 9:30 to 5:30 FASHION'S MOST FLATTERING SILHOUETTES . . . THE DALLAS SHEATHS All wool jersey sheaths in the top fashion colors for now and for all the very special Fall occasions! 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