The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, September 24, 1960, Page 2, Image 2

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    2 Th Nwt-Review, Rofeburg,
Kennedy Evokes Ovation
From Mormons In Speech
On Religious Controversy
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (AP)
Sen. John F. Kennedy headed
toward Chicago and 1 brief respite
from the campaign trail today
after praiiing a Mormon battle
"to make religious liberty a living
Lions Hear Talk
On Debut Of New
Flying Machine
A talk on a revolutionary new
flying machine, an autogiro known
ax the Umbaugh 18, was given by
Paul Dillon at the Koseburg Lions
Ciub meeting Thursday night.
Dillon and George Felt, who was
at the meeting, visited the factory
in New Jersey recently and saw
the new machines which may
hrmg about a revolution in avia
tion for private use.
The small flying machine, which
uses the autogiro principal, was
developed by Kamond E. Cm
baugh, who sought ,i quick
easy method of transporting his
salesmen about the country, con
tacting farmers for sale of his
product by hopping from farm to
farm, according to Dillon.
He stated that the planes cannot
tall and will not power dive. The
rotor blades act like a glide plane,
making them impossible to crash.
The cost is less than $10,000. The
cruising (peed is up to 128 miles
an hour, with 350 miles cruising
range. Landing speed at tourch
down is 0 to 10 in ph.
Dillon will have the agency for
Coos and Curry counties when
the plane, soon to be mass produc
ed, comes on the market, relt has
the agency for Douglas County.
Report was made by delegates to
last weekend's mid winter confer
ence attended by several local
Lions at Lakeview.
Attending were District Governor
nf 36 E, A. G. (Mike) McLain, For
rest Losee. a former district gov
ernor; Herb LeoniR, Knsehiirg club
president, Willard Buchanan and
Frank von Borstcl, both officers
and Fred Gleeson of the Roscburg
Lions: Don Bell, of the Umpmia
I ions and Darrell Langevin of the
Oak and club.
Plans for the stale Lions conven
tion to he held in Roscburg next
May were mapped out at the meet
ing. HEARING SCHEDULED
Lonnie Alfred Dickens, 22, of
North Bend, arrested on a charge
of non support, asked for a pre-
liminnry bearing when arraigned
Thursday in district Court. Judge
Warren Woodruff set the hearing
for Sept. 26 at 3:30 p.m. Bail was
set at $1,000.
Scenes
iirr
t- v -? j r ' Si
t .,..... 4M-!-!.A:-jt 'ft
.. " - "Vl : Si
W?k :n V'rr '
DISASTER STRUCK FRIDAY morning of 9 o'clock in this house in southeast Roseburg.
Kim Newport, 4'2-yeor-old daughter of Morvin ond Nonda Newport, perished in this
bloze ot her home, 1629 SE Mill St. She was badly burned and olso overcome by smoke
ond fumes in a bock bedroom of the residence. Shown ore exterior and living room views
of the badly damoged structure. The cause of the blaze was unknown.
Ore. Sot., Sept. 24, 1960
reality" in this country.
Before leaving on an overnight
flight aboard his private plane,
the Democratic presidential can
didate won cheers for a fighting
speech striking back at Vice Presi
dent Richard M. Nixon, his Re
publican rival, for calling him I
naive about the Communists.
Sunday, he will fly to Cleveland
for more campaigning. He is
scheduled to return to Chicago in
the evening to prepare for his
television debate Monday with Nix
on the first of a series of four
to be carried nationwide on TV.
Shortly before taking off from
Salt Lake City Friday night, Ken
nedy touched on the controversy
in some areas over his Cathol
icism. He made no mention of that con
troversy in his formal speech, but
he paid tribute to the Mormon
people for, as he put it, "having
proven to the nation in this cen
tury that a public servant devout
in his church faith was still capa-
aole of undiminished allegiance to
the Constitution and national in
terest. Speaking to more than 8.000 per
sons who filled the great Mormon
Tabernacle to overflowing, the
Democratic nominee said the pub
lic servant was the late Sen Reed
Smoot of Utah, who was an ap
ostle of the Mormon Church,
Smoot Case Precedent
The church president, David O.
McKay, 87, sat on the platform
next to the speaker's ledum and
joined in the standing ovation for
Kennedy.
Kennedy recalled that Sinoot's
right to a Senate seat was chal
lenged on the grounds that he
would subordinate the claims of
his- country to the claims of his
church.
Fortunately, Kennedy said, "The
forces of reason and tolerance" en
abled Smoot to take his scat.
In this country, he went on, di
versity of religion has led to na
tional unity and religious liberty
has led to national strength.
The senator said such strength
moral and spiritual is needed
as never before. He added that
America has faced peril before
and many a dictator as harsh as
Soviet Premier Khrushchev.
"But Mr. Khrushchev while
he may symbolize and personify
our danger is not the enemy,"
Kennedy asserted, "The enemy is
(he Communist system itself -Implacable,
insatiable, unceasing
in its drive for world domination. "
In Salt Lake City and earlier in
the clay in Denver, Kennedy again
voiced concern tihout the Commu
nist threat and said once more it
would lie danuerous tor any presi
dential candidate to keep silent
about any IT. S. shortcomings. That
was in reply
by Nixon.
to criticism of him !
From
t.ji ,J"V
Tragic Fire
Picture Wins Award
'I
' -A v ' 1 '
if" - - A
"LITTLE ARAB" is tne picture of Del Blanchord which won
Myrtle Creek photogropher Jerry Warren high honors
with 15 out of 16 points in the recent Oregon Profes
sional Photographers' Association convention in Salem.
Western Europe Fears New
Cold War Wave Will Result
From Khrushchev's Speech
LONDON (AP) Western Eu
rope feared today that NikiH
Khrushchev's speech at the U. N.
General Assembly heralds a fresh
cold wave that will plunge Kast
Wcst relations into an even deeper
freeze
The Soviet Premier's attack on :
V. N. Secretary-General Dag lhe independent trench news
Hammarskjold was resented by : paper Figaro also looked to a me
newspapers in every non-Commu-j dialor, unnamed, to bring the two
nist capital. His proposal to re- together.
place llammarskjold with a three- "Crisis at the U. N." was used
man committee was seen as a bid in several London newspaper
to kill any rapid U. N. emergency headlines about the Soviet speech,
action in the future. Svenska Dagbladet, eonserva-
In contrast, the Soviet Commit- live newspaper in Stockholm
nist party newspaper Pravda ran! snapped: "The Russian plan is an
a huge headline proclaiming
"The world listens, applauds, ap
proves." The official New China News
Agency gave more attention to
President Eisenhower for offering
a plan "to lure the African coun
tries into the pit of U. S. ccfunomic
assistance."
Some Hopes Held Out
The London Daily Express saw
it '. fl
Cjawi s If ' '1
p" - :. -
I
i
hope that British Prime Minister
Harold .Macmillan might be able
to act as peacemaker between
Khrushchev and Eisenhower a
role he tried unsuccessfully last
May just before the summit meet
ing in Paris collapsed. Macmillan
is flying to New York Sunday
infallible way of making the of
fice (of U. N. secretary-general)
unwieldy to the point of power
less ness."
The Danish newspaper Datens
Nyheder said the Soviet Union
wants to abolish lfammarskjold's
office "because in the Congo the
U. N. has, for the first time, real
ly demonstrated its moral and
military strength.
The right-wing French newspa
per JAurore said Khrushchev ob
viously was making a big play to
pet support from the Africans,
Asian and Latin-American na
tions. In West Germany, the influen
tial Frankfurt Allgemeine charged
the Sovtet with using the tribunes
of lhe U. N. for its own purposes.
Britain's conservative Daily Tel
egraph commented:
"To have three secretary-generals
one Communist, one Western
and ono neutralist would in ef
fect introduce the veto into the
functioning of the secretariat." '
Rolla Dee Wells
Funeral services for Holla Dee
Wells, B3, who died suddenly at
Drift Creek Landing near Walport
Thursday, will be held at Wilson's
Chapel of the Roses Monday at
11 a.m.
Masonic services will be conduct
ed by Laurel Lodi;e No. 13. Con
cluding services and interment will
follow at the Tennnle Cemetery.
lie was born April 14, 1897, in
Olalla, Ore. He was the son of El
mer and Minnie Wells, pioneer set
tlers of the Tenmile area. He and
his wife Krma were married Aoriliiio iair n,n,'H m California and
23. 19:16 in Roseburg. He was em-i jn 1935 moved to Roseburg.
ployed as an engineer for the South- He was employed at the U. S.
era Pacific railroad until his re-1 Plywood plant in Roseburg. and
tirement about five years ago. lie j was a member of Local 2671, Lum
was a member of the Masons and' ber & Sawmill Workers, AF of L.
the Elks. I surviving are his wife, Mrs. Hat-
.-miwMus in aimuiun 10 111s wile
f one sister. .Mrs. Neta May Cul
len. .Medford: and two brothers.
Worth P. of Medford and l.vle Y.
of Dallas.
Nu Delta Club Plans
County-Wide Youth Rally
A county-wide youth rallv la be
ing planned in Hiisehurg next Fri
day by the Nu Delta Club in com
memoration of the club's tenth an
niversary. The Roseburg High Srhnnl t'h
tian club, founded in 1950 hv Mrs. rUMJ Viz-fim Of Pnlin
Ralph Arensmeier. now has a mem- Ch,ld V'im f .ro"
bership of lbo. Reported Improving
The rally is scheduled from 7 to:
9 p.m. in the First Baptist Church I A four year-old Myrtle Creek
on SK l ane and Hose. The pro-1 child. Lance Keyes, is reported to
gram will feature the World Vision be improving following contraction
Quartet ( formerly the famous Four of non paralytic polio.
Flatsi and a outh teen-agers' I The boy. son of Mrs. Janet Keyes,
group, the Youth Go;.pol Team of came down with the illness Wed
Albany. : nesdav. At first the bov appeared
Anyone is welcome at the rallv,
but the emphasis will be on teen
agers, repents Chairman Mardella
; landers. A freewill offering
i b! lakCn '"rlllt'r "" l'lub' w
I CHILD CLINICDATEO
landers. A freewill offering will
ork.
A Well Child Clinic will be held
in Drain Tuesday at 1 p m The
urogram is rondurtpH ih nnnn.
las County Health Office. The chn.;'ord- n?s PP'ealed to the Su
ic will be hi'ld in the Drain Meth.
enlist Church. i
BAIL POSTED" I
Joseph Thomas Devere Smith of I
V insion has been released from
the Douglas County l.ul on nostinc
$1,000 bail. He is facing a charge ! Caley had ordered that Burnett be
of rape. Judge Kldon F. Caley re- j transported to the appropriate
dured his bail from Jl.SdO to $l,-j slate mental institution for psychi
000. I atrtc examination.
Civil Rights Issue Sends
Nixon On Fifth Foray Into
Wavering Dixie States
EN' ROUTE With Nixon (AP) -1
Vice President Richard M. Nixon
scheduled speeches in Louisiana :
and Mississippi today to wind up
the second week ol nis miensuieo.
presidential election drive.
Associates said Nixon based his
decision to make a fifth foray into
the South on reports that the strong j
Democratic civil rights piauorm
has made 1 battleground of vir-
tually every Southern state.
Memorial Hall, seating 4,500, i
was filled to overflowing in Kan-
sas City, the biggest Democratic
stronghold in normally Republican
L- e A rn.,l nf hart!
waited for Nixon in the rain when
he flew in from Sioux Falls.
Fsrm Talk Dotsn'r Enthuse
But it was a crowd that was
mosllv silent, applauding loudest
when Nixon spoke of peace as the
most important campaign issue.
The Dakotans showed little re
sponse when he talked about the
nation's farm problem.
Nixon outlined a six-point farm
program embracing a temporary
but substantial expansion of land
retirement, a long-term system of
price supports, and a stepped up
rural development program.
Jn Kansas City, Nixon told his
audience one thing that makes
him boil is "this continual harping
to the effect that the United States
is losing prestige."
Edwin A. Myers
Of Sutherlin Dies
At Bowling Alley
Edwin Alden Myers, 47, of 654
West Union St.. collapsed and
died at a Sutherlin bowling alley
Friday evening.
He was born Nov. 22, 1912, at
Portland, and attended Willamette
University. He resided at Hines
Ore., from 1935 to 1948 and in Rose
burg for the past 11 years.
He was office manager for the
Southern Oregon Log Scaling Bur
eau. Married at Burns to the for
mer Mary Rachel Higgs on Jan
22, 1938. he was a member of the
Methodist Church, Laurel Masonic
Lodge, Scottish Rite, Roscburg
Elks Ix)dgc. and the Roseburg Rod
and Gun Club.
Survivors include the widow; two
daughters, Mrs. Bruce (Diane) Ml
chels of. Long Beach, Calif., and
Sally Myers, a sophomore at Ore
gon State College; his mother,
Mrs. Elizabeth Tucker of Gary,
Ind.; a sister, Mrs. Norma McGce
of San Bernardino, Calif.; and a
half-brother Leonard Tucker of
Gary, Ind.
Funeral services will be held at
the chapel of Long and Orr Mor
tuary Monday at 2 p.m. Ritualistic
services will be conducted under
auspices of Laurel Masonic Lodge.
Vault interment will follow in Rosc
burg Memorial GAardens.
Portland Mayor
Praises Unarider
TORTLAND (AP)-Mayor Ter
ry D. Schrunk says Portland can
anticipate continued progress on
the maritime front and lauded
the work of Sigfrid B.,,Unandcr
on the Federal Maritime Board.
Schrunk, who returned recently
from conferences with board of
ficials, declared:
"Sig Unander was a tower of
strength during the discussions.
His strong representation of the
Pacific Northwest viewpoint in
Washinaton maritime circles is a
great asset to the aspirations of
the area."
Unander. a former Oregon state
treasurer, was appointed to the
post by President Eisenhower.
Groves Sills
Groves Mabrv Sills, 72, of U29
SE Hamillon St., Roseburg, died
at a local hospital on Friday.
He was born at Kosciusko,
Miss., Dec. 10, 1887, and was mar
ried to Hattie Amanda Beaty at
i C Amroln T.v Anril 7 1910
tie A. Sills of ltoseburg; a nrotner.
John Sills. Kosciusko, Miss., two
sisters. Mrs. Ada Simmons, Kosci
usko, Miss., and Mrs. Ida Monroe
of Monrovia, Calif., and a number
of nephews and nieces.
Funeral services will be held in
the Chapel of lxmg & Orr Mor
tuary Monday at 11 a.m., with the
Rev. A. P. Rill, pastor of the
Roseburg Seventh day Adventist
church olficialing. Concluding serv
ices and interment will follow in
the Civil Bend cemetery at Win
ston. 1 to have the paralytic variety of the
disease but the attending physician
said today the child had recovered
the feeling in his legs. The physi
cian credited the two shots of vac
cine the boy had received with
preventing paralysis.
COURT ORDER APPEALED
Robert Lister Burnett. 35. of Med-
preme Court f rum an order of Cir
cuit Judge Fldon F. Calev of Aug.
2. denying his motion to withdraw
a plea of guilty to a charge of con
tnbuling to the delinquency uf a
minor.
Hurnett seeks to nave his case
go before the Grand Jurv. Judee
This was an obvious reference
to the utterances of Sen John F.
Kennedy. The Democratic candi
date said in Denver he was pinning
his whole case before the voters
on the belief that the Anerican
people are "uneasy at the present
drift in our national course that
they are disturbed by the relative
oecune in our viiaiuy ana pres
tige."
"TVI I VirfSmC
I1ICT
fT li:,f..i.
JT MISlOITUnG
Receiving Aid
The community of Tiller has
thrown its heart into the efforts to
soften the tragedies suffered by
Mrs. J. V. Lewis and her two chil
dren this month.
First Mrs. Lewis husband died
Sept. 1. Then last Tuesday her
house burned to tne ground, it was
the same day she had made the
final payment on the house.
Jacket Left
With the prompting of Mrs.
C. J. Porter, the community began
to mobilize to help her.
their tirst too was to get Bed
ding and clothing for Mrs. Lewis
and the children. "The response
was tremendous," Mrs. Milton
Hammersly, Tiller correspondent,
reports.
The only thing still needed in
the line of clothing is a size 16
winter jacket and underclothing for
the boy.
Promises of furniture and appli
ances were also made.
Set Power Lines
But the biggest undertaking will
start this weekend. Richard Prair
ie of Days Creek and C. J. Por
ter re-established the power lines
to the house site three miles
above Tiller.
This was the first step in a com
munity house-building project. The
debris will be cleared away Sun
day, and volunteers have promised
to be on the scene to begin-building
forms. Mrs. Lewis brother, Wil
liam Randall of Cottage Grove, f
carpenter, will direct the building
operations.
Mrs. Hammersly said a major
drive is now on to secure building
materials and cash donations to
be used for the rebuilding.
Mark Lends Hand
In Massachusetts
BOSTON (AP) Gov. Mark O.
Hatfield of Oregon flew into Bos
ton friday to give campaigning
Massachusetts Republicans a hand.
Hatfield will campaign in the
Boston area with U. S. Sen. Lev
erett Saltonstall, seeking re-election,
and John A. Volpe, GOP can
didate for governor.
Hatfield is to appear with Salt
onstall at a student rally Satur
day at the Northeastern Univer
sity graduate center. He also will
go to Worcester for a young Re
publican rally. The Oregon gov
ernor, Volpe and their wives will
hold a reception in Boston Satur
day afternoon.
Later. Hatfield will deliver the
main address at a GOP rally in
nearbv Necdham. Volpe and Salt
onstall also are to speak.
Hatfield is to address a youth
meeting sponsored by the greater
Boston Christian Business Men's
Committee tonight, and receive
an award from the organization.
Roseburg IWA Union
Elects Business Agent
Marvin S. Williams has been
elected the new business agent of
International Woodworkers of
America Local 3-438 of Roseburg
The local has a membership of 700
He succeeds Charles W. Lynch.
who did not run for re election be
cause he has moved to California
Lynch served four years in the ca
pacity.
Williams has been assistant busi
ness agent for the last IS months
He is a former employe of Pacific
Plywood Co. of Dillard, wherr he
had worked for five years
The new business agent came to
Roscburg from Holbrook, Neb., in
1948. Ho has served as a member
of the Roberts Creek Water Dis
trict board of directors and is vice
chairman of the Green Recreation
Assn. He is married and has three
children.
'Baptists For Kennedy'
Sign Roils Church Heads
RALEIGH, N. C. (AP) Some
Norlh Carolina Baptist leaders are
bristling over a sign proclaiming
"Sou. Baptists for Kennedy" which
was on the platform when Demo
cratic presidential nominee John
Kennedy spoke here last Saturday
mqnt.
Dr. Douglas Branch, convention i
general secretary, ;aid Baptist en-1
dorsemcnt of a political candidate ;
"would be completely foreign to i
the tradition and outlook of South
ern Baptists because each church
is autonomous."
He said Democratic party lead
ers in charge of the visit denied
knowledge of the sign. Branch add
ed. "If I were in charge of a
meeting, I would know where the
signs were coming from."
CATTLE CERTIFIED
A Yoncalla resident. James J.
Cosner. has had 48 Jersey cattle
officially classified by the Ameri
can Jersey Cattle Club.
Cosner's cattle rated an aver
age score of 85 8.1. The ratings are
based on an official score card
which allots 100 points for the
ideal Jersey animal.
Have You Mined Any Phone
CALLS LATELY?
OR 3-6629
CLOVER'S Ttltphon
Antw(inf Snrie
Moose Lodge Officers
r Hi
if fj ,
n
ELECTED TO TOP HONORS recently were, left, G. L.
(Curly) Craig ond Bob Elliott, of the Roseburg Moose Lodge.
Croig was elected North Moose, of Beaver Legion No. 171,
ond Elliott was appointed Guiding Moose. The Beaver
Legion consists of most of Western Oregon. The Legion of
the Moose is the second degree in the Moose Fraternity.
Croig is a past governor ond Elliott is the present governor
of the Roseburg Lodge. (Koop's Photograph)
Canyonville First
Grader Scholars
Hosted By Mothers
Mothers of Canyonville first
graders were intertained at an
annual tea Wednesday afternoon
at the primary school with Mrs.
Marcella Chiavaras, principal, and
Mrs. Ethel Huston and Miss Su
sanne Taylor, first grade teachers
as hostesses, according to Virginia
Proctor, News-Review correspon
dent. ,
Supt. Larry Burden set a new
precedent in the duties of his office
when, after greeting the 24 moth
ers present, he volunteered to read
to the first-graders, keeping them
busy during school hours while the
teachers indoctrinated the moth
ers and served them refreshments.
After the tea, mothers visited
their children's classrooms to in
spect the work done thus far this
year.
Thursday afternoon the children
at the Canyonville primary school
participated in an assembly tilled
Crusade Child Safety which
emphasized student pedestrian
safety rules.
Mrs. Ruth Shell s second grade
entertained the assembly with a
song and showed posters they had
made. "Pledges to obey 'rattle
laws were signed hy the children
after which they were given pins
to wear.
Five Ladies join
Club At Tenmile
Five new members joined the
Tenmile Ladies Club at a recent
meeting at the clubhouse in Ten
mile, reports Mrs. Walter Coats,
correspondent.
Taken into membership were
Mrs. Virginia Wilson, Mrs. Lois
Humbird. Mrs. Betty Payne, Mrs.
Bobbie Fish and Mrs. Mary Camp
bell. A turkey dinner planned for Oct.
15 was discussed. A committee,
headed by Mrs. Carnie Cornell,
was appointed to make plans for
the event. Proceeds from the din
ner will be used to pay the insur
ance and other expenses of the
clubhouse. A special meeting of
committees will be held Wednes
day at 10:.10 a.m.
Relatives Visit
Recent weekend visitors of Mr,
and Mrs. Roy Cornell of Tenmile
were his brother-in-law and sister,
Mr. and Mrs. Chet Jones, of Ar
eata, Calif. The visitors brought
Cornell's mother. Mrs. Olive Cor
nell, to Tenmile for a two-week
visit at her son's home. Other re
cent visitors at the Cornell home
were his brother-in-law and sister,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Leifi, of Condon.
Sutherlin City Posts
Attract Nine Candidates
Sutherlin doesn't have a dearth
of candidates for the jobs of
councilmen and mayor this year.
The election of three councilmen
and a mayor is scheduled at the
lime of the Nov. 8 general clcctk-r..
No less than three men have tiled
petitions as candidates for mayor.
Included is incumbent Ira Mann,
who has served two years in the
office. Running against him for
the job for the next two years are
Dick Bcllis, the 1959 junior first
citizen, and A. C. Hensley. who has
served on the council 13 years.
His term on the council and those
of Bill Trozelle and Oliver Eggle
ston expire this year. Six candi
dates have filed to fill the four-year
posts. They are Frank Moss. Herb
Hubbell, Yo Han Kim. Raymond
Mullen. Larry Armstrong and Jes
se lox.
ORDER NOW
PLANER ENDS
PEELER CCRES
GREEN SLAB
SAWDUST
DRY OAK WOOD
Dial OS -8741
Roseburg Lumber Co,
i V;;;
lll'H it t
Dillard School Disf .
Enrollment Upped
All schools in the Dillard School
District show an increase in enroll
ment again this year, according In
George Corwin, district superin
tendent. This year's growth continues to
follow the pattern of enrollment in
crease which has faced the area
since the 1952 consolidation with
the Winston School district
In 1952, enrollment in grades one
through eight in the three schools
then in the district totaled 788.
These schools were. Tenmile, Look
ingglass, and Dillard.
Since 1952, the district has con
structed two new schools, Douglas
High School and Winston Junior
High School.
Enrollment in the four elemen
tary schools this year f5 1,145.
Douglas High has an enrollment of
367 students, with a total of 1,512
for the district this year.
The district foresaw that enroll
ment might exceed all forecasts at
the time of consolidation, as it has.
As a result of planning, ail schools
in the district have been able lo
assimilate these new students with
out problems.
the district is still looking ahead
and planning for future growth,
Corwin said. Construction of four
new classrooms at the Tenmile
school was just completed. Next
year, additional classrooms are to
be added to the junior high school.
lhe Dillard school board has also
purchased 10 acres of land in East
Winston for the construction of a
new elementary school sometime
in the near future.
Alleged Theft Of Dogs
Draws Innocence Plea
Richard Juinor Smith, 34 of
North Bend, pleaded innocent on
arraignment in Circuit Court Fri
day to a grand jury indictment
charging grand larceny.
Smith was charged in the indict
ment with the theft of a Walker
male hound and a Red Tick female
hound, the property of Noble Van
Dolah.
Hs was admitted to bail in the
sum of S1.000 and his trial will be
set for some time in November, un
less it can be worked into an ear
lier date cancellation, Judge El
don F. Caley ordered.
Poisonous Plants
Color-blind Test
MOUNTAIN LAUBEl
(I. Are any plant $ or flotrrrt
commonW found in gnrttent
poisonous?
A. Onlv a few garden plants are
harmful when eaten. Included
anions the harmful one are
plants of the Solanaceae family,
rhododendrons, mountain laurel,
Christmjs ro.e. and monkshood.
The seeds and iuivC of oleander
are very poisonous, as are many
other plants of the Apocvnaceae
family.
(. Are lfW irnvt to "fottT
the mlor-blintt lI iren Iff
ormnl jierric inHuctm?
A. No. The test usually given
for color blindness, in which the
person hcing tested views a scries
of color plates ( such as the
Ishihara series), is failed hy
almost all subject with any de
gree of red-green color deficiency.
The prescription phyMcun
writr for you i ymir person!
property and it i your rht
nd prmlcdp to he it filled
at a pharmacy of jour own
rhooiing