e 2 The Newt-Review, Roseburg, Ore. Tue., Oct. 4, 1960 Scout Rocket Shot Termed Successful WASHINGTON (AP)-A 72-foot Scout rocket roared 3,500 miles high and 5,800 miles out over the South Atlantic today on mission that could help develop meant for delecting nuclear explosions in space. The Civilian Space Agency an nounced 80 minutes after the fir ing that the flight was a com plete success and the rocket had followed "its programmed flight path perfectly. It was expected to take about 80 minutes from launch time for the rocket to complete its flight. Primarily, the shot was de signed to test the flight perform ance of this unique solid fuel and relatively low cost rocket which Is slated for various important space-exploring missions in the near future. But the rocket also carried a special Air Force experiment de signed to test the feasibility of spotting radiation from sneak nu clear explosions high above the atmosphere. Such explosions, touched off by an enemy, could Douglas PTA Sets Meet On Wednesday The Douglas County Council PTA will meet Wednesday in the Pres byterian Church social room at 10 a.m. The guest speaker will be Alex Kennedy, Director of Adult Kducation, for the Itoscburg School District, lie will explain the adult education program, and answer any questions you have. There will also be a film eniiiiea, "I'arna menfary Procedure." The execu live board will meet at 9:30 a.m. prior to the regular meeging. (Advertisement) Ruptured Men Get $3.50 Gift for Trying This Kansas Cily, Mo. Here is an im proved means of holding rupture that has benefitted thousands of ruptured men and women in the last year. Inconspicuous, without leg straps, clastic belts, body encircling springs or harsh pads, it has caus ed many to say, "1 don't see how it holds so easy. I would not have believed, had I not tried it." So comfortable so easy to wear It could show you the way to joyous freedom from your rup ture trouble. You can't lose by trying. It Is sent to you on 30 days trial. You receive a $3.50 special truss as a giu lor making mis trial. Write for descriptive circular. It's free. Just address Physician's Appliance Company, 3907 Koch Bldg., 2006 Main, Kansas Cily 8, Missouri, But do it today before you lose the address. cast a kind of electronic curtain around the earth, knocking anoth er nation's early warning system and hiding the approacn ot at tacking missiles or bombers. The 3B,60upound, jour-siage rocket was fired at 11:23 a. m. from the Wallops Island, Va., sta tion of the National Aeronautics and Spare Administration, the auencv announced here. The shot, originally scheduled for Sept. 23, bad been postponed twice. After an 80-minute ballistic flight, the rocket was expected to come down in the South Atlantic between South America and Af rica. NASA reported a few minutes after the launching that all four slages of the rocket fired success fully. The "Scout" has ben unoffi cially nicknamed the "poor man's rocket" because it Is relatively inexpensive compared with giants like the Atlas, Titan and Thor yet is deemed capable of versa tile performance. The cost of a "Scout" is ap proximately $900,000. This com pares with $5 million for an Atlas Able and about $3.3 million for a Thnr-Able. The rocket fired today carried 192 pounds of instruments de signed principally to study the performance and structural strength of the vehicle and the environmental conditions it con fronts. However, the payload also In cludedas i kind of scientific hitchhiker a second trial of the Air Force detection experiment Information gleaned by all in ttruments was to be radioed to earth before the detached payload plunges down again through the atmosphere and Into the sea. Pakistani Rites Formal, But Divers PULLMAN, Wash. (AP) It was a very formal wedding, but you have to admit it was a little different. The groom wore a turban, the bride's face was veiled, awl while 100 guests looked on, thr women beat ine dickens oui oi me nest man. Let us hasten to add that it was all according to tradition Pakis tani tradition. Two Pakistan students, whose marriage was arranged by their oarents. were married Sunday night in as near a full Moslem ceremony as was possible. Sheikh Parvez Wakil and Fark- handa Shah, both of Lahore, Pakis tan, were wed in a ceremony per formed by another foreign student, Tahir Elawad of Ihe Sudan. About 100 other foreign students attended. Most of them wore their native costumes. The service was read from the Koran in Arabic, and for those who understood only English, the whole thing was trans lated by Azcez ilaque of Banga lore, India. The beating of the best man? The women attending the cere mony get to do that sort of thing in Pakistan, Mrs. Martin Branscum Mrs. Martin (Flora Josaphlne) Branscum, 58, died Monday eve ning at a local hospital. She was a resident of Winston for tiie past 11 years. She was born March 18, 1902, at Elba, Ark., and was married there on Feb. 18, 1917, to Martin Cornelius Branscum. They resided at Wilder, Idaho for two years before coining to Win ston. ihe was a member of the Missionary Baptist Church of Win ston. Survivors include her husband; four children, Coy, Caldwell, Ida ho, L, D.. Sunnyside, Wash., Mrs. Horace (Gladys) Cuker. Winston. and Mrs. Carl (Elsie) Single, Wild er, luano; one sister, Mrs. Martha Philips, Evcrton, Arl.; two broth ers, Earl Barnelte, Harrison, Ark., I.ee Barnette, Peluluma, Calif.: four half brothers, Monroe Bar nette, Elba, Ark., Albert and Abra ha in Barnette, both of I'urdy, Mo. and George Barnelte. Jentrv. Ark. five grandchildren and one great granucniiu. Funeral services will be held at (lie Missionary Baptist church at Winston Friday at 2 p.m. with El der William Turner officiating. Con cluding services and interment will follow at ltcseburg Memorial Gar dens. Arrangements are in care of Long and Orr Mortuary. Judge Suspends Fine, Releases Jail Inmate Charles W. Schlaser of a local hotel has finally gotten out of the Douglas County jail after nearly a month of waiting for disposition of his case. Schlaser was charged with being drunk in a public place on arrest by Itoseburg City Police Sept. 5. He pleaded innocent and asked for a jury trial, which was set down on the regular municipal court cal endar. He failed to post ball, however, to had been waiting in jail since. He asked for an appearance Sat urday and changed his plea to guil ty, judge John Horn fined him $35 but suspended Ihe fine, con sidering Schlaser had spent enough time in jail to cover the amount. Lookingglass Resident Dies On Hunting Trip Charles Milton Dysert, long time resident of Reslon Lookingglass area, died near Lakeview from an apparent heart attack Tuesday morning. He was on a hunting trip at the time. His body will be brought to Rose- nurg by Long and Orr Mortuary. Funeral arrangements will be an nounced later. Castro Planning Big Sugar Deal HAVANA (AP)-Fidel Castro's regime is planning a big barter deal that will make Cuba com pletely dependent on the Commu nist bloc for imports in return for all the island's sugar, government sources report. The informants laid the Nation al Bank'a extreme leftist chief, Ernesto Guevara, is going to Mos cow for the Nov. 7 celebration of the Bolshevik revolution with the Erimary purpose of trading Cu a's entile sugar crop for years to come. Communist countries, including Red China, already have agreed to take more than a third of the 1961 sugar crop. Formerly the United Slates took about third of Cuba's average six-million ton crop. The informants said Guevara will propose to sell sugar to the Soviet bloc at 3.25 cents per pound, the price Cuba has set as the export minimum. When Cuba made its first sugar barter deal with the Soviet Union last Feb ruary, she agreed to sell sugar at the world price, which was then about 3 cents a pound, or about 2 to 2'4 cents less than the prem ium price paid by the United Mates. The 3.25 cents a pound would be about of a cent below pro duction cost by private sugar companies. The former daily wage of Cuba's half million sugar workers already has been cut 3.14 pesos to 2.60 pesos. Payless Store Reports Entry One rcDOrt of theft and another of break and entry were made to Roseburg City Police Monday. Paul Orr. manager of Payless Store, reported boxes containing 12 alarm clocks and a radio type clock were stolen from the rear of the store while the recording clerk was in the basement. A check of the shipment inventory disclosed the missing items. A break and entry into the of fices of Drs. G. C. Finlay and J. H. Finlav. dentists, in the Medi cal Arts Building was reported to the police. Discovery of the jim mied door was made by tne janitor, Robert J. Blumbing. Nothing was believed taken. It Was Bobs Face, But Pollys Voice NEW YORK (AP) Comedian Bob Hope's face appeared on mi lions of television screens Mon day night, but hit voice was Polly Bergen's. For nearly five frantic minutes, harassed NBC engineers strug gled to get Miss Bergen appear ing on a rival CBS show off Hope's NBC program. It was all very confusing, at least east of Chicago where the mixup occurred. Through a switching error in the coast-to-coast telephone circuits, a CBS rebroadcast of "To Tell the Truth," beamed to the West Coast. was relayed back to New York on NBC lines. "To Tell the Truth." a panel show starring Miss Bergen, among otners, was seen in New York an hour ahead of Hope. Hope got his own voice back Iter tour minutes and 20 seconds Hubcaps Said Stolen Itoscburg City Police reported a switch in the hubcap situation Mon day. Usually reports are of stolen caps, but Monday. Raymond L. Hughes of 242 W, Bradford report ed finding a cap. the owner. Miles F. Fickes, of Sutherlin has been notified. But more than offsetting the find, Judy II. Reid of 1241 NE Alameda (old police that four four - bar chrome spinner hub caps had been taken from her car parked in front of her home between 12:30 and 8 a.m. The report was turned over to the sheriff's office, as the ad dress is outside the cily. Motorist Kills Deer While the number of deer killed bv automobiles on the highway may not tally with the number killed by hunters, the number of slain animals continues to mount. - A motorist informed Slate Police that he had struck a deer i'ft miles south of the Douglas County line near Wolf Creek Monday about 10:35 p.m. and mat nis car nau gone into the ditch. He wanted a tow car to null hiin out. This was the second deer kill reported Monday. Lana Has Tax Trouble I.OS ANGELES (APi Lana Turner has income tax troubles. The Internal Revenue Service Monday filed a tax lien against the actress' property, claiming she owes $13,589 lor last year, tier business agent said Ihere is a ue linquency, but it will be taken care of within a montn. ' IT r WHITE SEWING MACHINE MR G MM! WHITE PORTABLE Complete With Case Reg. 169.95 Only $$(0)95 With Trade Model 1114 Round! Bobbin Automatic Pop-Up Darner 3-Position Fabric Selector ' Automatic Bobbin Winder Many other outstanding features! SAME HEAD IN BEAUTIFUL "DESK" CABINET 169.95 Reg. $214.95 ONLY With Trad Easy Terms CALL FOR FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION NO OBLIGATION All makes of sewing machines repaired In our Sewing Center GIT YOUR "UMPQUA VALLIY" CREDIT RD TODAY! NAM! .'. ADDRESS '. CITY - STATS imQoyed BY HOW LONG PHONI NUMSER win, namc i a. 630-648-658 S. E. Rose St. Phone OR 2 lfi 635 S. E. Stephens St Phone OR 2-1616 This Burets ii Home-Oned . . The Earning! Stay In Roseburg ! II I Ill I II II Trial Court Finds Dupper Not Guilty Charles F. Dunoer. 19. of Rt. 2. Box 1192, one of four persons ar rested in connection with an al leged teen-ace beer party in north noseDurg recently, was found inno cent of a charge of giving alcoholic liquor to a minor Monday. Dupper bad asked for a trial, which was conducted by District Court Judge Warren Woodruff. The judge found him not guilty when the state failed to present corroborating evidence to support me cnarge. Similar Counts I Two other persons. Gary Lee uraack, zu, of Winston, and Her man Lee Griffin. 18. each d leaded guilty earlier to similar charges growing oui of investigation by the snerni s ollice and were fined $150 A fourth case is still pending. Vernon Eugene Dean. 48. Reeds- port, charged with embezzlement Dy bailee, was bound over to the Douglas County Grand Jury follow ing a preliminary hearing in Dis trict Court Monday. Dean had asked for the hearing on arraign ment last week on a charge of taxing a m vomswagen from Hill Top Motors to try it out and failing to return the car. Allen . Clute of Hill Top was called to the stand. Dean, however, did not make a statement, so was held to answer to Judge Woodruff. His bail was set at S1.500. In other District Court cases Rodney . Burkhart. 18. of Rt. 4 Box 935, Roseburg, was sentenced to serve 30 days in the county jail tor driving witn nis operator s 11 cense suspended. Paul Dwight Wikstrom, 19, of 18.16 NE Klamath Ave., pleaded guilty to a charge of possessing game durins: closed season and was fined S100 and $5 costs. He had been cited by Slate Police sept. zu, CLUB TO MEET The Roseburg Art and Embroi dery Club will meet Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the home of Mrs. C. R. France, 836 SE Brockway Ave. Suspects Returned To Douglas Jail Douglas Warren Posten, 28, of Spanaway, Wash., Robert LeRoy Jones. 28. Tacoma. Wash., and Thomas Lee Courser, 18, of Gra ham, Wash., arrested in fcugene early Sunday for investigation into a break and entry at Walt Lun ney's' Shell Service Station at Rice Hill, were returned to the Douglas County jail by sheriff's deputies Monday. They are scheduled for arraign ment today on charges of burglary not in a dwelling. They were ar rested by State Police at Eugene after three persons were seen tak ing several items from the serv ice station by James Barnes of Rt. 1, Oakland, who followed their car to the truck stop at Curtin. He called a description of the car and persons ahead to Eugene. The ar rest was made a short time later. Other bookings at the Douglas County jail include Roy Bobby Mc Vev. 24. of Ft. Collins. Colo., ar rested by Riddle City Police Sat urday on a cnarge oi assauu wun a deadly weapon. Charles William Payne, 36, Star Rt., Tenmile, has been committed from Winston Municipal Court in lieu of posting 200 bail on a drunk en drivinn charge. Elmer J. Laine Fenton, 22, of Route 1. Sutherlin. has been com mitted from Sutherlin Municipal Court in lieu of payment of a $100 fine for disorderly conduct. Evert fcugene Alters, at, zua Gary Ave., has been arrested by Oregon State Police and booked for driving while his driver's li cense is suspended. James Albert Geer, 18, of Myrtle Creek and Roy Granger, 22, Port land, have been returned to Fair view Home, after their earlier es cape and arrest over the weekend at. Riddle. Driver Thankful No One Was Hurt E. R. Cochrane. 89. who acci dentally drove his automobile onto the sidewalk at Mam hi. and wasn ineton Ave. last Thursday, is "not only glad but thankful," that no one was injured. "I have not been wanting to drive recently," the elderly man said, "but this trip was necessary and it was ud to me." Cochrane says that Thursday's minor accident caused him to re port to the police for only the second time in 40 years of driving. While attempting to park his car. he accidentally stepped on the gas feed Instead of the brake, causing the vehicle to jump the curb. He steered the car to a stop on the sidewalk, tight against the Her ding building. His car received only minor damage, he said. Arthur E. Moore Arthur E. Moore, 74, of Days Creek died at his home early Mon day morning, succumbing during sleep from a heart attack. xne noay nas Deen removed to Ganz Mortuary, Myrtle Creek, and funeral announcements will be made lalcr. Winston Hires (Mew Policeman .. . '' tilrori hit A new policeman w"V'""fl;'i the Winston City. Council Monday evening, aucu.uit - "-Aant Guire, Newa-Review correspondent. r. . '..,Mt: uo ia u'hn haji been H8 W William - , on the Sutherlin pol' 'rce fur "ree M"' J v... .!, The vacancy was craucu u, ... v'cancy of TroyRichar son wh I awas recently v were given for the resignation. Hale Is married and has three children. He started his duties to day, and will immeaiawiy. '""- -Winston, his family following later. Bids for sewer extension on Suksdorf Ave. and Oak S . were let to Howard Newton, Winston con tractor. Public nearinp " called for rezoning of Lots 1 and i, z.. . u.i.ht. with ii date BIOCK, illinuis ntii, to be set later. Some residents want more resiaenuai mu -mercial zoning in the "., Mayor Bill Schell, who has been hospitalized with a broken heel returned and presided Monday night. PTA Council To Meet -......., Pnnnfil tit The UOUgias l-uumj v.--...... -- the PTA will meet Wednesday at 10 a.m. in me sucim im , n...h.,l..ian rhiiri-h. KOSeourg ricflu;i' - ... Main speaker at the meeting wi be Alex Kennedy, director of adult education for the Roseburg School District. Troop Withdrawal Asked By Ulbricht BERLIN 'AP) Waller in. bricht, East Germany's Commu. nist chief, called today for the withdrawal oi u. a. troops from Germany. He said West Germany had been created as a separatist state by the Americans as a base for aggression. Addressing his re. marks directly to President Ei. senhower, he said: "Give West Germany its freedom at last. Take away your troops." The bearded Red leader spoke in his Parliament for the first time as chief of state. He took over last month after the death of President Wilhelm Pieck. The Berlin question is "going to be solved anyway in due course by the signing of a peace treaty" between East Germany and ths Soviet Union, Ulbricht said. Jury Favor's Plaintiff A Circuit Court jury has award ed a verdict in favor of Charles Byers against the State Tndustrial Accident Commission, granting him compensation for permanent partial disability equal to B5 per cent loss of use of a leg and 50 V. per cent loss of use of an arm. The trial was conducted by Judge Eldon F. Caley. William C. Phil, lips Jr. was foreman of the jury, following close of the trial Friday. i i HOW OLD OLD? Bexel M Vitamin insurance hefpa make the older yean mora active -the active years tnorif fun! Are Ihe years slowing you down-or are you ilowing down from a lack of vitamim? Older people especially need plenty of vitamins in their diet. Don't stop doing the things you enjoy. If you need vitamins, Bexel M guarantees you the vitamin insurance you need for "get-up-and-go!" It's perfect for busy adults who want to be sure they get all the vitamins they need. 'ljjur Until it Junctional, tnu orJuilo ir mat', Kyn ixU. 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