6 The Newt-Review, Roieburg, Lumumba Fight Looms In Congo LEOPOLDVIIAE, the Congo (AP) Opposing troops with ma- chincguns faced each other around the home of Patrice Lu mumba today as the Congo's ruling government , commission threatened an army uprising un less U.N. forces hand over the de posed premier. Machincgunners of Ghana's U.N. contingent mounted a pro tective guard around the contro versial ex-premier and prevented uie vxccuuun ui we arrest war rant for Lumumba signed by Pres ident Joseph Kasavubu. Congo army troops formed an outer cordon around Lumumba's residence, keeping him a prisoner inside while the government com mission and the U.N. Command wrangled over his fate. Justin Bomboko, head of the commission appointed by army chief Col. Joseph Mobutu, re newed demands upon the U. N. uommanrt Tuesday nignt lor per mission to serve an arrest war rant and said Congolese troops in tended to take Lumumba into cus tody. Any U.N. interference, he said, would set off an army uprising throughout the Congo, and this "could start a war in the Congo and a world war." But he did not set a deadline for Lumumba's surrender. He said he was wailing for further word from U.N. Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold. The U.N. Command declined to deliver Lumumba on the grounds that under the Congo's temporary constitution, Parliament must ap prove the arrest of one of its members. Hills Creek Dam Plunge Fatal To Truck Driver OAKR1DGE (AP) A truck plunged over the edge of Hills Creek Dam 200 feet down to the river bed near here Tuesday, Jolt ine the driver. The victim was Jerry Engle- wood, about 35, of nearby Wil lamette City. Fellow workmen said the edge of the earthfill dam collapsed and Englcwood's truck slid over the side. He was hurled out and hit by the truck as it fell. Portland Stater Picked TORTLAND (AP) The Oregon Young Citizens for Kennedy Com mittee will be headed by Dick Keency of Portland State college. He said groups will be organized on all college campuses in Oregon to support the candidacy of Sen. John F. Kennedy for President. HEMORRHOIDS (Piles) Most hemorrhoidal" cases ar corrected well within a four month's period through the use of our electronic, non-surgical technique. Re-examinations and treatment, are given periodically. Should symptoms re-appear within one year after the existing condition has been corrected, additional treatments will be given without charge. ' . Descriptive Booklet On Request. v E. R. REYNOLDS, N.D., D.C. Practice of Proctology 1742 Willamette Eugene Ph. Dl 3-8131 fe.fi!550v-xwc:;. GET YOUR "UMPQUA VALIIY" CREDIT CARD TODAY! NAME 1. ADDRESS .... CITY STATE EMPLOYED IY : HOW LONG PHONE NUMBER WIFE'S NAME Oct .." QW) Coos Bay World Favors Porter COOS BAY (AP)-ReD. Charles 0. Porter, D-Ore., was endorsed for reelection from the 4th Dis trict by the Coos Bay World Tues day. The newspaper said in an edi torial the choice between Porter and the Republican nominee, Dr. Edwin Durno. Alcdford. is "clear ly drawn. ..In general, Porter is a liberal. His. ..opponent is a con servative." The World said that In Congress Durno would be forced to join the Republican - Southern Democrat ic coalition and vote against econ omic issues of importance to the timber economy of southwestern Oregon. Glendale Family Visits Relatives By MRS. G. B. FOX Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Kafer and family of Glendale drove to Lone view, Wash., one day last week to visit with Ins nrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Studley. The following day, Mrs. Kafer and Mary Sue went on to Portland where the little girl is undergoing asuiraa tests, tiater, another daugh ter. Margaret, and his father. Charles Kafer, who had been visit ing the Studleys, have returned home. Mrs. Kafer and Mary Sue were expected to return home this week. Mothers Meet Glendale Cub Scout Mothers, Mrs. Del McDiarmid, Mrs. Kenneth Brady, Mrs. Bill Ham and Mrs. James Korthof met at the Ham home recently to make plans for ine aen woric lor -ine coming months. They went over plans for October and then set a date for the first pack meeting of the fall. The pack meeting will De combined with a Halloween parly Oct. 25 at the Scout Building. Mr. and Mrs. Henrv La Pralh of Glendale have received word that their granddaughter and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Hall, of Anapolis, Md., are parents of a 7 pound 2 ounce girl. Lisa Marie. born at Anhanolis recently. Mrs. Hall, the former Kay Box, lived in uienciaie lor a numncr ot years and attended the Glendale schools. The couple have two older daugh ters. ' Lanceford King of Glendale un derwent an emergency appendec tomy at the Forest Glen Hospital in Canyonville recently. He is re ported to- be doing well. The opening meeting of Mrs. Bill Ham's Cub Scout den was held at her home recently. Speed Tracy was chosen to be denner to assist the den mother for this month. 1- Ore. iVeFRIGIDAIRE Host glamorous ranges ever , . , they look built-in, but aren't! The new FLAIR models glorify any kitchen with built-in glamour. And this compact 30" electric range makes petite kitchens the more pre cioua. Just slide a FLAIR (cabinet and all) into the place ot your present range. Incredible? It's true! $ Cook-Master Automatic Oven Control cook while you are away Roll-To-You Cooking Top -puts surface units out of sight Simplified Controls located on a clutter-free divided panel Vou pay little or no mar than or other jtrst quality conventional electric roitoe - - i Imagine, a 26-Inch wide See-Level oven exclusive , Glide-Up oven Door, tool r -in WE SERVICE ALL FRIGID Al RE APPLIANCES REGARDLESS OF AGE!) Frigidoire Factory-Trained Servicemen. For expert service, call OR 2-1616. 430.648-618 S. E. Rait OR 2 1616 635 S. I. Sttphtni This builmtl It homs-ewntd the teminii stay In Roitburj Campaign ' I '. i v if j" 0&mw-, '"f GILDING THE CAMPAIGN barnstorming tour through Douglas County Saturday for Elmo Smith, GOP senatorial candidate, will be Nancy Green of Roseburg. (Photo Lab) Smith Plans Whirlwind 10-Stop Tour Of County Elmo Smith Is coming back for his third major campaign in Doug las County Saturday. And his invastion is planned to reach more of the county in one day than any other candidate this year. He's going to lead a cara van in a whirlwind, ID-stop tour of the county in a single day. It will range all the way from Glen dale in the south to Drain in the north. And that isn t all. The caravan party will include a band, party workers and the members of Smith's family. The band will be the "Oregon All-star Band, made up of musicians from all over Ore gon and led by Bill Borchcr of Roseburg. It is the band that fol lowed Louis Armstrong on the State Fair bill this fall. To hear Smith, voters will clamber around the band wagon in the old-style stumping tradition. Hunter Suffers Wound In Arm MEDFORD (AP) A service man from Fairchlld Air Force Base is being treated In a hospital here for an arm wound sutlcrcd while hunting deer Monday. He is Charles Eugene Taylor, 26. Slate police quoted Lasscdor Nelson, 52, Eagle Point, Ore., as saying he fired when he mistook Taylor's rifle for a deer antler, and the bullet hit Taylor. Park Houses Damaged MEDFORD (AP) Three park houses damaged by a freak wind storm Sunday are being repaired at Crater Lake National Park, The storm felled about 30 trees, some of them five feet in din meter. Some fell on the houses in an area at the base of a canyon below Garfield Peak. Damage was estimated at $2,000. fcgaM; On Approved Credit Clamour "1 Here are the stops slated in the county and the approximate times they will be made: Tour starts at Glendale with a 7:30 a.m. break fast. Smith will be met by the caravan at 9:30 a.m. in Canyon ville. From there it's Riddle at 10:15, Myrtle Creek 11:15, Winston noon, Koseburg 1 p.m., bulherlin 2:30, Oakland 3:15, Yoncalla 4:15 and Drain 5. Smith, Republican, is running against Democrat Maurine Neu berger for U.S. Senate.- SAVE $30-8 Piece Bunk Bed Outfit EASTERN MADE ' ' , - - ssa viniiwwitwi &., .. - , . -. IK jJtr r" oni y-' w i flU di'AV " I $8 Per Month .VI1LI ' OARLOAD PURCHASE .z. Mod through our association with . ftWlY ' Weirores Ine. with 90-storo Buy!m fTrrfc tSSc ZS!? fi ON"-T m if tn nn j m W Mf UOO iYou Get All This! ) - y down 2nd Big Week jr jr- ALL WOOL j JLm i ' 'JSTiMg CARPET SALE IAARST&P jfeKfcQ 3R..ms $?n " If rulTURtCOWPANYyfej j 30 Sq. Yds. 31 i j . ;' . 3 T!!r J Hatfield Favors Crime Measure0 SALEM (AP) Gov. Mark Hat field said here he supports bal lot measure No. 4, which would oermit orosecution of crime by in formation signed by the district attorney. ' This would be an alternate to the grand jury system. Hatfield said the measure, to be on the November ballot, would "improve and facilitate the ad ministration of justice in Oregon without endangering the rights of any person accused of crime." Welder Killed In Barge Blast THE DALLES (AP)-A work man was injured fatally when a spark from his welding rod touch ed off an explosion aboard a petroleum barge here Tuesday. Another workman was missing and believed drowned. Ward Warren, 45, died a short time after the explosion. Ed Co burn, 54, an electrician, was seen by other workmen struggling in the water after the explosion. He did not come up. The blast took rlace in the for ward compartment of an empty barge at the Pacific Inland Navi gation Co., where it was being repaired after arrival from Port land. Firemen said a spark from Warren's welding rod apparently ignited petroleum fumes in the compartment. The barge caught fire, and crews worked more than an hour to put the flames out. Several of the 15 men on the barge were knocked down or shaken by the explosion. The barge, 48 feet wide and 206 feet long, nas a capacity of 20,719 barrels. The Coast Guard said there had been another explosion aboard it last winter in the Port land harbor, CLUB TO MEET The Rural Women's Club of Az alea will hold its monthly lunch eon meeting at the Azalea Orange Hall Thursday noon. All ladies of the community are invited to be present. The program will include talks by guests, Miss Jean Scott and Miss Katherine Bowers, rural' missionaries in Eddyvule, Ore. ... rTsnniinrr - ' ' f'i i Great Debate Over 'Great Debate1 Shaping Up Between Candidates NEW YORK (AP)-A great de bate appears to be shaping up over the "great debate" between the presidential candidates. Sen. John F. Kennedy has ac cepted a network offer to make time available for a fifth debate early in November. But Vice President Richard M. Nixon is cool to the idea and has suggested that instead of a fifth debate he and Kennedy expand their fourth, joint appearance to two hours. Kennedy has not yet replied. Club To Be Organized For Tenmile Children A 4-H livestock club' is being organized in Tenmile with Mrs. Ronald Swift as leader, reports Mrs. Walter Coats, correspondent. Parents who have children in terested in a livestock club are requested to contact Mrs. Swift or attend a club meeting. Members may choose any of the farm ani mals, rabbits or poultry as their project. If enough are interested in a horse club, one will be or ganized. Members need not have their animals right away but must attend meetings. Hunters Return Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Breitenbu cher and Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Seigle and daughter have returned to Tenmile following a hunting trip to the Lakeview area. Body Of Missing Man Found Near Lebanon LEBANON. Ore. (AP) The body of a man who has been miss ing since Monday was found Tues day afternoon near a logging road. He was Percy -Miller, 65, an arthritis sufferer. He was on the ground , with bis rifle across the body. Bloodhounds, men afoot, horse men and Explorer Scout units from Sweet Home and Salem took part in the search. Miller's home was seven miles southwest of Lebanon. The body was nearly a mile from his home. The cause of death was not im mediately determined. Originally, four one-hour de bates were scheduled. Two al ready have been held and the third is set for Thursday night. The proposal for another de bate "around Nov. 2" was made in telegrams Saturday by three Democratic senators. The Nation al Broadcasting Co., the Columbia Broadcasting system ana ine American Broadcasting u. agreed to give television and radio time and the Mutual Broad casting System offered its radio network lacuiues. The Kennedy camp feels that tho ontitnr Hid so well in the firiit two debates that still anoth er one would oe oeneueiai iu College Credit Courses Get Okay Of Principals SALEM (AP)-A program to give gifted high school students a chance to take college credit pmirses received a boost at the Oregon Association of Secondary School Principals semi annual convention Tuesday. A sub-committee was appointed tn studv the eradine of the courses. Principals said some students fear losing college scholarships from possibly low grades in the courses. In earlier action the principals favored establishing junior college and regional vocational schools in Oreeon. A questionnaire showed 82.5 per cent of 203 answering principals favored the action. Sixty-nine per cent of them saw a need to give more vocational training to less gifted students. IS Car PRESTO-LOGS Due Friday PLACE ORDERS FOR DELIVERY GERRETSEN BUILDING SUPPLY CO. Flegel Warehouse Phone OR 2-2636 him. They also believe that, with the last debate -now set for Oct. 21, too big a time gap would be left before the election and that the Republicans could finance a home-stretch TV blitz that the Democrats could not match be cause of a lack of funds. The Republicans take another view. ' Fred C. Scribner Jr., chief Re. publican National Committee ne. gotiator on the four programs al ready scheduled, asserted thdt Kennedy had lost the second TV debate, held last Friday. "It is not unusual for a man who has been beaten to ask for a return match," he said. : Nixon, in San Diego, Calif., suggested through his press sec retary that the fourth joint TV appearance now scheduled for Oct. 21 be turned over to the vice presidential candidates. He also suggested that the two hour debate that he proposed should be held some time in the week of Oct. 21-28 and that the time for both answering questions and for rebuttal should be in creased from two-and-a-half to five minutes. Nixon was quoted as saying that his schedule was too tight to per mit a TV debate after Oct. 28. Trial Continues , MEDFORD (AP)-The embez zlement trial of O. H. Bengtson, a Medford attorney, continued in circuit court here today. He is accused of taking money in October, 1959, from the Med ford Escrow Co., of which he was an officer and one of the founders.