0 o O o 2 Tha Nawi-Review, RtBebtiaj, Nixon Sees Win In Sererr Of Nation's Large States KN ROUTE WITH NIXON (AP) Vice President Richard M. Nix on predicted today he would win in a majority of seven of Ihe na tion's largest stales California, Texas. Michigan. Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York in npYt upik' nresidenlial e ection. "The tide lias turned and my opoonent is practically running out of gas," said Nixon as he took off from Philadelphia for campaign appearances at Lan caster and Erie. Pa. In reply to a question as to how be felt tne election was snaping ud. Nixon said: lo win. my op nnnent has to take six of the seven big states and he can't do it. The tide has turned. 1 will carry majority of the seven big states." Nixon s prediction of victory at least four of the seven carried him a step further than his posi tion last Sunday, when he rated New York. Michigan, Ohio, Fenn sylvania and Illinois about SO-SO Trick Or Treaters Get Moth Crystals PORTLAND (AP) Poisonous moth crystals were dropped with candy into the sacks of children trick-or-treating on Halloween Monday night. Police said some of the children tasted the crystals but none apparently ate them. Several children remembered where they got the crystals, and authorities arrested a 17-year-old boy a short time later. Deputy Frank Gilbert said the teenager admitted giving the cry stals to six or eight children. "Ho said he did it for a joke, he thought it would be funny," the deputy added. The teenager was being held by juvenile author ities. Gilbert said the teenager told the children to open their trick- or-treat sacks "and then dropped in candy and a few crystals with them. Some realized they weren't randy and threw them away. Several tasted them and spit them out." A doctor at the university of Oregon Medical School Poison Center reported the crystals con tained formaldehyde, Gilbert said. Children also were given apples into which a bitter, but apparent ly harmless, substance had been injected. Deputies said they were told the substance was cream of tartar. Deputies said three com panions of the teen-ager were questioned, but not arrested. Greyhound Bus Stalled North Of Canyonville A Greyhound bus was disabled rarly this morning in the vicinity of the Middle Riddle . Junction north of Canyonville, State Police report. The investigating patrolman re1 ported that the bus had become stalled in the north bound lane of the highway. The driver was un able to move the bus, due to a jammed clutch. A wrecker was dispateched from Grants Pass to remove the bus. The two passengers on the bus were brought to Roseburg by the state patrolman. Husbands! Wives! Get Pep, Vim; Feel Younger jlinuianil of conplaaairtin.,1. weak, Morn. mil, nhamld Itrt-uuM body UvLi uon and ilamin Hi. r'or lhal vnnnurr IrrltnK alltr 40, try nw -.id iropmvr-,1 (Mti-i '1'nmc Tahli-t,. Contain itnn pint hiKh-potrn, y tlna Vitamin Bi lor a quick, m-w vming' npp. Mm. "Ot -arn.ua intrd fuze only 6df. Al all -iruBgiitt everywhere. F US MAIL yhea "I do my saving by mail" An Equitahk savings account is as near as pour mail box ' If you're like me, you like convenience. Th.it'i liy I nave nt 1'quiuMe and ue their speedy Nave-Hy-Mat! plun. Nothing hrt.iVs my mvingi routine . . . bad uiMthcr, turtle iaim, appoint ments , , , ihe ntjit aUMs iocs through and so do niy sainsi, if lime is important to you me Lquiuble's lime.Na ing mail pl.tn. 2 great ways to save DKVnillNT tSSCOK 1VIIICS rT I 7q 5alnr plarrn h, the ti,h naap earn Irtim Ihr ui. ,( ,hit W " a. virrn ,ur a, count at ttieilipli luday. Cattaat Sal Salft lateral U llO.OOA If Mml Ore. T., littV. and saw himself leading in Texas and California. Nixon contended that Ihe great est weakness of his Democratic opponent, Sen. John K. Kennedy, "is that people are afraid he will shoot from the hip and make mistakes as president. We can't afford to lake such a chance." The vice president also asserted he expected President Eisenhow er to be a "great help" in the closing days of the campaign. . Nixon charged Kennedy with trying io make "a political foot ball" out of the problem of chron ic unemployment. The Republican presidential nominee blasted Ken nedy's proposal for dealing with depressed areas. "The sorry lack of concern for the American people too often re vealed by my opponent and his followers can be no better docu mented than by the record on dis tressed areas legislation," Nixon said in a statement before leav ing on today's campaign swing which also will carry him to Syra cuse and Rochester, N.Y. Nixon said, "five times they have ignored the President's rec ommendations and, instead, they passed two pork-barrel bills of their own, each in an election yeur, 1958 and 1960, and each so full of politics they were obvious it rw.trtin, hut inin hail " Before his slop overnight in Philadelphia, Nixon said he was willing to take on the whole Ken nedy family in a national televi sion debate. Woman Found Guilty Of Assault, Battery Maria Knight was found guilty of a charge of assault and battery in a trial before District Court Judge Warren Woodruff Monday. The judge fined her S20 and $3 costs, but pavment of the fine was I indefinilely suspended. She was accused in a- nrlvate a P complaint of assaulting and beat ing Mildred Pratt on Oct. 15. She pleaded innocent of arraignment Oct. 20 and the trial date was set. She was out on bail. Days Creek Resident Denies Rape Charges Jarold Arden Rachor, 38, of Days Creek pleaded innocent on arraign ment in Circuit Court before Judge Kldon F. Calcy Monday to two in dictments charging rape. Rachor's bail bond of $5,000 on the two counts has been continued and his trial will be set down for the January term of court on the regular trial ducket. Elan. N. Pebworth ' Eluin Nathanial Pebworth died in a Portland hospital, Oct, 31 fullowing a prolonged illness, lie was a late resident of Box 341, Oakland. He was born Sept. 11, 1893, in Ti Valley, Indian Territory, Okla. He was a member of the Odd Fel lows Lodge, 70, Springfield. He is survived by his wife. Ruby, of Oakland) two daughters, Airs. Olive Anibernathy, Pontiac, Mich., Alma Pebworth, Oklahoma City; three sons, Jack, of Jones boro, Ark.. Harvey and William of Uuibank. Calif.: several grand children and great-grandchildren. Services will be held at Wilson's Chapel of the Roses, Thursday, at 2 p.m. with M. Tankersley of the Rosicrucian Society officiating. An Odd Fellows graveside serv ice will be held at the IOOF Ceme tery in Oakland. PtnNtlta MVINSS PUT l u A,k ah.n ih.. rl.i.e I Munahle aina I'lan ittat ll.iaranu r aint Cerraat tn ia lk cent Satiafl 4 la laivaMil Cararillat. ' II omen $1 M 1.H4MM Rotburj Officii 733 S t. Cu f io iiuvi rou Study II . . OPENING SESSION Earl Albright, special instructor from the state Department of Vocational Education, explains one of the more technical phases of operating o fire pum per to members of eight Douglas County fire deportments ot the opening session of the pumper school currently being held at the Roseburg Rural Fire Department offices. The school is being given through the sponsorship of the rural department. Representatives of the host department, the Roseburg City, Winston-Dillard, Myrtle Creek, Sutherlin, Tri Cities, Canyonville ond Riddle departments were on hand for the opening session. The school will continue each noon and evening this week and for part of next week. (News Review Photo) Crossing Of A Chicken And Turkey Nets Churks Poultry farmers take note. there's a new member of the poul- try family peeking around me gov- ernmenls research center the cnurx. 1 he hybrid fowl is a cross be tween a turkey and a chicken de veloped in experimental work by Dr. Mallow Olsen at the Agricul ture Department s center in Mary land. The turkey ancestry stems from the witleTy known Beltsville turkey, a bird developed with an excep tionally broad breast, to provide more white meat. The chicken side of the family the rooselcr is Cornish. Three of the churks are alive at the center. Minor Auto Accident Reported In Roseburg City police report a minor auto mobile accident occurred at about 9 p.m. Monday night on South Stephens St., Roseburg. Automobiles operated by Donna Lou McCrain, 1450 SB Mill St., and Lloyd II. Hemming, of the Dec-Lite Trailer Court, ftoseburg. were involved. According to the police report, there were no injuries, nor were there any citations issued as a result of the collision. Oakland Firm Complains Fire Equipment Stolen Douglas County Sheriff's deout- ies received a report from Bill Rav of the Martin Bros. Container and limner Products Low., Oakland, that two tires and whetls had been stolen from a company fire pump er truck. According lo the report, t h e truck was stationed on the Krassev Creek and Kelly Creek logging op eration oi ine limner products con cern. Fred L. Couey Funeral services for Fred L. Couey, 78, who died at his home in Winston Sunday evening will be held in the chapel of Long & Orr Mortuary, Wednesday, at 10:30 a.m., Willi Ihe Rev. James McCall of the Winston Baptist Church of ficiating. Concluding services and interment will follow in the Rose burg Memorial Gardens. Mr, Couey was born at Fossil, Ore., on Sept. 17, 1882, and re sided near Roseburg for a number of years before moving to Port land, lie was married to Bessie J. ruuer at Vancouver, Wash., on Jan. 10. 1I32. He had made his Inline at Winston for the past 12 years and was a member of the Baptist Church. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Bessie J. Couey of Winston, a slepdaugnter. .Mrs. 1 of Winston: and three sisters. Mrs. j "''J'" of Long Beach.! ma nauk-nn ' Yr, ;1':"? Falls, Idaho, and Mm. laula Castle of Sandy; and a brother Edward Couey of Venice, Calif. BETHEL TO MEET The Winton l)illard Bethel 53 meeting will be held at the Win ston School at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. The meeting has been changed from Wednesday night to Thurs day for this week onlv. For JUDGE - Choose a JUDGE Prl. Pol. Adv. Wofnn Woodruff, CouMvmh, Rofburcj, Oregon Pumper OperatieA 2 If Kennedy Spans U. S. Today To Open Drive's Final Week LOS ANCELES (AP) Sen. John F. Kennedy spanned the con tinent today, opening an intensi fied drive that will carry him to 17 states in the final week of the presidential campaign. Opening two days of campaign ing here and in San Francisco Kennedy charged that Vice Presr dent Richard M. Nixon two days ago reversed tne Kepublican pot icy of 25 years by advocating im provement in the social security system. As this final, crucial week be gan, Kennedy forces stepped up their already almost impossible schedule. After two days here and in San Francisco, Kennedy will hit Arizona, Mew Mexico, Tex as, Oklahoma, Virginia, Ohio, California Man Lodged In Douglas County Jail A Sacramento, Calif., man was lodged in the Douglas County jail Monday evening after he had been charged with being drunk on a pub lic highway by Oregon State Po lice. Charles Morris, 50, was arrest ed near the Shamrock Motel south of Roseburg about 10:45 p.m. by stale patrolmen. His vehicle was towed from the scene of his arrest by Walt's Tow ing Service. Roseburg Man Reports Pilferage Of Hubcaps Wayne Mutschler, 1940 Austin Rd., Roseburg, reported to State Police that sometime after 8 p.m. Monday night, someone had stol en the hubcaps from his car. According lo police reports, Mut schler's vehicle was in the park ing lot of the National Plywood plant in Crcen. The hub caps were described as 1958 Oldsmobile caps. Harriett L. Gallegly Harriet L. Gallegly, 71, a long time resident of Drain, died sud denly while visiting at the home of her sister in Longview, Wash., on Oct. 23. Mrs. Gallegly was born at Hen- dersonville, N. C, March 31, 1889 and was married Nov. 24, 1920 to Fred A. Gallegly at Nyssa. He pre ceded her in death in December 1954. Mrs. Gallegly and her husband came to Drain several years ago where he held a teaching position in the Drain High School, and re tired from the teaching profession in Drain. Mrs. Gallegly was a member of the Drain Baptist Church. Surviv . ..I., a:..- -: a, , !, T Lo nview Wash Fl 5SinL 1 Haulme Barnes r,f of Calif.: one brother, I.onie Max- ! well of Boise Idaho., two grand daughters of Madras, and seven teen nieces and nephews. Funeral services were held at the Drain Baptist Church Oct. 26 at 1 p.m. with her nastor Rev. Otis L. Daherty officiating. Interment was in the Drain Cem etery with Longview Mortuary, Longview, Wash., in charge of arrangements. JUDGE Warren Woodruff FOR CIRCUIT JUDGE PRESENT DISTRICT JUDGE Mora than 30,000 coses hov coma befora Judgt Woodruff in the lost six years. n if . rv Michigan, Illinois, New York, Connecticut, New Jersey, Ver mont, New Hampshire, Rhode Is land, Maine and Massachusetts. Some extra stops in these states also were added. His campaign strategists said this would be more states than any presidential candidate ever covered in a final week. Nixon Monday announced he would touch at Anchorage, Alaska, to become the first candidate to campaign in all 50 states. Kennedy's challenge to Nixon to bring Eisenhower along for a final debate was in a mocking vein and obviously was not expected to be taken seriously. In it he mentioned Eisenhower by name, something he rarely does. He usu ally retcrs only to "this adminis ration," or "republican leader ship." Negotiations for a fifth debate broke down last week in an ex change of charge and counter charge. With Temple students hanging from every window of a four story dormitory Kennedy said, "I am going to make an offer to Mr. Nixon. I have been trying to get nun to aeDaie me lor two weeks. He has given me every reason and finally his last excuse was that I should apologize for saying that he was unwilling to debate. I may now find the reason why. "I read in today's paper that Mr. Nixon is willing to t a k e a ride through the city of New York to meet the voters. But he is go ing to take President with him. "I now offer him to let Presi dent Eisenhower come with him on the fifth debate. Then we can see." Kennedy added, "What Mr. Nix on docs not understand is that President Eisenhower was run ning only in 1952 and 1956. Presi dent Eisenhower is not a candi date. Mr. Nixon is. Mr. Nixon and I are going to face the voters alone next Nov. 8. no matter what the president of the United States may choose to do this week in New York or any place else. It is Nixon versus Ken nedy, the Republicans versus the Democrats, and 1 look to the fu ture with some degree of hope." U Oppose "I n I Pd. Pol. Adv., AX f i ni .i m it i i iii nn 111 J Death Ends Career Of Businessman Who At One Time Defied U.S. Army CHICAGO (AP) Sewell Lee Avery. 86. a strong-willed big bus inessman who ultimately took on the U. S. Army, died Monday. Averv. who was Montgomery Ward & Co. chairman from 1931 to 1955. died in his apartment on fashionable Lake Shore Drive of a October Traffic Count Hits 48 Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Three more traffic fatalities were reported in Oregon Monday. The October toll went on record as the third highest in the state this vear. The latest victims included two persons who died in a headon crash near Medford and a man who died of injuries suffered five days earlier in an Eastern Oregon accident. s The Associated Press tabulation showed today that 48 persons died on the state's highways in Octo ber. That toll was exceeded only by 49 deaths in July and 58 September. So far this year. 374 persons have been killed in Oregon auto accidents. At a comparable period a year ago, there had been 402 highway fatalities. The headon crash of a logging truck and a car killed two per sons 40 miles northeast of Med ford Monday. State police said the victims were identified tentatively as Leo Lester Jones, 54, o Lancaster, Calif., and his wife. .Police said the crash occurred moments after Jack Wesley Bro- phy, 50, of Eagle Point, swerved his truck to avoid birds that sud denly darted into his path. He was not injured. An accident that occurred last Wednesday took the life of Ed ward Benjamin Freauff, 40, of Portland, in a Richland, Wash., hospital Monday. State police said Freauff was injured when his pickup truck overturned on state Highway 730, near Irrigon, and rolled over several times. Motorist Meets New Road Hazard A young Drew motorist met with something new in the way of a highway traffic hazard Sunday night when a black bear jumped in front of his car, according to Mrs. Milton Hammersly, News-Review correspondent. Vernon Lowry was driving near the Bilbert Bonney residence east of Drew about 7:30 p.m. when the bear suddenly appeared from the bank of Elk Creek and jumped di rectly in front of the car. The im pact shoved the grill of the car into the radiator and caused the vehicle to swerve into the opposite lane of traffic. Neither the driver nor anv ot his youthful passengers were in jired, but blood on the car indi cated the bear had been wounded. However, it rolled across the high way and continued up the bank to disappear into the underbrush. efforts of Vernon and his father. Virgil Lowry, to track the bear with dogs Sunday evening proved unsuccesstui. Sorority Schedules Roseburg Candy Sale For the second week in row. Gamma Iota chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority has slated a door - to - door candy sale in the Roseburg area for the benefit of the Eugene Crippled Children's Hospital. The sale starts tonight at 7:30 p.m. Women of the chapter will sell the candy house-to-house and proceeds will go to the hospital as one of the sorority's projects. ODDQDQaDO A IB) 9 A BIG ELECT STATE SENATOR Any Raid On County O&C Funds" Jockson for Senotor Comm . Lee Wimberly, Chrtiw, 547 S. E. Jockson, Roseburg, cerebral hemorrhage. He had been; ill for a year. In financial circles, Avery was a legend. Brilliant and tough, he was al most phenomenally successful from the day in 1891 when he grad uated from University of Michigan T u Sr-hnnl As Montgomery Ward's chief executive he fought spectacular battles against the federal govern ment in 1944 and financier Louis E Wolfsnn in 1955. In 1944, Avery defied the. War laDOr BOaru S iniervenuuil m a Montgomery Ward dispute with a CIO union. ' When on April 26, 1944, govern ment officials, backed by troops, nt punied Ward oronertv in Chi cago, Avery sat defiantly in his office. The next day two soldiers en tered his office, picked him up and deposited him in the street outside. Pictures of Avery, immaculate Iv eroomed and apparently unruf fled, being carried by two GIs were among the most widely circuiaiea news photos of the decade. He later said he deliberately maneuvered the government into a show of force to dramatize what he called the "march of dictator ship" in the United States. Two weeks later, the labor con. trcversy was settled, the govern ment relinquished Ward control and Avery was back on the job. His last big battle was a suc cessful defense in 1955 against fi nancier Wolfson's campaign to wrest control of Montgomery Ward. Wolfson, then 43, staged an eight- Youth Temperance Club Sets October Meeting The Douglas County Youth Temp erance Council held their October meet at the North Roseburg Evan gelical United Brethren Church. The ladies of the church served supper to the group, numbering about 40 members. Various churches and communi ties over the county were repre sented. Rev. Edgar Albee gave the devotions. Doris Pilger sang a solo with Mrs. Albee at the piano. Judy Floth presented an interest ing lesson from the study book, "Real Living Takes Time." The purpose of the YTC is to unite the young people of the com munity, state and nation in a pro gram of Christian citizenship, to build for total abstinence for the individual and sobriety for the na tion. In a talk before the group, Mrs. C. N. Currier, president of the Douglas County Woman's Chris tian Temperance Union made an appeal for a county general secre tary for this group of young people, the YTC. The Youth Temperance Council is the tcen-aga and 20's age group of the Woman's Chris tian Temperance Union. Mrs. Cur rier said she would1 be moving from this area and would not be available to assist reeularlv as she has in' the past. She will retu eturn when there are special meetings and to help in anv projects being planned bv the County WCTU. The YTC Training Program Is planned to help councilors learn about tobacco, alcohol, and other depressant drugs and their effects on individual and community life. Anyone interested should contact Rev. Valeria L. Cleveland, corre sponding sccretarji of the county WCTU, telephone OR 3-3497. OSEPIAN NAMED Janice Osepian of Azalea, honor1 graduate of Glendale High School this spring, is one of 129 freshmen 1 in the Honors College at the Uni versity of Oregon this year. i Entrance in the special four-year ' program for superior students was: gained by placement in special ex-j aminations taken at the University j last summer. The program is op erated as a separate college within 1 the University system and gradu-1 ation diplomas will be given. FOR JO JAC-KS'O month proxy Ii8M very to 'run the huge S700 million mail order concern. Avery, then 81, fought back and won. A few months later he re signed as board chairman and four years later, critically ill with a cancerous tumor, severed his last connection with Ward management. Avery took over direction of the mail order firm in 1931, when it was slipping toward bankruptcy. He was recruited by J. P. Morgan Si Co., which held a substantial in terest in the company. Avery's first triumph in business came in 1905 when he vaulted to the presidency of United States Gvpsum Co. after only four years with the firm. From 1937 to 1951 he was chairman of the board. He was a demanding employer. Between 1936 and 1955, Montgom ery Ward lost four presidents, 40 ' or more vice presidents and count- ' less lesser officials who were fired or resigned because of conflicts with Avery. 3 Youths Arrested By Roseburg Police Three juveniles, two of them marines, were taken into custody Monday night by Roseburg City police after being seen srinking in their automobile, police records state. s Two of the youths are being held for illegal possession of li- . quor by minors. The third is held for being intoxicated in an auto mobile. The three boys were lodged in county jail pending arraignments. Four additional youths, three boys and one girl, were stopped Monday night by city police. The juveniles were turned over to juvenile officers for disorderly conduct in Roseburg Monday night. The four were stopped for throw- , ing balloons filled with water at pedestrians. According to Douglas County Sheriff's deputies, four boys, one 18 and the others 15, were seen breaking plate glass windows with thrown rocks in the Green area : Monday night. The windows will cost upwards from $80 each to replace, the re port continued. Further action by the sheriff's office will be taken today. Roseburg Man Fined For Interference Count In municipal court action Mon day, David Flores Ortiz, Roseburg, was fined $50 on a charge of inter ference with arresting officers. Of the fine, $30 was suspended under the stipulation that Ortiz pay for all costs that occured from the repairing of a police officer's watch that ha. been broken in the Struggle that brought about vt he marge. . . . . In further action, Cyrus Napo leon Peterson was released on $150 bail pending his trial, to be held in Liccemner. - Peterson entered a Dlca of inno cent of a charge of a hit and run automobile accident. Jranon Norton Pond of Roseburg was fined $50 with a 30 day sus pension of her operator's permit for reckless driving. REVIVAL CHURCH OF THE OPEN BIBLE . 1643 S. E. Jackson St. Roseburg EVANGELIST W. B.FUSON , Every nitt except Men. & Set, 7:30 p.m. DO Q Oregon Art A FUlS (