2 The Newi-Review, Roseburg,
Wtr- Gromyko Meet Fails
To Solve
GENEVA (AP)-U. S. Secreta
ry of State Dean Rusk and Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko
met today but (ailed to solve their
dispute over how Laos should be
represented in the international
conference on the future of the
Southeast Asian kingdom.
The issue of Laotian represen
tation kept the conference from
starting on schedule Friday. In
his first try at personal diplomacy
with the Soviets, Busk conferred
with Gromyko in a Soviet hillside
mansion to try to end the dispute.
U.S. Refusal Demand
Rusk told newsmen after his
meeting that the United States
would not accept the Soviet de
mand for full and equal status
for the Communist-led Pathet Lao
at the conference table.
"This represents an injection of
a new idea by the Soviet Union,"
Rusk said. "This was not the
basis on which we were invited
to the conference."
Rusk and Gromyko were togeth
er at the tree-shaded Soviet man
sion for 70 minutes. The American
decided to call on the Soviet for
eign minister to explore ways of
breaking the deadlock, a move en
couraged by other Western lead
ers. Harriman Arrives
Meanwhile, five members of the
Western-backed Laotian govern
ment delegation reached' Geneva.
W. Avercll Harriman, President
Kennedy's roving ambassador,
Kasavubu In Move To Place
Katanga Under Congo Rule
LEOPOLDV1LLE, the Congo
(AP) President Joseph Kasavubu
today called Parliament back into
session to help resolve the politi
cat chaos that has split the nation
since its founding. It is expected
to meet In a few weeks. .
"After nearly 10 months of con
fusion, misery and all kinds of
privation, the president said in
an address, "each of us will have
taken note of the need for stable
social order based on the princi
ples of public morality and legal
ity" :.
The call for Parliament to meet
represented an attempt to bring
Katanga back under control of the
central government, now that Ka
tanga President Moise Tshombe
has been arrested on treason
charges. He has proclaimed his
province an independent nation.
It remains to be seen whether
Katanga's deputies will desert
Tshombe and attend the parlia
mentary session.
Kasavubu asked for United Na
tions protection for the parlia
mentarians and their families,
and for U. N. travel facilities to
bring the members to Leopold
villc. He called the first session to
open immediately after the con
clusion of ' the present political
conference In Coquilhatville, prob
ably this month.
"The moment is very grave,"
Kasavuhu said in a formal ad-
Older Children Slated
For Summer Work Plan
Beginning June 12, children from
14 to 18 will receive no. aid to de
pendent children ,or monies from
the general assistance fund of the
County Welfare Commission.
Jack Summerficld, welfare co
ordinator, said that this year, as
in the past year, these children
will be considered a part of the
summer work program. Tho pro
grain ends Aug. 30.
The children aro expected to
meet their needs through their own
employment during this period,
Summerficld said. .
If illness or special needs oc
cur, it is possible on an exception
basis for sonic of the children to
be left on grants, he said.
This program will affect between
75 and 100 children, Summerficld
estimated.
Delivery Truck Overturns
Oregon State Police said that f
small delivery truck owned by the
Meadow Gold Dairy in F.ugcne
overturned early this morning on
Highway 99 near Wilbur.
According to the police, Uie driv
er of the vehicle was uninjured
T..ToBBi !
There's a free "Mill America
Pattern Book" inside the tpeeial
Toni kit on sale now. Pick one of
the eiht. McCall't patterns.
There's a convenient order form.
Send for your tree pattern.
The MrCatl's patterns are de
sinned in EVERGLAZEfJ fabric.
j REGULAR
Ore. Sar., Moy 13, 1961
Dispute Over Laos
met them and Rusk arranged a
prompt conference with them.
Pathet Lao and neutralist delega
tions, the other two factions in
volved, already are at Geneva.
Their arrival was one of a fast
moving scries of developments.
After the conference in the So
viet Embassy, Gromyko told
newsmen: "We discussed ques
tions of opening the conference
without going into details. We
reached no conclusion."
Rusk said "No progress has
been made yet" in breaking the
deadlock.
The American secretary of state
said he would now have to consult
other delegations "as to where we
go from here."
U.S. Delegates Ready
Rusk stressed that the United
States delegation is ready to take
its place at the conference table
on 10 minutes' notice once the
representation issue is settled.
Some delegates are saying it
may be no use to hold the 14
natinn meeting at all. But the
round of talks continued as dele
gation leaders sought some loop
hole. Foreign Secretary Lord Home,
playing the British role of peace
maker, saw V. K. Krishna Menon,
India's defense minister, and later
Rusk and Maurice Couve de Mur-
ville, the French foreign minister.
MMtt With Miu
Uusk arrived for the meeting
with Home from another with
dress in Coquilhatville. "Every
one has the duty to collaborate
in the work of reconstruction. I
hope the convocation of the par
liament will bring not merely a
return to legality but a full new
lease of life for our population."
By recalling the parliament
Kasavubu effectively challenged
the rebellious Lumumbist regime
in Stanleyville to come to terms
with the central government.
Rebel leader Antoine Gizenga
has always insisted that only
parliament could designate a le
gal government,
Gizenga look over the leader
ship among followers of ex-Premier
Patrice Lumumba, slain dur
ing captivity early this year, and
set up a rump regime in Stanley
ville to continue the fight for a
rigid central government.
Good Intentions End
In Unusual Accident
Good intentions sometimes bring
disastrous results as A. F. New
man, 925 NE Cedar St., found Fri
day afternoon.
Newman, retired and near 70,
according to police, had gone to a
grocery markot, 1019 SE Cass Ave.
with his daughter, Audrey Z. New
man, of the same address, in her
car, a sedan. '
While she was inside the market.
he decided to move the car closer
to the store door to make it a little
easier for his daughter. After put
ting the car in gear, his foot slip
ped from the brake to the gas
pedal and the car shot forward,
jumping a high curb next to a pri
vate drive.
Unfortunately, Tom L. Miller,
885 NE Cedar St., had his sedan
parked in tho drive. The Newman
car landed on the Miller ear dam
aging its left rear section and
hlowing out the Miller car's right
rear tire. Tho Newman car was
not damaged.
No estimate of damage was
made.
Off-Duty Rural Fireman
Quelches Pickup Blaze
Norman Sallee, 1109 NW High
land, sitting in a coffee shop near
McKay's market early Friday
night, noticed snioke coming from
the inside of a pickup parked in
the market lot.
A member of the Rural Fire De
partment, he investigated the
smoke, found that the truck's seat
was on firo and called the depart
ment. Then he put the tire out
himself.
When department trucks arriv
ed, Karl Peering, Rt. 1, Box 992.
Roseburg, truck owner, was begin
ning to add up his damages, which
amounted to $25. Cause of the (ire
is unknown.
When POLIO strikes,
can you strike back?
Iherc'i only one way to answer yes-get your Salk
hols nini'. Immunisation is as available as your phone.
Pick it up and arrange with your physician to get
POLIO protection. Or call your local health depart
ment for information on where to go for shots.
Make an appointment now for your children (par
ticularly your babies) and yourself. Remember, POt.10
hat no age limits.
POLIO shots mean you struck back!
Don't taki a (hantakt your polio Jftofi
rVMlifctd at iHif'lc ttrvlft Is rrsfatioii t. Ihs 4vsi1ilm
Council si Ins MftiiMMr Mvatint tiacutivti Attociattsti
Burmese Foreign Minister Kyau
Miu.
"I expect I will be circulating
around quite a bit today," Rusk
said.
Lord Home told reporters as he
came in: "We are just going
along. We just keep talking."
Some one asked Couve de Mur
ville if any progress was being
made.
"I don't know," he said. "It's
not going very fast." It was re
ported diplomats of Communist
nations here for the conference
also were holding a series of con
ferences and talks.
County To Hold
Rabies Clinic
Dr. John Donnelly, Douglas
County health officer, today listed
rabies clinics to be held in the
county in the next two weeks.
The clinics were set up after a
meeting a week ago with the coun
ty dog control officer and veterin
arians of the area to establish
whether such rabies protection is
necessary.
Inoculation Monday
Donnelly noted that while no ra
bies outbreaks have been estab
lished in the county, there is no
proof that rabies docs not exist.
Beginning Monday, area veterin
arians will begin the inoculation
program. Donnelly has ordered 6,-
000 doses.
"If we get 6,000 animals inocu
lated, we will achieve a better
than 70 per cent protection which
is desirable for the entire popu
lation," he said.
9,500 Dogs
The dog control officer estimated
that there are 9,500 dogs in the
county. Twenty per cent of these
have had rabies shots which are
still effective or else they are pup
pies less than four months old and
not eligible.
The schedule is as follows:
Monday, May 15, Drain Fire
Hall, 3 to 8 p.m.; Tuesday. May
16, Sutherlin, old city jail, 3 to
8 p.m.: Wednesday, May 17, Rose
burg, West Side Fire Hall, 3 to 8
p.m.; Thursday, May 18, Tri-City
Veterans Memorial Building, 3 to
8 p.m.
Monday, May 22, Winston Fire
Hall, 3 to 8 p.m.; Tuesday, May
23. Glendalc. Fire Hall, 3 to 8 p.m.;
Wednesday, May 24, Reedsport
Fire Hall. 3 to 8 p.m.; and Wed
nesday,. May 24, Roseburg Rural
Fire Department, North Roseburg,
3 to 8 p.m.
Fee of 51 will be made per ani
mal to help cover costs. If owner
s unable to pay, no charge will
be made.
Cats also will be vaccinated but
no other pets will be accepted.
Dogs should be on leashes, cats
may be carried in a box or other
suitable container. One dose will
be given. Minimum age for dogs
is four months; lor cats six
months.
Damages Denied
In Accidental Death
A Circuit Court trial jury Friday
denied damages in the accidental
death of Kenneth Gene Goebl last
July 2, in a suit tried by Judge
Charles S. Woodnch.
The suit was brought by Esther
Gocbl, administrator of the estate
of Kenneth, who was 17 "at the
time of his death. Defendant was
Leslie Hatfield, whose . daughter.
Audrey, was driving the car in
which Gocbl was killed.
The accident took place on Buck
horn Road, eight miles east of Dix
onvillc, when tilt car failed to ne
gotiate a curve and went off the
road. The plaintiff had charged
gross negligence, but the jury in
its finding failed to lind gross neg
ligence as charged.
The plaintiff had asked for $20,-
000 damages. The trial opened
Thursday at 10 a.m. and the jury
brought in its verdict Friday at
2:35 p.m.
Walter G. Gaston
Walter G. Gaston, 74, died this
morning at the Rivcrsdale Sani
tarium following a prolonged ill
ncss.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced later by Wilson s Chap
el of the Roses.
Coburg Man Exonerated By Jury
On Charge Of Horse Stealing ,
The Douglas County Grand Jury
Friday returned one secret indict
ment, one not true bill and four
true bills.
Exonerated was Charles Finne
gan, 46, of Coburg, who had been
bound over to the Grand Jury
from Drain Justice Court on a
charge of larceny of a horse. He
had been free on his own recog
nizance. True Bills Returned
Two true bills were returned
against Inar Steen, 30, of North
Bend. One charged him with non
support of minor children and the
other with larceny by bailee. On
the latter charge he is accused of
failure to return a television set
owned by Fred Bcrnau, which al
legedly came into Steen's posses
sion May 15, 1960.
Claude Yarbrough, 56, Myrtle
Creek, was indicted on a charge
of assault with a dangerous weap
on. He is accused of pointing a
.22 caliber pistol at Ernest Pcnry
and threatening him on April 21.
Burglary Count
The fourth true bill was against
Terrance Calvin Potts, charged
with burglarizing the dwelling of
Jeff W. Shinn of Winchester Bay
on March 1.
Three persons appeared in the
Circuit Court of Judge Don H.
Sanders Friday. Two of them,
charged with non-support of minor
children, had imposition of sen
tence postponed for five years and
they were placed on probation for
that period.
Three Year Probation
They were Le Roy McBride,
24, of Imbler, who was returned
here Thursday from Ontario by
Undersheriff Lyle Dickenson. The
other was William H. Webb, 34,
of Sunland, Calif., who was re
turned to Roseburg Thursday by
Deputy Sheriff Bobby Johnson.
McBride waived grand jury ac
tion and went before the judge
on the District Attorney's informa
tion. Webb was arrested on a se
cret indictment of an earlier grand
jury.
More Oregon Towns
Adopt Fast Time
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Most stores in The Dalles and
Toledo decided Friday to move up
clocks an hour Monday as the
movement for daylight saving
time in Oregon continued to
spread.
A majority of Toledo merchants
favored advancing their hours al
though all of them are not ex
pected to go along. The mixed pat
tern along the coast prevailed in
Toledo. Standard time will con
tinue in schools. The City Council
will let various municipal depart
ments set their hours. -
On the other hand the City Coun
cil of Sheridan, in the Willamette
Valley, voted to resist the swing
and remain on standard time.
Before adjourning the Legisla
ture authorized Multnomah and
contiguous counties to change to
daylight saving.
Contiguous usually means touch
ing in actual contact. But it
also means neighboring but not in
actual contact. This could open
the way for a legal opinion that
other counties which are near, ,but
not bordering, also might go on
daylight saving time.
Some areas have moved up
clocks without awaiting legal opin
ions. Merchants there said they
can set clocks as they choose, and
that the law affects only govern
mental subdivisions county
courthouses, city halls, etc.
No penalty for violation is pro
vided by law. But in legal circles
there has been speculation that a
public official who ordered use of
daylight time could be prosecuted
for malfeasance in office.
Sid Leiken Named
To Advisory Group
Sidney Leiken, state representa
tive and Roseburg lumberman, has
been named to the Multiple Use
Advisory Board for the Oregon
and California grant lands in west
ern Oregon.
lie is one of seven new members
appointed to the 18-nipmber board
by Secretary of the Interior Stew
ard Udall. The membership, Udall
said, wii! include all resources in
volved in OiC administration. It
will include forestry, grazing, rec
reation, wildlife, mining, labor, ed
ucation, industry, county and state
government.
Eleven of the members were re
appointed. The role of the advisory board
is to make recommendations and
advise on programs affecting pub
lic resources on the OiC. In car
rving out a forestry program on
these lands, the Rurcau of Land
Management is railed to consider
all possible uses.
Leiken was selected to the board
as a small lumber industry rep
resentative. All appointments will
terminate Dec. 31.
Airplane
- Rides
2g Per Pound
Per Person
Mother's Day
10 AM to 6 PM
Roifburij Airport
SpontorW By
Roieburg Civil Air Patrol
Robert Ray Walcott, 17, of 2636
W Harvard, was sentenced to serve
45 days in the Douglas County jail
on a charge of taking and using
an automobile without the owner's
consent, without intent to steal
He was accused with David Woods
of Roseburg of taking a car of
Cliff Aten from the Aten At Phil
lips used car lot on SE Stephens
St. in Roseburg.
Walcott was given credit for the
time spent in jail from April 2. He
pleaded guilty to the District At
torney's information. He told the
court that the two had seen the
keys in the car earlier and later
drove it off the lot. They were
gone about 20 minutes, and when
they returned with the car, the
owner was present on the lot. He
had already reported the car miss
ing to police.
Algerian Troops
Ready For Riot
ALGIERS (AP)-Algiers today
swarmed with troops under orders
to shoot if necessary to stop any
rioting by diehard rightist Euro
pean settlers on the anniversary
of the 1958 coup against the
trench government.
Public transport moved normal
ly and shops opened on time, but
merchants stood by warily, ready
to clang down the shutters at the
first sign of trouble.
Some 20,000 troops, riot police
and gendarmes were massed
around Algiers, ready to smash
threatened strikes and demonstra
tions to mark the right-wing ris
ing that brought Gen. Charles de
Gaulle back to power.
Long columns of police vans
moved into the heart of the city
shortly before the 10 p.m. curfew
Friday night, while troops took
positions around government build
ings. Warships of the French Medi
terranean fleet rode at anchor in
the harbor.
European extremists opposing
Algeria's evolution toward inde
pendence have been threatening
armed action for two weeks.
Police informants said some 6,
000 armed men, members of the
"secret army organization," have
been alerted for a possible move
on the city.
Apparently the aim of the organ
ization is to occupy large portions
of Algiers, build barricades around
those positions and then challenge
the troops to attack. The extrem
ists hope for the complicity of a
large number of the city's Euro
pean population.
By entrenching themselves in Al
giers, the . Europeans apparently
hoped to force the government to
recognize them as a bargaining
power on the same level as the
Moslem nationalist rebels.
A similar attempt collapsed In
January, 1960. The settler force of
some 4.000 men disintegrated then
after eight days in a barricaded
stronghold in the heart of the city.
This time, authorities are not
taking any chances.
Welfare Departm't
Hires Case Worker
Jack Summerfield, welfare co
ordinator, today said that the wel
fare commission has hired a new
case worker, John Foust, 24, a
recent graduate of Southern Ore
gon College.
Foust will replace Miss Donna
Robinson, who resigned April 30.
Miss Robinson is planning to re
turn to Portland, where her family
resides.
Foust's tenure officially began
Wednesday. He is a native of south
ern Oregon. He grew up in Med
ford. Summerfield said that Foust will
spend four weeks in the welfare
training center, Oregon City, then
he will join the staff in Douglas
County.
His wife, currently the secretary
to the manager of the Ashland
Shakespearean Festival, and their
two children will join him here in
late summer.
Former Tenmile
Resident-Shot
Former Tenmile resident, Mrs.
F.sther Cabot, 53, now manager
of the Block House sanitarium and
resort near Goldendale, Wash.,
was gravely wounded Thursday in
a bizarre shooting and fire.
Klickitat County Sheriff, E. C.
Kaiser, said he believed Walter
S. Price. 55, a patient, fatally shot
Mrs. Florence E. Matthews, 57,
operator of the Block House,
wounded Mrs. Cabot, set fire to
the house in which he was living,
near the main building, then killed
himself with a gun.
Mrs. Cabot was shot in the chest
with a .38 caliber pistol bullet
which entered her left lung. She
was also stabbed in the left arm.
She is in critical condition in,
Klickitat Valley Hospital.
Her son, Jack Cabot of Rose-
burg, left today to be with his j
mother who is receiving oxygen, i
His sister, Mrs. Donald Christen-1
sen, Milwaukie, is already there. I
Mrs. C a bo t, who identified j
Price as' her assailant, was in a
second-floor bedroom when she)
was shot. Mrs. Matthews' bodyj
was found in a first-floor bedroom. I
- I
WALLPAPER
SPRING PATTERNS
Colorcraft Point t Wollaaaar
711 S. I. Srapham
mu-.ui.iajei,.iL niiiiiaiiiianaanir "rrL'l'Jf"'''"'!! 1
. t: l V
GIVING THE ONCE -OYER to the new Employment Deportment headquarters ore a
group of the department's officials, as well os the architect and contractor. Left to
right, comparing the finished product with- the drawings, are engineer J. K. Bilzh
iser, Roy Vick and Francis Riley of the Employment Department, Johnny Weber and
John Todd of the Todd Building Co. and architect James Keefe. Riley is manager of
the local Employment Department office and Vick is from the SDE central office.
MOVING IN to the new Employment Department offices was carried out Thursday
and Friday, as the recently-completed building was made ready to be open to the
public Monday morning. It was designed by Eugene architect James Keefe and Con
structed by Todd Building Co. of Roseburg.
America Will Honor Commitments,
Johnson Tells Filipino Congress
MANILA (AP) Vice President
Lyndon B. Johnson told the Phil
ippines Congress today free na
tions "must together show our de
termination to keep our freedom"
in the face of Communist threats.
The vice president, barnstorm
ing Asian hot spots for President
Kennedy, appeared at the Univer
sity of the Philippines and then
dashed across Manila by helicop
ter to make this pledge before a
joint session of Congress:
"America will honor her com
mitments to the cause of freedom
throughout the community of free
nations.
"Our friends can count on
America, and we know we can
count on our friends none more
than our old and cherished friends,
the Filipino people."
A packed chamber listened as
Johnson warned: "Communism is
testing our good will by many
tactics in many places."
He cited Cuba as a place where
"a demagogue has turned a peo
ple's dream of a better life into a
nightmare of Communist dictator
ship." In South Viet Nam, which John-
State Leaders Pay
Homage To Tugman
"His monuments are every
where." This was, the eulogy Friday by
the minister of the St. Mary's
Episcopal Church in Gardiner of
the deeds of William Tugman. for
mer editor of the Eugene Register
Guard and Port I'mpqua Courier.
Tugman died after suffering a
heart attack last weekend.
Some 100 people, including sev
eral of the state's dignitaries.;
jammed into the tiny church on.
the hill overlooking a humming
lumber mill. Among those present
for the simple ceremony were
some of the state's editors, who
knew him as editor of the Register-Guard
for 27 years and own
er of the Port I'mpqua Courier
until lj months ago.
Also attending were members
of the state Highway Department
and commission, who worked with
him m chairman of the commis-j
sion's advisory board, and former
governor, Charles A. Sprague of I
Salem. I
Coming out from Washington. I
D. C, for the funeral was I'. S. j
Rep. Edwin Vlurno. who had picked i
Tugman as his 4th Congressional'
District contact man. Tugman
was serving as Durno's represent
ative in the district when he died.
Tugman was an effective pro
ponent of development of Oregon's
natural resources, city plannin?
and other works for the stale's development.
.Ll-U m J- W..'tUJ,f. 1 J,
son left Friday, "Communist guer-i
rillas hide in the jungles to strike)
by night against families whai
have chosen freedom," he added.!
In a seeming gesture of caution
about the Philippines' expressed
frustration with anti-Commu-;
nist policy throughout Asia, John
son said "unity of purpose is one
thing. But it is not everything."
"In a global contest there are
many arenas and many tactics,"
he said. "Unless this is under-;
stood, unity of purpose can be
come an empty shell." i
This was the closest the vice
president came to mentioning La
os, the crisis area of greatest con
cern to the Philippines. i
"Freedom must respond re
sponsibly to clear and compelling
challenges of communism wher
ever and however those chal-!
lenges come." he said. "Freedom
must demonstrate flexibility." j
The free world must display Ini-;
liative, he said, and "seek new
responses to express true strength
of our free society."
Before addressing congress,
Johnson lunched with President ,
Carlos P. Garcia in sprawling
Malacanang Palace. Garcia is the
second chief of stale Johnson has
met in his tour aimed at helping
stem the Communist tide in South
east Asia.
Johnson displayed a touch of
Texas informality during the mo
torcade ride from International
Airport the same informality that
won him a wave of friendliness in
South Viet Nam.
Novia Eugene Landreth
Novia Eugene Landreth. 735 SE
Flint St., died at a local hospital.
He was born Jan. 3. 1876 in Kan
sas, and was married to Clara- A.
Gage in Coouille on Nov. is. 18M
He lived in Coquille for several
years.
In September, 1931, he moved
from Turlock, Calif., to Roseburg.
He was a retired plasterer by trade
and a member of the Seventh-day
Adventist Church.
Survivors include hij wife Clara
of Roseburg; two sons. Novia E.
of Oakland. Calif., and Merle of
Federal Way, Wash.; four grand
children and seven greatgrand
children. Funeral services will be held
Monday at 2 p m. in the chapel
of lxng and Orr Mortuary, and
interment will follow in Civil
Bend cemetery in Winston.
PAINTING
EXTERIOR AND INTERIOR
Fret Etrimarcs
Phortt
OR 2-4504 or OR 2-4630
it;-,,r-t . nmrwa ,i.
LB
DANCE
Every Saturday
Western Music By
CHARLIE PARRET
and the
MEDICINE VALLEY
BOYS
LINDY'S
9:001:00
. Adm. $1.00 incl. tax
-DANCE-
SATURDAY NIGHT
MAY 13th
Music By
ART LUCAS
and hit
PEPPY DANCE BAND
Myrtle Hotel Lounge
Myrtle Creek
Bring Mom
TO THE
RED BARN
For
Mothers Day Dinner
Virginia Baked Horn
At Its Best
Roast Turkey and
All The Trimming!
If Miles East an N, Umsquc
Rood