Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1961)
2 The Newi-Review, Roseburg, Ore. Men., Aug. 21, 1961 British Guiana Voters Pick Leaders In Election Today GEORGETOWN, British Guiana (AP) Voters in this tiny British colony of East Indians and Ne groes on South America's north coast chose a new government to day in an election that political experts believe may decide whether British Guiana moves on to democratic independence or Soviet-style socialism. . Cheddi Jagan, Socialist with Communist leanings who has Morgan Chosen FPC Chairman WASHINGTON (AP) Howard Morgan of Oregon has been chosen vice chairman of the federal Power Commission for the re' mainder of this year. Morgan, former public utility commissioner of Oregon, took office as a member of the FPC June 28 for a term expiring two years hence. The commission each year se lects one of its members to serve as vice chairman. The vice chair man acts in the absence of the chairman. Joseph C. Swidlcr of Nashville, Tenn., who was sworn into office on the same day as Morgan, has been designated by President Ken nedy to be chairman of the com' mission, effective Sept. 1. Jn that office he will succeed Jerome K Kuykendall of Olympia, Wash., who has been chairman almost continuously since May 15, 1053. Kuykendall, unless he resigns will remain a member of the FPC until next June 22 when his term expires. Kuykendall is a Republican. Morgan and Swidler are Demo crats. Hospital News Visiting Hours t to 1:30 e.m. and 7 Is I p.m. Douglas Community Hospital Admitted -. . Medical: Kelvin Lovegren; Mrs. Charles Emery, Mrs. John Pryor, Edwin Finnell, Mrs. Heber Mur ray, Mrs. Allen Underwood, Mrs. Ivan Rogers, Marjorie Fletcher, Marjorie Ellison, Roscburg; Paul Geddes, Winston; Cherry Hopkins, Glide; Mrs. Jack Watkins, Oak land; Ixurs Mills, Tillamook, Ore.; Mrs. Elbert Sims, Sutherlin; Aud- mer Brandon, Camas Valley; Mrs. Bobby Daggs, Leslie John, Lor ranna Mendenhall, David Monden ball, Roscburg. Surgery: Donald Hickham, Rose burg; Edward Boehrs, Oakland. Discharged , Tyrgve Forness, Marjorie Mor gan, Cheryl Brown, Mrs. Charles Rogers, Mrs. Dale Towne and son, Darrell Keith, Clover Maloney, Ar thur Gilbert, Mrs. Russell Wood, Mrs. William Roberts, Mrs. Willis Lane, Violet Thomas, Eric Baird, Cindy Roberts, Agnes Follett, Mrs. Al Strain, Mrs. John Gillett, Mrs. Richard Glcnyear and son, David John, Roscburg; Mrs. David Har pole, Myrtle Creek; Mrs. Blanche Williams and son Brett Leon, Mrs. Dodge Emerson, Mrs. Richard Estcrbrook, Mrs. Willard Ott and son Timothy Ray, Myrtle Creek; Frank Ervin, Tessie Englegjerd, Winston; William Wilson, Oak land; Edward Malone, Glide; Di ane McCaullah, Riddle; Mrs. Kea lon Parsons, Umpqua; Robert Jlcid, Battle Creek, Mich.; Pres ton Smith, Van Nuys, Calif, Mercy Hospital Admitted Mtdicalt Mrs. Walter Webb, Myrtle Creek; Mrs. Johnny Buie, Hazel Walker, Frank Graham. Mrs. Wilson Coltrcll, Mrs. Ilcrshcl Whit- ten, Robert Delorne, Roseburg; Mrs. Joe Lewis. Sutherlin: Mrs. F.rnest Branton, Umpqua; Mrs. Diedrich Menke, Idlcyld Park. Surgery! Mrs. Robert Bell, Rose burg; Russell Lee, Myrtle Creek Discharged Mrs. Wendle Carpenter, Carl Mathews, Charles Stubbs, Rickey uoaine, Mrs. Conrad uulst. Ed ward Harris, Mrs. Martin Yodcr and twin daughters Rita Sue and Wanda Iou, Roscburg; Clinton Mc Cord, Sutherlin. Jerry Jones. Mrs Wayne Rcitmann and daughter Jennifer Anno, Myrtle Creek; Mrs. Ronald Frailer and daughter Rhon da Kay, uurungame, Calif.. Mrs, Jose Gnmcc and son Louis, Oak land; Mrs. Willard Lee and daugh ter Carol Sue, Oakland. Worry of FALSE TEETH Slipping or Irritating? Don't be tmbrrMd be loot fnlt tth slipping, dropping or woobllug when you rat, talk or laugh. Just sprinkle a llttla FA8TEKTH on your plates. This pleasant powder glree a remarkable aenae or added comfort and aeeurlty by holding platea mora firmly. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. It's alkaline (non-actdl. Ott PAbTEBm at any drug counter. Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch-Relieves Pain X T.rk, K. T. (Sm.1.11 - For the first tlmt science has found a new healing substance with the aston ishing ability to shrink hemor rhoids, stop itching-, and roller pain without sorcery. . In fast after case, whila gently relieving pain, actual reduction (shrinkage) took place. atoet amaung al all-results were dominated the colony's politics for eight years, seeks to become its first premier. Opposing the East Indian dentist for power over the 83,000 square miles of tropical territory are torbes Burnham, Socialistic lawyer lead er of the Negro-dominated Peo pie's National Congress (PNC) and Peter Daguiar, an anti-Corn munist beer baron of Portuguese origin. Jagan attacked the United States in an election eve slate ment and said he did not "pro pose to establish Vany form of die- tattrinl uaima 11 Without denying his enemies' claim that his People's Progres sive Party (PPP) is Communist, he said: "Events in Russia and Cuba have deeply wounded (North Americans') national pride and made their fear of communism psycopathic. " His opponents predicted that Ja gan would lean to the Soviet side in the cold war if the PPP took enough seats in the legislature to form a new government. Jagan said aid to lilt the 558,000 Guian ese from the "mire of poverty' will be taken from the United States, Britain or Russia "with out committal of any sort." Political experts forecast a close election, with Jagan's par ty winning 18 seats, Burnham's 18 and Daguiar's United Force only one. If neither Jagan or Burnham can form a government, a new election may be necessary. With only one per cent of the land under cultivation, British Guiana's economy depends on Goldberg Briefed On Met Labor Row T1FNVFR Tnlrt APt T ,w Secretary Arthur J. Goldberg will wu uimcu iui mc bccuiiu urns in as many days today on the Mct- rnnnlifnn Hnara siinAintinn'a -- nam.MUUII a stand on a labor dispute which nas jea lo cancellation of the Met's 1961-62 season. f!nlrlh0ro uill m..t t,a ...lit. Anthony A. Bliss, president of the m, wim came to ienver irom his Montana ranch. The twn tallrprl for mnri than an hour Sunday about a dispute wvt-i- wttKcn uivuiving me met ana uicai we oi me Musicians union. A spokesman for the labor sec retary said Goldberg has a meet. fred j. Manutl, president of the union local, wno will brief Gold ere on iha nninn'a r.n i nn Twice in recent weeks opera of- flpialft hatA AnnonnArl Halltt thnt the winter season, scheduled to oegm in uciooer, has been can celed. Thfl "milllVIane srs asLlntf wage increase from $170 a week m a. ine mei termed the de mand exorbitant, and countered With an offer nf 1 a franf raid in each of the next two seasons. pius iringe Benefits It said would bring the total increase to 14 per cent. Putnam Services Slated Wednesday SALEM (AP) Funeral earvir-pc for George Putnam, editor emeri tus of the Salem Capital-Journal, will be held Wednesday at 3 p.m. In St. Paul's Episcopal Church. rutnam cuea early rrwiay in a fire which swept through his home. He was 88. His sister, Miss Elizabeth Put nam, 86, suffered hand burns and shock, hut was reoortcd imnrnv. ing today in Salem General Hos pital which described her condi tion as good. Henry P. Mohr Henry P. Mohr. a World War I veteran, died Saturday al the noseourg veterans Hospital. He was born Jan. 11. 1894 in Bloomington, Neb. Surviving are his wife, Augusta, of Monitor, Ore., and children, Lawrence and Juli an Mohr, both of Albany; Alvin of Dallas, Mywran of Monitor and Mrs. Bill (Dcloris) Mohr also of Monitor. Burial will take place In Wil lamette Memorial Cemetery' in Portland. Local arrangements are being made by Gam Mortuary of niyrue ircex. Truck Injures Man Charles Dcllart, Winchester, was laxen lo uougias community Hos pital Saturday for treatment of in juries suffered while he was re pairing his pickup truck. The truck, which had been raised on blocks, gave way, causing multi ple rib fractures. Dcllart is reported In good con dition. lo thorough that sufferers made astonishing statements like "Piles have ceased to be a probleml" The secret is a new healing sub stance (Bio-Dyne) discovery of a world-famous research Institute. This substance is now available in SMppesiferg or eiHtMnl erne Boder the name Preparation ft. At all drug counters. bauxite, sugar and rice exports. The British governor, Sir Ralph Grey, stressed the country's need for foreign aid in a radiocast ap peal against election disorders. Three More Die In Road Mishaps By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Highway accidents claimed three lives in Oregon over the weekend. Two of the victims were fatally injured as cars plunged from the roadway and one was killed when a towed car swung into the opposing lane into the path of another car. The deaths put Oregon's toll for August at 18, and for the year at 291 in the Associated Press tabu lation. The year's total, through Sun day, is six less than at the same time two years ago, the year Oregon's all-time highway death record was set. But it is 41 higher than at the same time last year. First of the weekend deaths was that of Richard Denny Wood, 17, Beaver Marsh, a community south of Chemult. He was at the wheel of a car being towed on U.S. Highway 97, north of Klamath Falls, when it swung out into the path of a car driven by William Robertson, 20, Gilchrist. Robert son was reported in fair condition today in a Klamath Falls hospital. Late Sunday afternoon, Delmer Ray Smith, 40, Springfield, was fatally injured when a car in which he was riding, driven by John R. Pectsch. 19. Springfield. left Fall Creek Road,. 20 miles southeast of Eugene. It went over an embankment, hit a parked pickup truck and burst into flames. The fire spread to nearby brush and the East Lane Fire Patrol put out the blaze. On Sunday morning, Alice F, Graichen, Astoria, was killed when her car left Highway 30 some 20 miles east of Astoria and plunged into a creek. Five In Family Killed In Crash BUHL, Idaho (AP) A traffic accident Sunday wiped out five members of three generations of a southern Idaho family. Six persons were killed in the two-car crash at a country road intersection. Judith Anderson, 18. of Buhl, who died of injuries, was alone in one car. Driving the other car was Ivan Kisler, 26, of nearby Filer. He was critically hurt. His wife Betty, 22, and their son, Edward, 4 months, were killed. So was Ivan's brother Michael. 11. and their parents. Al bert L. and Dclma G. Kistler, both about SO, of Buhl. All lived at filer. Roseburg Firemen Stop Small Fire On Mt. Nebo Roseburg firemen were called to Mt. Nebo at 11:12 p.m. Satur day to fight a small grass fire. Firemen quickly quenched the blaze on the steep terrain. Sunday the Roscburg Rural Fire Department was called to 330 NE Garden Valley Blvd. at 4:30 p.m. to quench a grass fire started by smoldering sawdust where a pre vious fire had been. There was uo damage. Sunday afternoon the Winston Dillard Fire Department was call ed to the home of Mrs. Ben Ward where a grass fire was reported, Sparks from a permit fire flew into a ditch near her house. The fire burned itself out. John Flurry Funeral services for John E, Flurry, 73, of Rt. 3, Box 1900 W Military Ave., will be held Tues day at 10 a.m. at the Long and Shukle Memorial Chapel. He was found dead in his home Friday. A veteran of World War I, he was one of the early past com manders of Roseburg American Le gion Post No, 16. lie had lived in Roscburg for the past 22 years. He also was exalted ruler of the Elks Lodge 326, Roseburg, in 1922. The Rev. James Jenkins of the First Methodist Church will offi ciate at serviees. The body will be taken to Hu lelt Undertakers at Hattiesburg, Miss., for interment. Tires Said Slashed Ruby Stella Galyean of 837 NE Church St., and Orrin Kingariter of Alexandria, Minn., both reporl ed to Roseburg Police that tires on their cars had been slashed and were flat. Their cars had been parked on the lot at 518 NE Nash St., while they were attending church at this location. They found the tires slash ed when they came out after the services. This occurred between 7:30 and 10 p.m. Sunday. Non-Surgical Methods for correction ot Hemorrhoids. Descriptive booklet on request. E. R. REYNOLDS, N.D., D.C. Rectol & Colon Disorders 1742 Willamette Street Eufeno, Ore on t : 1' i' v,? soTTrj; EDUCATIONAL aids ond toys ore "accepted by Mrs. Morgaret Plowman on behalf of the Park School. They ore being tendered by Miss Katherine Richmond, chief of occupational therapy at the Veterans Hospital. The equipment wos made by patients in the physical and re habilitation service of the hospital os part of their pre scribed treatment activity program. Three Accidents Reported To State Police On Weekend The curve around Mt. Nebo, the sharpest on Highway 99 Freeway, was the scene of another accident Sunday at 8:15 p.m. This was one of three accidents reported by state police. According to officers, the car was operated by George Jerome Kramer of Seattle, Wash. His ve hicle was traveling south around the curve. It moved to the west shoulder and then skidded across the southbound lanes and struck, the center guard rail. The car then bounced off the guard rail and came to rest against the dirt bank on the west side of the road Eye Lacerated Kramer received a lacerated right eye and his car had exten sive damage to the front. Kramer and his vehicle were removed by Billy Mohr's ambulance and wrecker. He was taken to Com munity Hospital in Roseburg. A one-car accident occurred about five miles north of the Glen- dale junction on Highway 99 about 3 a.m. today. The car, operated by David S. Dansky, 19, of San Leandro, Calif., was headed south, according to the state police re port. In the vicinity of a long sweeping curve just south of the Barton Park Rd.. a buck deer jumped in front of the Dansky ve hicle. When Danskv hit the brakes, his vehicle skidded out of control and turned over in the east ditch. No One lnured Passengers in the vehicle were Mell Sciortino, 18, of San Leand ro; John Emert, 19, and Kenneth Ketlerling, 19, both of Bremerton, Wash. No one was injured, but the extensively damaged vehicle was removed from the scene hy Miller Bros. Garage of Quines Creek. Saturday at 6:30 p.m. a two-car Jewish Teeners Warned On Interfaith Marriage STARLIGHT. Pa. (API-Jewish teen-agers were told Sunday that interfaith marriages threaten the suryival of Judaism and are a peril to personal happiness. A report to the 38th annual con vention of the Aleph Zadik Aleph boys' division of B'nal Brith said: "Both Christian and Jewish clergymen have consistently op posed such marriages not because they thought their religions su perior, but because they know that marriage at best has many challenges. Where there is reli gious difference there is an add ed and serious hurdle." Prisoner Breaks Ankle In Portland Escape Try PORTLAND (AP) An escape attempt at the Portland cily jail annex Saturday failed when trusty Fred Henry Qucahpama. 25, White Swan, Wash., fell 20 feet from a fire escape and broke an ankle. Police said Queahpama, who was serving a 15-day sentence for being drunk on the street, told them he tried to get away be cause the other prisoners had been kidding him. He climbed out a window and was on his way down the fire escape when he lost his grip and dropped to the street. Female Fagin DIJON, France (AP) Police have jailed a housemaid accused of heing a female Fagin. Officers said Mrs. Raymond Gueanaoui, 37 taught her four children 8 to 12 years old to be pickpockets and they lifted wallets containing a to tal of $400 in the last few months. Fair Admission Adults 75c Kide lit AUG. r -r w L ' . e. Wk. f li t , accident occurred on Highway 99 near' Quines Creek. Betsy Margar et Hiney, 30, of Myrtle Creek, was northbound when a vehicle operat ed by Thomas Clay Williams of Redding, Calif., struck the rear of the Hiney car when the latter slowed, said State police. Louis Henry Teller, 41, Myrtle Creek, a passenger in the Hiney car, suffered cuts. Williams' car had to be removed from the scene by Miller Bros Garage of Quines Creek. The Hiney vehicle drove from the scene under its own pow er. Reckless Driving Count Hits Woman A 34-year-old Winston woman was cited for reckless driving that resuuea in a two-car injury acci dent in downtown Winston Sunday night, Winston city police reported mis morning. According to Winston Chief of Police BUI Hale, Alberta Joyce Davidson was arrested for reck less driving, and a passenger in her car, 21-year-old John David Alien of Wallowa was arrested for being drunk on a public highway. Hale said he and another Win ston officer observed the accident, which occurred about 9 p.m. Sun day. He said the Davidson car was heading down the main street at a high rate of speed, estimated at 60 miles per hour, passed one car and then ran into the rear end of a car driven by 16-year-old T. Ray Mincher. also of Winston. Alberta Joyce Davidson was treated at Community Hospital for a broken arm and released this morning. Allen and another pas senger in the Davidson car, Betty J. Davidson, also of Winston, were not injured. Mincher was not in sured either. Fire Chief Mike Nee ly took the injured woman to the hospital. Hale said the Mincher car was a total wreck, and estimated dam age to the Davidson car at $600 to S700. The Winston chief also reported the arrest of Norbert Ray Contival of Winston and Robert V. Swan of Brockway, both for driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor. William J. Schultz William Jordan Schultz, , well known resident of the Roseburg area, passed away at his residence at 1113 SE Jackson St. Saturday following a prolonged illness. He was born in Cottage Grove Nov. 28, 1882. He was the son o( Frederick and Mary Jane Schultz. He was married to the former Alta Helen Wikon in Portland Aug. 9. 1924. To this marriage there was born one son. He is survived by his wife, Alta. of Roseburg; one son, Billy, of Roseburg: and two grandchildren, also of Roseburg. Schultz came to Roseburg with his family 30 years ago and was associated with Herman Althaus and Denn Gerretsen in the plumb ing business. In later years ho was well known in this area as a plumb ing contractor. Funeral services will be held at Wilson's Chapel of the Roses Wed nesday at 2 p.m. with the Rev. Eugene Gcrlitz of the First Baptist Church of Roscburg officiating. Private concluding services and vault entomhment will follow at the Lincoln Memorial Mausoleum in Portland. OPEN HOUSE SLATED An open house for senior mem bers of Rebckah Lodge will be held at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Herman at 346 W. Riverside Drive. Hostesses will be officers of the lodge. FREE FREE FREE TWO Hawaiian Holidays by Standard Airways to be given away at the DOUGLAS 24-27 ROSEBURG Washington On Smuggled Oregon Cigarettes OLYMPIA (AP) Plans to crack down on smuggling of un stamped cigarettes from Oregon into Washington will be considered by the State Tax Commission Monday, an official reported. Second Suspect Held In Burglary Roseburg City police and the sheriff's office, working together, have arrested a second suspect in connection with the safe burglary at The Friendly last Dec. 5. City Detective E. R. Woodworth reports the arrest Sunday of James Irvin Joers, 36, of 605 SE Mosher St., Roseburg. He is the brother of Richard Eugene Joers, 22, al ready in custody and facing a charge of burglary not in a dwell ing involving The Friendly bur glary. Confession Received Woodworth said he and Deputy Sheriff Gail Carnine obtained from James Joers a signed confession admitting his participation not only in the safe burglary job at The Friendly but also a break- and-entry at the Brockway More on Highway 42 Dec. 26. Joers told officers he and Rich ard had gone to Brockway, using the car of a friend, and broke in through the rear door. The safe, they found, was too heavy to re move, so they took only four car tons of cigarettes, he told officers. Carnine had been working on the Brockway store case for several months. James Joers was arrested by city police Friday night soon aft er Carnine and Undersheriff Lyle Dickenson obtained a confession from Richard Joers pertaining to The Friendly robbery, admitting his part and implicating his broth er. Drill Used According to Woodworth, James Joers told them he and Richard had gone to The Friendly about 4 a.m. Dec. 5, drilled three over lapping holes in the back door with a two-inch bit, then reached through the hole and unlocked the door. He said they then took a bottle of Scotch Whiskey, numerous rolls of coins, a money bag under the bar containing change, then wheeled the safe from the building on a hand truck found in a store room. They took four more bottles of liquor, one of which they drop ped in the rear of the tavern, Joers said. The safe was loaded into the rear of their car, he continued, and they drove by a back road up the North Umpqua, broke out the bot tom of the safe, then after taking out the contents, dumped the safe off the United Stales Plywood bridge into the river. The safe has since been recovered. Farm Bureau Federation To Maintain Fair Booth An information booth, at which an attendant will explain policies; of the organization, is to be main tained at the Douglas County Fair by the Farm Bureau Federation,' it was reported today. : The federation, it was staled, j will report on activiiics and pur-i poses to all interested persons. I At this month's meeling mem-! bcrs heard a representative of the I Southern Pacific railroad speak on; its efforts to obtain authority to purchase a controlling interest in Western Pacific. i Sept. 4 a representative of the Santa Fe, which also is seeking control over Western Pacific, will speak. The meeting will be open to the public. Two federation officials from Salem recently met with the mem bership at a picnic at Whistlers j Bend park and discussed plans of: activity for the coming year. I SEE YOU AT THE FAIR SAFETY HEAT CONTROL SUMMER AIR CIRCULATION SWITCH COMPLETELY AUTO MATIC ELECTRIC SPARK IGNITION ABSOLUTELY WILL NOT FLOOD THERMOSTATICALLY CONTROLLED ...THE SAFEST FLOOR FURNACE ON THE MARKET... CURTISS over USES ECONOMICAL DIESEL OIL - SAVES YOU 1 A t A GALLON ON OIL State To Crack Down A V Unmliiirtf pvrUp tax di- ..Icin ntiinf caii hp wnillH COnSUlt with the attorney general's office on possible legal steps agauui we smoke smugglers. . HolmDurg saio ine cummisaiuii may assign one or two investi gators to act as spotters in Port laul eiinoi-marlrplc where there have been reports of purchases Dy me case 10 avuiu u sc,t-cent-pack cigarette tax in Wash ington. Because cigarettes are not taxea in rirnonn a partnn 1 more than $1 cheaper than in Washington, Holmburg said. Holmburg said commission in vestigators may check persons in DnWlaml e M npr m a rlrl Wlm load cases of cigarettes into their auto mobiles and find out wno mey are through their license numbers. Cm.innlinrf ntamnpH fMParettCS into Washington for personal use is a gross misaemeanor punisii hio hv n ti nnn fine, nr one vear in the county jail or both, along with payment of douoie me seven nnnt nlaaratia lav Holmburg said total sales of cigarettes in Washington have gone down only a siigni .c per cent since a one cent tax boost that went into effect April 15, but the tax take went up $737,000 in the May-July period compared with last year. The excise tax chief said the state is more concerned about per sons wno are Duying cigareues in Oregon by the case lot for profit Coos Bay Man Due In Court On Charge Ray Albert King, 51, of Coos Bay, is scheduled for arraignment today in District Court on a charge of assault with a dangerous weap on, brought in a private complaint. According to Undersheriff Lyle Dickenson, King is accused in the complaint of Joe Moore of Reeds port of pulling a gun on him, fol lowing an altercation at a boat landing at Loon Lake. Moore filed the complaint in Reedsport Justice Court, and bail of $15,000 was set in the warrant issued for King's arrest. He was arrested at Coos Bay and returned to Roseburg Sun day to face the charge. Mary Gertrude Starks, 20 of Ok lahoma City, Okla., has been re turned to Roseburg to face a charge of obtaining money by false pretenses. She was returned by Charlotte mith, deputy in the sheriff s department, and booked Friday night. Eugene Ledford. 32, Canyonville, also is being held to face a charge of obtaining money by false pre tenses, following his arrest by Can yonville resident deputy Don Soper. Bail is set at $1,000. Robert Dale Fish, 31, Canyonville, is being held in the Douglas County jail on a non-support charge. LO0NS For Back-To-School Needs $50 to $1500 on your AUTO FURNITURE PICK-UP MOBILE HOME Or SIGNATURE Roscburg's Only Home-Owned & Operated Finance Co, Where Earnings Work for Community Improvement FAMILY FINANCE 729 5. E. Washington Ays. (Between Rosa ond Stephens) Phone OR 3-5581 Free Customer Parkinf Hours: 9-5 Doily; Friday 'til 8; Closed Sat. uvr l ? V Approved for FHA Title I ")Af nr Priced as low es .347. 7J MUNION'S HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING 1098 N. E. Stephens OR J-J440 than with those who purchase on ly a carton or two for a bargain. Young Demo Action Raps School Board NPAHKAHN1E (AP) The Young Democratic Club of Oregon Sunday voiced its support for an Oregon teacher whose teaching certificate has Deen reiusea De cause of an eight-year-old court conviction, vmino npmncrats. meeting in a two-day weekend session at Neah- kahnie, north of luiamoon, passed a resolution Sunday which asked that the Board of Education resign if it did not reconsider an earlier decision. The board has refused renewal of a teaching certificate for Dean Bay, 32, a La Grande resident who taught fifth grade last year at nearby Weston. The board's deci sion stemmed from a larceny con viction on Bay's record eight years ago. The resolution saia, in parr, imp n,v hac demonstrated clear ly the fact of his rehabilitation by hi. Mmnotenm iw a teacher and devotion to the profession." "Further, ine roung uemo cratic clubs demand that Mr. rqv's pap he reviewed immedi ately, and that his case be evalu- ated on the merits oi nis me as he lives it today and not as he lived it eight years ago." Paronie nf students in the area last week formed a committee lo support Bay. Young Democrat president nan Marsh said about 40 delegates attended the session. Ballot Title To Get Supreme Court Test pnnTT.ANn (P The hallnt title of a proposed initiative that would make automomie insurance nnmniilcnru in Oregon, will he challenged before the state Su preme Court today. Merrill c. Hagan, jnciuinnviue, president of the Oregon Associa tion nf indpnpnrlpnt Insurance Agents, said his organization had decided to go to court oecause u considers the title misleading. He said the proposed law wouia apply to all types of motor vehic les including many kinds of trucks and some farm machinery. And, he added, the ballot title does not indicate that. The title that is coming under attack is: "Compulsory automo bile insurance law. Purpose: Pontiirpe nutnmnhilp nwnprs and operators to carry liability insur ance or furnisn otner proot oi financial responsibility. Autho rizes state-established insurance rates. Provides penalties." CONSOLIDATION LOANS UP TO $1500 EASY, INEXPENSrVC INSTAHATION COfJ DOWN THROUGH ITS OWN FLOOD OPENING EXTRA SHORT it to 20 inches seine ROOf JOISTS. NO base ment NEEDED. AIR CAN BE OIRECTtf IEFI OR RIGHT THUOUCH DOOHWSYJ OR CHS WITH MJUSTU.C SECISTER All SERVICING AND INSPECTION FROM ABOVE NO CHaWlING AFTEI INSTALLATION 100 AUTOMATIC LIGHTING 100 SHUT-OFT 100 THERMOSTATIC CONTROL SUMMER CIRCULATING SWITCH FOR COOLING FILTERED AIR SAVE TYPE FILTEt AS THE MOST EXPENSIVE SYSTEMS NO EXPENSIVE WIRING OR DUCTWORK NEEDED GIVES TOU CLEAN, FILTERED AIR RICK-LINED FIRE I0X LARGE CAPACITY BLOWER FOR STUDY, EVEN HEAT