The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, November 30, 1961, Page 3, Image 3

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    MESSIAH soloists Morsholl Worner ond Marfho Vance rehearse with pianist Virginia
Young in preparation for Sunday's performance of the famous oratorio scheduled for
5 p.m. at the Fairgrounds. Warner, tenor soloist, was graduated in music from University
of Portland and is now vocal music instructor at Joseph Lane Junior High School. Miss
Vance, senior at Douglas High School, hos been octive in the school acappella choir as a
soloist ond as an operetta lead performer.
Stranded Hunters Return Safely
After Nine Days On Mountain
ELGIN, Ore. (AP) Two hunt
ers from Portland arrived safely
in Elgin early this morning, look-1
ing fit and in good condition after
being marooned in the Blue moun
tains by snow for more than a
week.
A rescue team using i heavy'
four-wheel drive vehicle reached
the men. Earl Peterson. 51, and
Bill Turley, 67. about 8:00 p.m..
Wednesday night and brought
them out.
The two said they were more
worried about the people waiting
for them than they were for their
own safety.
"We weren't worried at all."
they said. "We had plenty of
supplies and fuel."
The wives of both men and
Indian Pleads Innocent
To Wife Murder Charge
PORTLAND (AP) A plea -of
innocent to a charge of second
degree murder was entered in
U.S. District Court Wednesday by
Eugene Bishop Frank, 25. a resi
dent of the Warm Springs Indian
Reservation in Central Oregon.
Frank is accused of beating his
H-year-old wife to death with a
rock last September.
The body of Mrs. Frank was
found near U.S. Highway 26 over
the Labor Day holiday.
A request by Frank's attorney
to reserve the right to enter a
later plea of innocent by reason
of insanity was granted by U.S.
District Court Judge William G.
East.
Frank's trial has been set for
the week of Feb. 12.
TRIMMER GOT TRIMMED
CASPER. Wyo. (AP) Even his
name didn't help O. J. Trimmer
of Lander win an election.
He lost a bid for the presidency
of the Wyoming Barbers Associ
ation. PATRONIZE NEWS REVIEW
ADVERTISERS
No Payments
'4 I
mm
Peterson's 19-year-old daughter
Jill had waited throughout the
the evening in an Elgin cafe,
where search operations centered.
When the snowbound hunters
and the rescue team drove into
hlgin, the wives raced out into
the street and embraced their
men.
A rescue attempt Tuesday
failed when two jeeps bogged
down in the snow and rocks north
of Elgin. Three rescuers then de
cided to walk on in to the hunters'
camp, while two state police offi
cers returned for heavier equip
ment. The three who went ahead were
Peterson's 22-year-old son Jack.
Dock Baker, state police officer.
Sam Lindley, 32. Portland, and
Dock Baker, state police officer.
It took them 12 hours to travel
the 12 remaining miles. When they
walked into the camp, Peterson
looked up from cooking breakfast
and said, "Well, look at that."
Meanwhile State Police S?t
Vern Kirkland and officer Bill
Cooper returned to LaGrande for
more powerful equipment and
started back in.
They met Peterson, Turley and
the other three walking out, seven
miles from camp. One of the res
cue team said the going was so
rough they might not have made
it all the way to where the hunt
ers were stranded, 50 miles north
of Elgin.
The men were isolated Nov. 21
by a snowfall that blanketed East
ern Oregon. The pilot of a plane
saw them the same day, after
spotting the world "help" tram
pled in the snow.
An early attempt by some resi
dents of Elgin to tramp into the
area by snowshoe failed.
Peterson said he was coming
back to this rugged mountain
country to hunt next year. "I
really love this country." he said.
But Turley was not of the same
opinion. "This is my last elk hunt
ing trip to Eastern Oregon," he
said.
The hunters didn't bag any elk
during their stay. They said they
didn't even see any of the animals.
Automatic
Model WA 352
Til March
ill .
Library To Get
Ravburn Estate
BONHAM. Tex. (AP) Nearly
all the estate left by House Speak
er Sam Ravburn will go to two
sisters, a brother and the library
he established.
Value of the property wasn't es
timated in the will, filed for pro
bate here Tuesday.
Rayhurn, 79, died of cancer
Nov. 16.
Virtually all the estate eventual
ly will be turned over to the Sam
Ravburn Library Foundation,
which operates the library be
built here.
Mrs. S. E. Bartley of Bonham.
a sister, will receive the Ravburn
home in Bonham, At her death it
will pass to the foundation.
A 153-acre farm goes to a broth
er, Richard Ravburn, and his wife,
for their lifetime. It will then be
sold. Two-thirds of the proceeds
are assigned to the library and the
rest to unspecified charitable insti
tutions. Rayburn's ranch north of Bon
ham is to be sold and Sl.OUO each
given to nieces, nephews and their
children, plus Si ,500 or a year s
pay to a ranch worker, J, H.
Hcnson.
Mrs. Bartley will get 40 per cent
of the remaining money from the
ranch: another sister, Mrs. W. A.
Thomas of Dallas, 30 per cent
and Richard Kayburn 30 per cent.
California Man Eyed
For Chancellor Post
PORTLAND (AP) The next
chancellor of the Oregon system
of higher education may be a man
who now is a California educator.
The state Board of Higher Edu
cation has asked Glen Dumke.
vice chancellor for academic af
fairs in the California college sys-
Item, to come to Portland Dec. 10
for an interview.
The board will meet Dec. 11-12.
Another reported candidate for
the post is Roy Lieuallen presi
dent of Oregon College of Educa
tion. The post has .been vacant
since early this fall when Chan
cellor John Richards resigned to
take an education post in Califor
nia. Washer
NOW ONLY
With Your Five Year Old
or Lett Operating Washer
General Electric
. Clothes Dryer
Model
DA 110
Ve Wi
Serious Chimponaut Paved Way
For Astronaut's Space Travel
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)
Heartened by the world-circling
space iiigm us cniinpaiuee. ui(
Inited State picked a man to
take the next step up the long.
dark stairway to the moon.
But it was Enos. a serious 37'i
uoimu iiiiiiiu. wiiu u.tru uie way
with his whirlwine" trip, twice!
around the world Wednesday.
Just 3 hour.-, and 21 minutes aft-1
er he had ridden an Atlas rocket
into me SKy. tnos was piucKed
from the sea by a Navy destroyer
255 miles south of Bermuda.
Astronaut Chosen
Less than two hours later, space
officials named U. S. Astronaut
John H. Glenn Jr. to ride a similar
spacecraft three times around the
world. Understudying Glenn for
that first American manned orbi
tal shot is Astronaut Scott Carpen
ter. Officials also named a team for
the second manned shot: Astro
naut Donald B. Slayton, with As
tronaut Walter Sehirra backing
him up.
There is no assurance, however
that the United States will be able
to put a man into orbit around
the globe this year.
Officials denied any urgency
for the flight, suggesting it was
not yet decided whether man or
animal would ride the next Proj
ect Mercury rocket into earth or
bit.
But only a day earlier, the Na
tional Aeronautics and Space Ad
ministration had allotted I con
tract for the design and construc
tion of a three-man space capsule
mat could go to the moon.
rue, scientists had to bring
Enos and his spacecraft to earth
before the intended three orbits
of the earth had been completed.
Trouble Shortened Plight
True, difficulties within the
spacecraft itself were the reason.
But NASA officials emphasized
at a news conference later that
man in the spacecraft would
have been able to make manual
adjustments and finish the third
orbit.
It was a remarkable IS minutes
that spelled finish to Enos' flight.
As his spacecraft glided over the
Moscow Blamed
For Military Gag
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP)
Sen. J. Strom Thurmond, D
S.C., says American military
leaders were muzzled on anti
Communist statements on orders
"direct from Moscow."
Thurmond spoke Wednesday
night at an anti-Communist rally
attended by more than 2.000 per
sons. He criticized those who he
said "were chiefly responsible for
gagging the military and also
were responsible for the no win'
policy of the Statn Department."
He said the national security
council m 2958 issued a directive
urging the military to give tough
er anti-communist training to
troops and to conduct seminars
informing civiiains of the dangers
of communism.
'When it appeared that this
program was making tremendous
progress." he said. Communists
in Moscow decided to formulate
their own anti-Communist cam
paign.
Government orders in the Unit
ed States quelching public anti
Communist statements by mili
tary leaders followed, he said,
and were the result of orders
"which came directly from Mos
cow."
Thurmond, who has made a
series of speeches in Southern
California, did not cite the source
of his information. Earlier he told
200 persons at a luncheon that the
federal government is infested
with "secret socialists" persons
who though not Communists, are
playing directly into Communist
hands.
Jury Hears Ten Witnesses
At Marquette Murder Trial
PORTLAND (AP) The state
brought ten witnesses to the stand
Wednesday, in the first degree
murder trial of Richard L. Mar
quette. 2o, accused of slaying
Mrs. Lawrence P. Caudle, 24, last
June.
Parts of Mrs. Caudle's dismem
bered body were found scattered
in various places in Southeast
Portland. Other portions were
found later in a small two-room
house where police said Mar
quette lived.
The victim's 29yearold hus
band testified Wednesday that his
wife went shopping the afternoon
of June J and did not return. He
reported her missing the next
day, he said.
Defense attorneys challenged
the admissibility of testimony
by tome police officers about
Marquette showing them where
South Stephens Hardware
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING
STORE HOURS
OPEN 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
WEEKDAYS
OPEN 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.
t
SATURDAY and SUNDAY
For Your Shopping Convenience
SOUTH STEPHENS HARDWARE
tracking Nation at Mn,h Am.
strain, scientists took quick note
ot disturbing- radio reports from
the automatic watchdog equip-
nient in the capsule.
There was trouble in the small
! gas-shooting jets that helped
i siaouife llie cralt in us IliL-ht.
And there was trouble, too, in
certain electrical equipment.
Third Orbit Risky
In seconds the information was
I reported 'o flight headquarters at
lape Canaveral. There, with the
help of computers, fhuht officials
decided a third orbit was too
r'v-'
ArgueNo. Calif., was notified and
a control officer there named Ar-
JFK, Johnson
Rap Goldwater
WASHINGTON (AP)-The Re
publican right, as represented by
Sen. Bany Coldwater, R-Arit,
has become a prime political tar
get for the Kennedy administra
tion. Goldwater drew fire Wednesday :
from President Kennedy and Vice
President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Kennedy struck back in his
news conference at Goldwatcr'j
opposition to giving the President
broad powers to negotiate tariff
matters, particularly with respect
to the European Common Market.
Without specifically naming
Goldwater. Johnson told I Phila
delphia audience that those who
are demanding total victory in the
cold war should say frankly
whether "Ihcy mean we should
declare war against the Soviet
Union." Goldwater has called on
Kennedy to make a cold war vic
tory the chief objective of U.S.
foreign policy.
While these same-day assaults
on Goldwater's views by the two
top elected Democratic officials
may have coincided only by acci
dent, they seemerl to indicate the
administration is worried by what
the Arizona senator contends is
a rising tide of conservatism.
If this tide is running, it may
threaten several key administra
tion proposals in the next session
of Congress. These include broad
tariff authority, school aid and
medical care for the aged.
INeilher Kennedy nor Johnson
has made any public attempt to
link Goldwater with the political
extremists both have de
nounced. But they have implied
that some of his views are similar
to those held by the occupants of
uie tar riht fringe.
Goldwater has been careful to
avoid being identified closely with
tnese groups. Nevertheless, manv
of their members look to him as
a potential 1964 presidential can
didate to their liking,
Pope john Gets
Khrush Greeting:
VATICAN CITY fAP-Soviet
Premier Khrushchev sent birth
day greetings to Pope John XXIII
last weekend, the first time any
Soviet premier is known to have
sent any greeting to a pontiff of
the Roman Catholic Church.
The Vatican said the message
had been received and a reply
sent but would give no details.
Presumably the reply wat an ex
pression of thanks.
A spokesman at the embassy
said Ambassador Semen Kozyrev
had been delegated by Khrush
chev to extend his greetings to
Pope John on his 80th birthday
Nov. 25. This had been done in
writing through the Vatican's
apostolic nunciature in Italy, laid
the spokesman.
One Vatican source described
the gesture as "a crooked line"
and said, "with this man (Khrush
chev) anything is possible."
missing parts of the body were
hidden.
The day's court session ended
with legal arguments on this mat
ter, and Circuit Court Judge Alan
F. Davis said he would rule on
the matter today.
Davis earlier denied a motion
for a mistrial made by the de
fense. George Van lloomissen and
Stephen M. King, defense attor
neys tr ade the motion in protest
to the prosecution opening state
ment that it would prove Mrs.
Caudle was murdered in the act
of rape or attempted rape.
That charge came Tuesday, and
the defense said the state had Dot
indicated in the indictment It
would make this contention.
For a conviction of first degree
murder, the state must prove pre
meditation or murder in the act
of a felony, such as rape.
s
DIAL OR 2-3751
n.iM iWri.h r.i..r..,i - .i;
signal cnt aloft. The signal trig.
gered flow-down rockets at the
i base of the spacecraft ami they
fired over the US West Coast
, slowing the 17.500-niile-an-hour
dpeed of the capsule.
Congress Gets
: Simpson Protest
SEATTLE (AP) - The Simpson'
to ConereM Thinsrfav rnnHmnn.
it said placed I'uget Sound saw
mills at a competitive disadvan
tage with, Canadian mills.
W. G. Reed, Simpson chairman,
said Canadian sot (wood imports to
the Atlantic Coast have "demoral
ized Uie pure structure of both fir
and hemlock lumber."
Reed expressed his views in a
letter to Hop. John Dent, D-I'a.,
chairman of a House subcommit
tee holding hearings on American
employment.
Canadians may use foreign flag
ships, Keed said, but existing
laws require use of U.S. vessels
for intercoastal U.S. shipping.
This, he described as a "govern
mentally - imposed handicap."
which raises the cost for Ameri
can shippers.
the Simpson chairman said
Canadian imports have risen from
6.9 per cent of the Atlantic Coast
market in 1951 to 56.5 per cent in
the first nine month of 1961.
Simpson has closed one sawmill
at snclton and reduced another to
I one smft al ,ne cost ot 136 iDs-
oaiu. miuuiri iw JUOS will 1 "1 Huacuiu K wile Ul uie eiKIl! Ill-
be eliminated unless the company j structors currently conducting the
can find markets at a competitive ; state-required hunter safety cours
price, he added. es.
The reduction of jobs will result I Only about 100 youths in the area
in an annual payroll loss of have taken the course since it was
$1,180,000 to Mason and Grays i started last summer. There are
Harbor communities if present I about 600 who should have this
market conditions prevail, Reed course if they expect to do any
predicted. I hunting next year, be said.
American lumbermen are After Jan. 1, 1962, no one under
barred from the best overseas the age of 18 will be issued a hunt
?inaH P"m"'y .m he United I ing license wi,hout havig passed
ih?g rJ? S.fi be"use the course. Kffective as of Aug. 9
riff U?w"7' l""";1 th' "". " "Oder the age
m,nrynanSCbqeUeennl yVcehde ' ! big
loos to Janan
Sanitary Board Election
Set Monday At Green
The Green Sanitary District
will hold its annual election Mon-
A V...I n ,1.- o
' " V B .111.
"The Snz place will be t h
Green Elementary School.
The election shall be for the our
pose of electing two members
the Board of Directors of the wllcla iu rcpon iur uiv guulsv uuii,ewis jusee, m. uuumu uu,c,
Green Sanitary District. what is required. Clarence Fowler, all of Roseburg;
Floyd Warner and Kenneth Lud- T"8 course will teach safety fac- Mrs. Ray John, Winchester,
erman have completed their terms tors game laws, hunter's obliga- Surgery: James Davidson, Rose
as members of the board and ,ion to property owners and tag- burg; Marvin Fay, Myrtle Creek,
each hopes to be elected for an 8S ' game animals. Speakers Discharged
additional three-year term. from the Oregon State Game Com- Oral Dccring, Mrs. Norman Da-
Others -on the five-man board mission will be present at classes vis. both of Roseburg; Mrs. Robert
are Warren Engdahl. William from time to time. llUlcr and son Lance Andrew, Win-
House and Raymond R. Olson.
Choose
HE
the Kentucky bourbon preferred,
by Westerners all year 'round.
Thur., Nov. 30, 1961 The
!
W.
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jut' ..." rv-
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- SSSB T
17 "'Ca -'r' . Q
RIFLE USE TAUGHT Harry Hill is shown here giving
Mike Eshlemon, 12, instruction on use of the rifle, while
young Ed Cloflin, 12, looks on. Both boys ore from Melrose.
(News-Review photo)
New Safety Course Slated
In Handling Of Firearms
when hunting season rolls around
next year there is going to be a
lot of disappointed young people
when they find they can't get a
punting license or a game tag
Tnis Predicted by Harry Hill
a'no l
The course is seven weeks long,
one night a week. Following the
seven weeks of classroom studies
the group will go to a firing range
and practice what they have learn
ed in the safe handling of firearms
A new class will begin Dec. 12.
Anyone interested in taking it can
register between now and then at
h r... UlnF. 1 ('
e Vng. ' "arl!' 0u'dr Store
ana ouae i.un snop on uae nona
- p""i" ")'.
to PPcamt wiU De caiiea ana torn
The Roseburg Kiwanis Club will'ston.
010 HIBUIIAGE OlStlULRV COMPANY, lOUISVU-lf, KY. MOO'
News - Review, Roseburg, Ore. 3
or
issue patches to those who have
finished the course to wear on
hunting coats or hats.
Hill pointed out that any Boy
Scout group can take the course
as a group. Also, he said, the
course is nut limited to boys. Girlt
are invited to participate too.
Hospital News
Viiltlm) Hours
1 to 330 p.m. and 7 to I p.m.
Douglas Community Hospital '
Admitted
Madical: Mrs. Mary McClendon.
Charles Lynch, Alman Walker,
Marion West, Mrs, Klla Jacobs,
all of Roseburg; Dallas Tower,
Winston; Marion Hulse, Winston:
Marlene I'riest, Camas Valley;
Kenneth Ahlvers, Winston.
Surgery: Mrs. hoy VanArsdale,
Myrtle Creek.
Discharged
Mrs. Helen Mnfiett, Mrs. T. W.
Peterson, Donald Pearman, Har
old Kietmann, Roy Young, Carl
Wassom, all of Hoseburg; George
Hurnett. Myrtle creek; AUyson
I 'II 1 J ,t I ..! .1 t-I-. 1
seph Young, Myrtle c'reek. "
mercy nospi'ai
. .
V VI
wedicyii Hazel aanaera. mtb.
tiQt.
1212 S. E. Stephens
266 S. E. Sfcphent
Ph. OR 2-3393