Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 6, 1961)
Family Night ByCalapooia By MRS. GEORGE MUNSON Thf Calapooia Farm Bureau will hold iti Chriftmii prty Dec. a it I p.m. in the Calapooia Club house. The party will be (or everyone in the area and a good old fashion ed family night is planned. Mrs. Brandner Home Mr. Pearl Brandner his just returned (mm several months vis inns with friends and relatives in Kansas and Colorado. She makes her home on the ranch n( her son-in-law and daughter. Mr. and Jlrs. Harold Crouch, near Ump qua. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Monett left for Klamath Falls Thursday where they were railed by the serious ac cident involving their two nephews, sons of Mr. and Mrs. John Strubel, , and frequent visitors in this area. The boys, 11 and 12, were walking to school and were picked up by a friend in his pickup. A head-on collision with a loRging truck in jured both boys very seriously. One was taken to a Medford Hospital for brain surgery and the other boy is in the hospital in Klamath Falls. Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Murphy drove to Cottage Grove Saturday where they were dinner guests at the home of the latter mother. Mrs. Emma Lansing. They were accompanied by their twin tons, Tat and Bill. Dakota Trip William Anderson has returned from a trip to Underwood, N. D., or Y-. i-? m US wnottm tw bv3t by Quafttone. Un tolWvobty racompiaiouaV dear ond powerful, aWsfME ft Kay art tf yarn hrtm m bearing problem, tmm Sub MHfHOtvr today . tt could open vp a wbole mm wonderful world of bearing for yo Hearing 'm m pvicetett poMeioA se it ond LEECAMPBELL Ifl-mRannilA. DO YOUR.. . ' "T $ 1-1 ll I ' , 4 ' ' " XT Hi Comt tea our huge variety of famous brand ap pliances at New. berry's low prices GENERAL ELECTRIC DRYER AND HOOD 21.97 te. 2M Warmorrnol Jvit PnrtrtiT honr for larfrr hair stvU. PuMv thut off Guarantee! 2 yean. Quiet operation. if!! Yule Party Set Farm Bureau where he spent several days visit ing friends and relatives. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Briggs of Myrtle Creek were dinner guests , at the home of Mr. and Mrs. I Charles Srott on Cole Rd. near L'mpqua Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Haines have returned from their Thanks-1 giving vacation at Tacoma, Wash .j where they were guests at the home of their son-in-law and daugh- j ter, Mr. and Mrs. James Schuma-' cher and family. John Hill of Coquille was an overnight guest recently at the1 home of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John Bacon. I Mr. and Mrs. Louis Fest and two. daughters from Tacoma, Wash., were guests at the home of the ; former's sister, Mrs. Will Long, i on her ranch near I mpqua. Mrs. Carver Hamilton has re turned to her home after under going surgery in a Eugene Hospi tal recently. She is reported to be improving satisfactorily. Mr. and Mrs. James lson of Can yonville were luncheon guests at the Guy Cole home on Cole Rd. Tuesday. Laverne Murphy, has returned from Eugene where he attended the annual State School Board convention held there. P ATKONIZK NEWS-RBVIEW ADVERTISERS This Christmas GIVE THE GIFT of HEARING VOW a new, liny behind-th hearing aid called sub-miniature! Heerine Aid Specialise Dial OR 3-7137 53 S. E. Jackson ONCE AGAIN NEWBERRY'S DISCOUNTS THE DISCOUNTERS! SHOP NEWBERRY'S G. F. 4-TUBE CLOCK RADIO 15.87 Re2. 21 95 Automatically waltee, yo to music or alarm. Lev- type clock controla. Built in Antenna. 4" speaker. G. E. AUTOMATIC TOASTER 11.93 R.. 17.95 Famnua for sturdy. He. pendabl operation. Snap out crumb tray, 6 pnaitinn control, extra high toatt lift. WEST BEND "PIEK-A-BREW" 7.66 ully automatic with window to you can inMftjre easily, atv.r run out. Chroma plated. 9 cupt. BIG ELECTRIC 12" FRY PAN 6.77 , wth cetr. Autor,ot-c hm "wMrrM C-W-Hr rV1"4?C. .- tvw -x. Local News j Mr. and Mrs. Noble Ooettel are. I bark at their hime in Laurelwood.l 'following several days in Portland attending to business. j I Mr. and Mrs. 0. M. Berrie of this city were recent business vis-1 I itors in Eugene. The former has been ill for several weeka snd is reported to be improving in health, i Mrs. H. A. Ramberf if Portland has arrived here to remain over the holidays visiting her daugh ter, Mrs. Bea Smith and with her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Etnil Ramberg, and family. Mrs. Ed Kreidlekamp of Valley City, N.D., arrived in Rnseburg Tuesday for a visit at the home uf Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Quist. Mrs. Kreidlekamp is on the west coast Vlsitinff family memrwr. in F.iioan She will remain in Oregon until inner innsimas. I Cub Scout Workshop Slated For Thursday A workshop on crafts, ceremon ies and general cub scouting for all den mothers and any mothers interested in the cub scouting pro gram is set for 10:30 a.m. Thurs day at St. George's Episcopal par ish hall. The following den mothers have received certificates for basic and advanced training following previ ous sessions: Elizabeth Drew, Nora Mae Stanley. Mary Ann Par son. Artis Barmore, Rubie Ken nerly, Grace Tudor, May Belle Butts, Marge Oilar, Barbara Rig ney, and Alice Cooper. Certificates for basic training for den mothers have been award ed to: Gloria Maret. Helen Schati, Lynn Hagberg. Geraldine Lee, Don na Sabala, and Josie Conkey. Lyle B. Ice, Frank Mayil and Henry Krohn have been awarded certifi cates for completion of cub master training. Twist Contest Slated For New Year's Eve LOUISVILLE. Ky. (AP) - Pic ture a huge room filled with cloth bags, each containing an angry wildcat. You should get the same visual effect New Year's Eve at Freedom Hall. That's the date when William U Vino ....II anAn.A , V.. t. tional Twist contest with several nunarea squirming contestants anrl an avnilMl ir.orwl inaplilnn Prizes, in merchandise, will total atwut 5,uuu. King says, -and entry is free. So, presumably, is first aid treatment. Wcstinghouse Automatic Electric Blanket 14;97 72I4" lull lita Rttulurty 17.97 Fomoos WMtinghousa, famous for dc'loblitv orH quality. Newberry s low price maies giving or buying a pleasure. Single Control, 1 1 5V AC. Hurry (or thu! percolator DOMINION CORN POPPER 5.99 r... $ 1-artw 2'vQt, electric pop per with automatic heat control, heat-proof win dow top, removable bowl, BMaSUTUlf cup. TJ Mr. and Mrs. Gtoroe Wharton are bark at their home on SK Claire Street, following a week in Portland attending to business. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Barnes of WDAY-TV in Fargo. N.D., were recent visitors in Rnseburg and were houseguests of Mr. and Mrs. Kmil Ramberg on Hawthorne Drive. Mrs. Earl Wiley of this city had a feature story published in Sun day's Oregonian. The story was on the use of the window at the Wiley Real Estate office for dis playing various hobbies and ex hibits. Jack C. Davis wilt be chairman of the annual Wassail party dance to he held Dec. 9 at 9:30 p.m. at the Roseburg Country Club for members and their invited guests. A midnight buffet will be enjoyed. Reservations for the affair must be made by calling the clubhouse. Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Watson will be honored on their 35th wed ding anniversary Sunday, Dec. 10. at an open house at the Glide Community building. Relatives and friends are invited and are asked to call between 2 and 4:30 p.m. Mr. Watson was born in Glide 78 years ago. Mrs. F. L. Crittenden of this city plans to leave Friday for Belvedere, Calif., to visit her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. James Crittenden, and baby, and will also visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pfleuger in Hills borough. Calif. She expects to re turn to her home here after the holidays. Three Roseburg eve doctors were in Portland over the weekend to attend two of Oregon's major 1961 optometric conferences. The 150 member Oregon Optometric Asso ciation's semi-annual convention ail day Saturday prefaced the three day ''Silver Jubilee" Northwest Congress of Optometry which ran through Tuesday. Those attending from Roseburg were Dr. William C. Allen. Joseph Agost and Byron E. Woodruff. Mr. end Mrs. Tom Blythe of Santa Barbara.. Calif., have an nounced the birth of their third child, a son, born Oct. 30. The baby, weighing 7 pounds 8'l ounc es, has been named Randall Devin. He joines two brothers. Tommy Jr. and Barry. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ben Blythe of Roseburg. Tom Blythe is I former resident of this city and is pres ently assistant manager of the J. J. Newberry Co. store in Santa 1 Barbara. SANTA MARX ELECTRIC 20-PIICE TRAIN 4.77 Rag . 14 Automatic switching' Set h locorootiv., gondola, battery, nin switch (battery eitra), 106" oval track. Heavy Rain, Snow Brighten Outlook For '62 Irrigation Oregon irrigation water supply conditions that dipped In the critic al point last summer have taken a turn for the belter starting with statewide heavy rains and snows during the Thanksgiving period. W'. T. (Jack! Frost, Oregon snow sirrvey supervisor for the Soil Con servation Service and Oregon Slate I'mversity agricultural experiment slation. reports mountain snow cov er greater than usually expected at this time. Frost cautions, however, that continued above average storm conditions are needed to "re charge" exceptionally dry water sheds, especially in eastern Ore gon. W hile snow cover is good for this I early in the winter, carry over wa ter in all eastern Oregon reser voirs except I'pper Klamath Lake and the main Deschutes dropped! to near rock-bottom during the pail irrigation season. Frost reported ! Above average water runoff will be required during coming months to build up adequate supplies in reservoirs for next summer. Early winter precipitation is especially valuahle for replenish- Fair Oaks Grange Sets Christmas Dinner Meet Plans for the annual Christmas dinner Dec. IB were made at the recent meeting of the Fair Oaks Grange at the Grange hall. Grange members voted to purchase ham and turkeys for the dinner. A gift exchange will also be held. Member Honored Master Fred Brauninger conduct ed the business meeting during which the charter was draped for Carl Thornton by Jenny Harri son, chaplain. Thnrnton and his family have been honored mem bers of the Grange for the past 10 years. Chaplain Harrison announced that member Frank Durkin is again a patient at a hospital in Vancouver, Wash. Legislative Chairman Virginia Williams gave a report on the Worlds Fair to be held in Seattle in 1962. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Cracroft and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Wilson were hosts for the meeting. GOOD TRY WINONA, Minn. (AP) Three days before the Minnesota deer season opened, a yearling buck leaped a nine-foot fence to gain the safety of a city park enclosure where tame deer are kept. No soap, though. Game wardens dosed the buck with tranauilizers and turned him back to the wilds. IS AT NEWBERRY'S 6-9 MON b SHOULDER HOLSTER & REVOLVER SET 2:77 Ra. 2 1 1W h-11 shorXinf revolver. Shoulder holMer with atrap. Dtrttve baHga and ID card in wallu ROLLER SKATES 1.59 JUa B Hajgtnn' runVI for KVlrvi or ou. Non. b'tfllxoble. Rutt proof. ing underground water supplies that feed creeks and springs for the late irrigation season, the fore-, caster explained. Early frost in some eastern Ore gon soils was taken out by the Thanksgiving storms and soils are, now recharging their water tup-' plies. Both Lake and southern Malheur counties report practical-j ly no streamflow with most of the, present precipitation and snowmeltj going into the dry soils. However. small amounts of Malheur run-off are being caught in the Warm Springs and Agency Valley reser voirs in the west part of the coun ty. The Crooked river near Prine ville is now producing excellent runoff, indicating that the soil is primed. Prineville and Ochoco res ervoirs are starting to fill well, Frost stated. Unity reservoir in southern Bak er county is now storing run-off and the area appears off to a good start. Frost gathered the preliminary reports from supervisors of reser voirs and irrigation districts and from U. S. Weather Bureau co operating stations throughout Ore gon. Scattered reports on November precipitation, not including the last two days of the month, showed the following comparison with the IV year average from 1943 to 1957: Roseburg. 40 per cent above; Bak er 70 per cent above; Klamath Falls, "better than normal." Areas showing below normal In cluded Pendleton, Burns, Lakeview and Salem. Frost said any appreci able precipitation in several of these areas during the last two days of the month could bring them to near normal. Frost said his first official re port, based on general observa tions, will he made in early Jan uary. Specific forecasts will begin Feb. 1 and continue monthly through May. The Feb. 1 report should he high ly significant, the forecaster stat ed, since long-time records show that we normally have two-thirds of the year's total snowpaek on the ground or stored as soil mois ture at that time. Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH With Little Worry talk. in(th or n4 without tr of tuMCur false! tuh dropping, lipping or wobbling. PASTEETH holds plfttet firmer aud mora com fortably. Thta pleasant powder has no tummy, Booty, pasty lasts or fcellnn. Doesn't caus na'.isea. It's alkstltn (non-acid) Check "piste odor" (dentura breath) Uet PASTEETH at any drug counter. Friday, Sunday, Monday, Tueidey, SPECIALS Metal Table And AM tract. Durobl strength! Rag. 7.98 Giant Fireball Express Rida-ryp Train, over 35" long. Rag. 3.98 Lil' Mother Diaper With occtstoriat. 2 Colors, plastic lined. 6 Piece set. Reg. 1.00 22-Pc Poly Tea Service Unbreakable let with designed pattern. Hours of fun. Reg. 2.98 Wed., Dec. 6, 1961 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. S Holiday Weather Easier On Tiller By MRS. MILTON HAMMERSLY' Holiday weather conditions were far Irs seveie in th Tiller vicinity than those experienced elsewhere in the -ounly. fn- although total precipitation of S 41 imhe was re corded at the Tille Ranger Sta-j lion (ro.n Tuesday In Friday morn ing, snow depth scarcely exceeded an inch. Heaviest rain came Wednesday and was recorded early Thursday morning at 212 inches. An addi tional 1 8! inches fell in the next' 24 hours. River reading on the heliopotentiameter Tuesday rrorn ing was 13 feet, rising to 5.1 feet Wednesday morning and reach ing 13.1 feet by 2 o'clock that aft ernoon. It crested about noon at 16.5 feet at noon Thanksgiving dav and then continued to drop as cool; weather brought snowflakes mixed with rain. Friday morning saw a light coat: of the white stuff at Tiller, and about 10 inches was measurea at Dumnnt Guard station in the Tal low Butte area of the Cow Creek Ranger District near the 3000-foot elevation. Power failure afi'erting the coun ty in general also blacked ou" the Tiller area except for patrons on FOR THE HOLIDAY SEASON HOLIDAY LOAN PLAN -$100 cost only $6.05 when repaid in 3 monthly installment of $35.35. Or you can get $300, $500, $1000 or more on monthly term to suit you. Quick, liberal service. Phone or com in today. jOCAL Q AIM (5 423 S.E. JACKSON STREET ORchard 3-4476 Rtnnla Sacanti, Mgr. Own Tutldai throuih Frittar till I X Ml. Monday tilt 7.00 F II. Saturday Until Noon TO SERVE YOU BETTER WILL BE OPEN SUNDAYS AFTER CHURCH 1 1 TO 5 ALSO OPEN TONIGHT AND Dec. I Wednesday. Dm. 13 Mender, Oea. It Dae. 10 Thursday, Dee. 14 Tuesday, Dc. If Dm. 1 1 Friday, Dec. 1 3 Wednesday, Dec. 10 Dec. 12 Sunday, Dsc. 17 Thursday, Dac. 21 And Friday, Dac. 22 ALL DAY SAT. FREE GIFTS Rn "MtMita" i Coaster Wagon 1.U.3'i Inches, 5" ttret. Heavy gauge steal body, non-ail eeerinfS.' Ret. 2 ( Chairs 1.97 6 87 3 33 Bag 88c 13" Steel Velocipedes 7.77 Ret. t ft Suaar-tturdy with 2 83 frant wheal semi pneumatic tires. Adiultakle seat, handle- ban). R.dwhite. the line upriver from Tiller, who had no power interruption during the entire storm. Phone service, however, was still out at mid week. Power was restored at Til ler Saturday morning and in the Drew area Monday noon, . Forest Glen Hospital DAUGH ERTY To Mr. and Mrs, Carl Daugherty, Oakland, Nov. 30, a son, Dale Allan; weight 7 pounds II ounce, KUPPER To Mr. and Mrs. 1. Roy Kupper, Myrtle Creek, Dee. 2, a daughter, Tracy Lynn; weight g pounds 2W ounces. DOI.LARHYDE To Mr. and Mrs. Willis Dollarhyde, Roseburg, Dec. 3. a son, Kevin Dewayne; weight 1 pounds 2 ounces. ' IRELAND To Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ireland, Myrtle Creek. Dec. 2, a daughter, Marilyn Sue; weight i pounds IS ounces. n Family Site 1 1 Sett Hew Bowling Set Weifht with wetee mt and ter real kewfcaf actianl 10 atm, 1 bellt, all raereekeble alettit. tf 3.88 r ! .1 nyUa S 1. keerinft.