Local News 1
rhur., Aug. 16, 1962 The Nwi-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 9
Mrs. C. M. Iltt, who is with the
advertising department of the J'uw
Keview. is taking her vacation at
this time.
Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Coopr and
-Mrs. Clitf Thornton of this city
were in Eugene Saturday for the
funeral of Mrs. W. E. Buchanan.
A potlock picnic luncheon will
he held at noon Friday by Unit
No. 58. Retired and Veteran Rail
way Employes at Umpqua Park.
Members and visitors are invited.
Mr. and Mrs. Dtan Jewell and
son, .John, of this city spent a
week in Seattle attending the Mid-
Western Neon Sign convention and
also attended the World's Fair.
Th annual Coos Bay Wagon
Road picnic will be held at Jack
son Park in Brewster Valley Sun
day, Aug. 19 at noon. Everyone
interested Is invited.
Mrs.. Henry Alexander, who has
been a patient at Mercy Hospital
since July 8, is reported to be im
proving. She expects to be confined
(o the hospital for several more
weeks, however.
Pastor and Mrs. Allan Ina.brit.
itn of Faith Lutheran Church, and
children, and David and Sonja
Lee, have returned home from a
vacatiion trip to Northern Idaho
and a week at Lutheran Bible
Camp at Lollon, ore.
Mrs. Bart Griffin and daughter,
Louise, have returned from several
weeks spent in California. They
visited relatives in Van Nuys and
San Diego and enjoyed visits to
Marineland and the various South
ern California beaches.
Mrs. Emily Judd of Roseburg
her daughter, Mrs. R. E. Kelly of
Myrtle Creek; and granddaugh
ters, Emily and Elnora Kelly, have
left by plane from Portland, bound
for Minneapolis, Minn. They will
visit for a few days with Mrs.
Judd's brother and sister, then will
return to Oregon via jet.
Mrs. Dan Slebold spent last week
here visiting her brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ford,
in Laurelwood. Over the weekend,
she was joined here by her hus
band, who took her back to their
home in Salem the first of the
week.
G. W. Wharton of Salem and
John Herbst of Oswego were in
Roseburg over the weekend visit
ing the former's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. R. Wharton, on W. Eliza
beth Street. Saturday, Wharton and
Herbst drove up the North Umpqua
River to Diamond Lake and Sun
day the two accompanied by Mr.
and Mrs. J. R. Wharton, went to
Ashland to attend the Shakespear
ean Festival .play, "As You Like
It."
Mr. and Mrs. Merit Hampton
and children, Pamela, Christy and
Danny, of Boise, Idaho, have left
for their home, following "a visit
here at the home of the former's
parents. Air. and Mrs. Ray B.
Hampton. Merle is manager of the
National Lead Co. in Boise. From
here they went to Sfletz, Ore., to
visit Mrs. Hampton's parents and
then to Portland to visit Merle's
uncle and aunt, before returning to
Idaho.
Mrs. Bruct Br.nn and small son,
Randy, of Ann Arbor, Mich, are in
Roseburg visiting her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Burton T. Randall, and
grandmother, Mrs. Adah Knowland.
They will be joined here later by
Mr. Brenn and the family will go
on to Japan, where Brenn will do
special studies. Before going to
Ann Arbor, he was dean of men at
University of Oregon. Mrs. Brenn
is the former Lucinda Randall of
this city.
Dr. and Mrs. G. C. Finlay re
turned to their home on SE Main
St. Tuesday, following a vacation
trip by jet plane to Boston, Mass.,
to visit their son, Gilben Finlay,
and his wife and their three chil
dren, Joanne, Chris and Kithy. Gil
bert Finlay is a professor at the
University of Oregon and has been
in Boston for the summer study
ing and participating in the Physi
cal Science Program, which in
cludes professors from all parts of
the world taking part in the program.
21 CUBANS CHARGE
NASSAU (UPI) Bahamas po
lice Wednesday planned to formally
charge 22 Cubans with illegal fish
ing aboard four boats towed in
from waters around the . island
group 150 miles south of here.
George McKenzie, government
fisheries officer, said he and three
policemen armed with rifles
caught tho Cubans fishing illegal
ly during the weekend. He said
all four boats were owned by a
Cuban fishing cooperative and
that the fishermen would appear
in magistrate's court on the char
ges. .
Robert Harris of this city went to
Eugene this week to participate
in the WVSO golf tournament.
: Mn. W. E. (T.rrul M.rrk.r .,!
ciuiuren oi Medtord are here visit
ing her mother, Mrs. Paul H. Hel
weg, in Laurelwood.
Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Kmuis of
Portland, formerly of this city,
spent the weekend in Roseburg as
housegucsts of Mr. and Mrs. Hor
ace C. Berg in Laurelwood.
Mr. and Mrs. William Graham
of Porterville, Calif., are spending
the week in Roseburg visiting their
son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Baline Graham.
Mr. and Mr. JnHn Mi-nlrtftArb
of Portland were housegucsts over
the weekend of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan
Pickens at their summer place on
the North Umpqua River.
Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Young and
son, uernie, and daughter, Brooke
and the former's mother, Mrs. A.
M. Young, of this city, were in Eu
gene Saturday for the funeral of
Mrs. B. A. Young s mother, Mrs.
W. E. Buchanan.
Mrs. Ron Noal and daughter, Vir
ginia, and Sharon La Brensz have
returned to their homes in this
city, following a trip to Portland
where the former attended the Gift
Show for the Noels' Westside Pharmacy.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Later of 1426
SE Pine St. traveled to Eureka
Calif., over the weekend to visit
Mr. Later's brother, Joe, who has
been ill. A niece, Kitty, returned
home with the Laters for a visit.
This week Kitty is a guest at the
home of Donna and Phyllis Peck.
Mrs. Russall (Gayla Gtddas)
Caldwell has returned to her home
in Los Angeles, after completing
the run of the play, "Ladies Night
in a Turkish Bath," in Redding
Calif., in which she played the fem
inine lead. Mrs. Caldwell is the
eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs
Paul Geddcs of this city.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Brown of
Dixonville will celebrate their 70th
wedding anniversary Sunday, Aug.
19 from 2 to 5 p.m. at the home
of their granddaughter and her
husband, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E.
Herman, 1626 W. Myrtle Ave. Rela
tives and friends are invited and
are requested to not give gifts.
Marsha, Mtllnda and Victor Kel
ley II, children of Mr. and Mrs.
Victor Kelley of Fullerton, Calif.
and Vic's friend, Mike Fulmer,
also of Fullerton, have arrived in
Roseburg to spend a couple of
weeks visiting the Kelly childrens
maternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Wiley, on SE Kane
Street.
Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Muncy of
Portland and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Van Doren of Palm Springs, Calif.
spent the weekend here as guests
of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Molschen-
bacher on NE Winchester St. Last
week the Muncys' son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Denny
Burns, of Portland, visited at the
Motschcnbacher home. Mrs. Burns
is the former Darla Muncy.
L-C Van M. Stovall will be sail
ing from the Far East Aug. 29.
During his 14 months overseas duty
he was stationed in Thailand, Oki
nawa and Japan and has been with
the 7th Fleet in the Pacific. His
parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Sin
vail, 1639 SE Main, Roseburg, are
awaiting his return and they plan
on launching their ketch next
spring when their son's tour of
duty is terminated and he will be
able to accompany them to San
Francisco for the first lap of their
worlu tour.
Sp-5 Thomas R. Paulson, who
has completed more than eight
and a half years in the Army, is
now attending pre-flight school at
Camp Wolders, Texas. On com
pletion of the school he will be a
W.O. pilot of helicopters. He was
graduated in 1952 and enjoyed see
ing many of his friends during his
20-day leave here. His wife, Don
na, and three children, reside at
1620 SE Main, and his parents,
Mr. and 'Mrs. R. L. Paulson, re
side at 1179 NW Garden Valley
Blvd.
Mr. and Mrs. Willard J. well and
Mr. Cass, all of Peabody, Kansas,
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dean
Jewell the last week. A dinner was
given at Village Green in honor of
the Willard Jewells' 25th wedding
anniversary. The Dean Jewells
took the visitors deep sea fishing
and six salmon were caught, four
of which were caught by John Jew
el. Of great interest to the visitors
was the tour of the Roseburg Lum
ber Co. plant at Dilard. The visit
ors reported they greatly enjoyed
the beautiful lakes and mountains
of Oregon. They returned home
via San Francisco, Santa Barbara.
Disneyland and the Southern
states.
Growing Number Of Travelers Change Motel Rooms For Better
j By GAY PAULEY
UPI Women's Editor
) NEW YORK (UPI) The ever
growing numbers of travelers are
changing the image of the aver
age hotel and motel room for the
better.
The inn-keeping industry no
longer can afford to settle for
flowered drapes, the dime store
work of art over the bed, and the
dim bulb in the floor lamp with
its shade always askew.
The theme today is first, su
preme comfort, then glamour,
said William Pahlmann, San Antonio-born
fellow of the American
Institute of Decorators and boss of
a design staff of 25 which has
done numerous hotel and motel
decorating plans.
"But not a home away from
home. . .that's not what the travel
ing public wants," said Pahlmann.
"This would bore them. . .what
they want is something different
from what they live with every
day."
"My great gripe," said Pahl
mann, world traveler through his
work in interior design, "is to find
that the new hotels going up in all
parts of the world all copy Amer
icana. "The sterile rectangular struc
ture of glass and concrete has
taken over. Yet tourists aren't
looking for this. They'd like to
enjoy some of the atmosphere of
the country they're visiting."
Pahlmann said his insistence on
retaining some of the flavor of the
surroundings was causing him
problems with his latest project
decorating the 800 rooms of the
new President Hotel in Hong
Kong, a privately financed proj
ect. Oriental Touch
. "I insist on some Oriental
touches and the use of some fine
antiques with the new." he said.
"So cables have been flying back
and forlh for two weeks now. and
1 think I've got them convinced."
He leaves soon to supervise the
interior design of the hotel.
We asked what changes in
hostelry interiors had been caused
by the growing sophistication and
growing numbers of travelers.
"Plenty." he said. "Today, the
first class hotel either has a full
time interior designer on the staff
or has an outside consultant. No
longer does the resident house
keeper have the last word in what
goes into a room.
"More attention is being paid to
feminine tastes. Today's interna
tional tourists, by and large, are
couples middle-aged or older.
Pahlmann listed some of the
small but basic touches which he
believes help create a pleasant
setting and also attract more re
turn customers:
Dust ruffles on the bed, so that
when the spread is removed the
steel frame does not show; works
of art scaled to the room size and
(jsen to fit the mood and color;
la colorful spread on the bed,
I durable enough to lake luggage
'dumped on it and people sitting
Ion it;
! Tea tables 22 inches high, taller
than the standard cocktail table
!hut more comfortable for room
I service dining than the carts
I wheeled in, in most hotels:
I Cabinet basins in the bath with
the mirrors lighted so that a man
I can shave without slashing his
'throat and a woman can apply
-her makeup and have room for a
cosmetics kit without having il
splashed from the basin; incan
descent rather than fluorescent
alters the color of the skin; a
light somewhere in the shower
area so that when the curtain is
closod, the person in shower is not
bathing in darkness;
Light For Rttdtri
Ample light for bedlime reading
"most hotels just don't," said
Pahlmann, "and they also have a
knack of putting the bed light
where you have to get out of bed
to turn it off:
Modernization of the luggage
storage area so that it will hold
today's two-and four-suilers and
lie soft, lightweight dress and
suit cases which unfold to hang.
Splashes of bold color rather
lhan the beige or grace basic;
wallpaper cither in combination
with paint or throughout a room;
"big, not dinky mirrors,, prefera
bly framed";
And plenty of stationery in the
desk with the Gideon Bible so you
don't have to call the manage
ment for more paper when you
write the folks back home.
"A hotel room should indicate
that somebody cares," said Pahlmann.
Twistin' Time Complete With Prixes!
TEEN DATE
FAIR DANCE
With Dick Booth
Thursday at 8:30
mix a f n-j nniini it i?
'3$$ AUGUST 15-19 ROSEBURG
Ike Meets Aging
Field Marshals;
Trades Memories
LONDON (UPI) Former Presi
dent Dwight D. Eisenhower Tues
day exchanged memories with the
aging British field marshals and
admirals who took part in "our
crusade in Europe."
Eisenhower, addressing a Pil
grims Society luncheon, spoke in
a choked voice. !
Tears glistened in the former
president's eyes as he said:
"I feel embarrassed. I have an
urge to do nothing but say 'Do
you remember when?' "
Around him at the table sat
many of the Britons who served
as his aides in World War II.
To his right was Field Marshal
Viscount Alanbrooke, Britain's
wartime chief of the Imperial Gen
eral Staff. Across the table sat a
smiling Royal Air Force Marshal
V count Portal, whose pilots were
the few to whom so many Britons
owed so much.
It was "Hello, Ike" from Field
Marshal Viscount Slim, who later
defeated the Japanese-in Burma's
jungles. . Admiral, of the fleet Vis
count Cunningham, whose fleet
protected the . D-Day Normandy
landing smoked a cigar and leaned
over his coffee cup to ask Eisen
hower, Do you remember..."
.Missing and not mentioned was
F(eld Marshal Viscount Montgom
ery, Eisenhower's wartime deputy
and peacetime critic.
House Group Cuts
Engineering Funds
For Power Lines
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
House Appropriations .Committee
this week scaled down plans for
preliminary engineering of pro
posed transmission lines to carry
power from Columbia River dams
to California.
The committee recommended
that a Bonneville Power Adminis
tration (BPA) budget request of
$500,000 for studies of the Pacific
Northwest-California high voltage
interconnection be reduced to
$300,000.
Use of the funds, the committee
said, should be restricted to addi
tional preliminary engineering, re
connaissance surveys, economic
analysis, and negotiations with
both public and private utilities.
"No actual ground survey is to
be undertaken," the committee
report said.
The committee said action on
legislation concerning regional I
preference should be completed
before prcconstruction or con
slruction work on the Intcrlie
begins.
The committee also recommend
ed that "more specific" negotia
tions and planning between the
federal government and private
and public utilities take place to
assure the most feasible plan for
an intertie.
tnoremeat
Save Time . . . Save Money . . . You Can Drive Farther, But You Can't Save More . . Shop Your Paul Bunyan Store
PAUL BUNYAN STORES
GEORGE'S MODEL MARKET Winston
BARNEY'S TRI-CITY MARKET . . .
Myrtle Creek
RIDGEWAY MARKET . . . Riversdale
Dundee yf Fireside v Hudson House
. Stock up NOW!! . -y They're Fresh!!! . Left of Flavor!
o)n(?rftnnn.fw new jumbo sizeh fpc
em
CANNING TIME!!
QUARTS (Regular) ...
DOZ.
PINTS (Regular) ... $1 .23 -- QUARTS (W. Mouth) ... $1.67-- PINTS (W. Mouth) ; . . $1.39
PEN J EL
FOR BETTER
JELLIES . Reg. 235e
4?49e SUGAR 25 $2.49
Hunt's Tomato
JUICE
$1100
Kraft's Salad
OIL
N.B.C. Sugar Honey
GRAHAMS
Royal
GELATIN
NOW
ONLY
7
PKG.
M.J. B.COFFEE 4 1 $2.33 2 1 $1.17 1 .1 59 6 " 79
Lean PORK
TENDER
JUICY
PURE PORK
SAUSAGE
STEM
3fs
SEASONED
RIGHT!!!
FRESH FROSTED
FRYERS
LARGE
PLUMP
MEATY
39s
LARGE
Crisp, Green
Mm
LET1UCE
hds.3fe
SOLID GREEN
CABBAGE
,4'
THOMPSON SEEDLESS
GRAPES 2129'
Grocery prlcoe good Friday through Sunday, Moat and product price good Friday and Saturday. No itlee to dealt re. Wa re terra right to limit.
RIDGEWAY
MARKET
RIVERSDALE
mm M
G.rdtn V. d. t Cuiry Rd,
GEORGE'S
MODEL
MARKET
WINSTON
OPEN
Wnh O.yt l-l
Sunday. t-4
ARNEY'S
TRI-CITY
MARKET
MYRTLE CREEK
OPEN
Week Doy. 9-8
Sunday! - 10-8
. . . Save Time . . . Save Money . . . "You Can Drive Farther, But Yoff Can't Save Mora , . , Shop Your Paul Bunyan Stort .