The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, May 07, 1963, Page 2, Image 2

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    2 The Newi-Rtview, Roseburg, Ore, Tun., May 7, 1963
Flood Threats Lessen
After Rainfall (eases
High water conditions in the ported for the 24-hour period in
North and South Umpqua river s most areas of the county,
were eased this morning as rains The Tiller Ranger Station area
tanered off throughout the area. had the most precipitation, report-
The U.S. Weather Bureau office ling 115 inches. Elkhead followed
at Itoseburg described river con-1 with 1.10 inches. Wolf Creek sta
ditions as "stationary" and no flood i tion reported 1.3 inches to raise
OVERFLOWING CITY JAIL at Birmingham, Ala., coused police officials to stop ond
deliberate where to keep this group of Negroes Monday night after they were arrested in
demonstrations Monday. The city jail was already overflowing, with more than 800
Negroes arrested Monday. (UPI Telephoto)
Management Policy Discussed
At Wildlife Training Session
Wildlife policy and responsibili
ties of the Forest Service in mul
tiple use management were under
cored by Raymond E. West in a
talk which opened a wildlife train
ing session in the Umpiiia Hotel
this morning.
West serves in the division of
range and wildlife management at
the Forest Service regional office
from Western Oregon national for
est! and several other public agen
cies are convened here for a three-
Attendance Areas Okayed
For Winchester Students
The Roseburg School Board Mon
day night approved a location plan
for students who will attend .Win
chester Elementary School when
the school addition is completed
next fall. '
This program was adopted to
keep all classrooms intact. The
classca will remain with the same
teachers throughout the year and
the classes involved will move to
the Winchester building when It is
completed.
Tentative estimates call for the
building to bo ready sometime be
tween Thanksgiving and Christ
mas. f.v
Following Is the program adopt
ed by the School Board.
' Grade 1 All Garden Valley stu
dents attend Hucrest. All students
from the north (Winchester, Wil
CARTER TIRE CO.
GOODYEAR
SAFETY CENTER
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SERVICE
COMBINATION OFFER
All 3 For
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266 S. E. Stephens St.
day conference on mutual wildlife
management problems.
An address of welcome was giv
en by Vondis Miller, Umpqua Na
tional Forest supervisor. Miller
also discussed the need for wild
life training.
John K. Schwartz, another mem
ber of the regional Forest Serv
ice wildlife staff, introduced parti
cipants and made Introductory
remarks.
In other highlights of today's
classroom program, timber man-
bur, Newton Creek) attend Win
chester. Grade 2 All Garden Valley stu
dents attend Hucrest. All students
from the north attend Winchester.
Grade 3 All students from the
north will ho picked up and
brought to Riverside school. This
will fill Riverside until Winchester
School is completed.
Grade 4 All students from the
north will be picked up the same
tlmo as the third grade students.
This will neccssitnto two large bus
ses. They will both go to Riverside,
discharge the third grade and one
bus will, take one room of fourth
graders to llucrosl and two rooms
of fourth graders to Rivcrsdale.
Grade 5 All students In the north
will attend Wilbur.
Grade 6 All students In the north
will attend Wilbur.
Only...
ANY
AMERICAN
CAR
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rirn
y And Storing
Front Wheel
Balancinq
M an Ml
4.UU
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agemcnt representatives presented
facts and figures on the detrimen
tal effects of animal damage to the
timber management program and
discussed how this problem can be
alleviated.
Representatives of the state
Game Department discussed co
ordination of fisheries management
with other resource uses.
Also discussed was the extent
and nature of animal impact on
tree regeneration on the Umpqua
National Forest and methods of
control.
To round out today's program,
staff members of the Siuslaw Na
tional Forest were to review forest
information and education resnon
sihilities in the field of ' wildlife
management and the relationship
with local conservation organiza
tions. Discussions Stt
The stale Game Department was
to discuss wildlife problems on na
tional forest lands of most concern
to the Oregon Game Commission,
and a representative for the Bu
reau of Spoi ls Fisheries and Wild
life was to discuss effects of
stream alteration and forest prac
tices on fish populations.
On Wednesday the group will
make a trip Into the Umpqua Na
tional Forest to view "good and
bad practices" in logging and road
construction and view animal
damage and wildlife studies.-
The conference continues Thurs
day with various classroom topics
scheduled.
John Stubblefield
Graveside services for John Ar
thur Stubblefield, 78, will be held
today at 2 p.m. at the Roseburg
Memorial Gardens with the Rev.
Donald Smith of the Wcstside
Christian Church officiating.
Stubblefield died in Portland last
Friday. He was born June 16, 188S,
in La Grande and had lived in
Portland for the past SO years. He
was a member of the First' Baptist
Church of Portland.
Surviving are three sons, James
A. Stubblefield, Myrtle Point, John
A. Stubblefield Jr., of the U.S.
Army, and Russell Stubblefield,
Coquillc; two daughters, Mrs. F.lla
May Mory, Port Orford, and Mrs.
! Wancta Fay Robertson, Coquille;
and 14 grandchildren.
Long and Shukle Memorial
Chapel is In charge of local ar
rangements. Charge Of Forgery Hits
Young Pair At Winston
Roseburg city police report the
arrest Monday night of William
Vade Carv, 19, and Junita Dianne
Whitney, 18, both of Winston, to
face cliarges of forgery.
They are accused in connection
with an alleged M0 forged check
passed at the Knco Service Slation
on SK Stephens St. Two oilier
checks are said lo be outstanding.
Mrs. Whitney is alleged to have
signed the name of Margaret Price
lo the check, made payable lo
Cary.
PTf,
tffTth
building
your
Equity
prompt
personal
HOME
LCANS
k MSItUM-U; I t. tottM tkttt
0tW4 I KIt
flTiX'
raw
warnings vere out.
The North Umpqua River, swol
len by several days of precipita
tion, was dropping. The river
crested at 12.4 feet at 6 a.m. to
day and later in the morning the
river level had dropped to 12.1
feet, according to the Douglas
County Water Resources survey.
The South Umpqua River crest
ed at Tiller at 9.7 feet and at
Winston at 18.7 feet.
The forecast calls for scattered
showers tonight and Wednesday.
Itoseburg received .86 inches of
precipitation for the 24-hour pe
riod from 10 a.m. Monday to 10
a.m. today.
Over an inch of rain was re
Three In Hospital
After 2-Car Crash
Three women were admitted to
Douglas Community Hospital Mon
day following a two-car collision
at 12:15 p.m. at the overpass on
Highway Interstate 5 south of
Roseburg near Lindy's.
Injured were Orvetta Jo Saum,
261 Peach St., Winston, operator
of one of the cars, and a passen
ger with her, Unice Fern Cook,
Box 488 Winston, whose conditions
arc reported from the hospital as
fairly good.
Operator of the other car, Goldie
Lcla Klcich of 1331 SE Mill St.,
Roseburg, was admitted but re
leased later that day. All three
were taken to the hospital by am
bulance, and the Saum car was
"totaled," state police report. The
other vehicle had slight damage
to the left side and a flat tire.
The accident occurred during
heavy rain and on wet pavement,
police said. The Saum car, north
bound, hit a cement bridge pillar
on the east side of the highway
and bounded into the southbound
lane striking the Kleich vehicle,
police said.
The Rural Fire Department was
called to wash the highway of spill
ed gasoline from the vehicles.
Model Contest
Winners Named
Winners have been named in the
model car contest that was recent
ly held at the Hobby Shop in Rose
burg. The contest is among young
people In the area to see who can
design the -best automobile in
scale model form.
The entrants usually , elaborate
on kit models of stock cars or hot
rods, adding new curves and styl
ing, and, in general customizing
the stock design.
In the senior class Richard Nave
won first place; Russell Kaine,
second; and honorable mention rib
bons went to Ray Stcltncr, Rich
ard Nave, Mary Nave and John
Hcbard,
Junior class winners were Brian
B. Stults, first place; Gary John
son, second; and honorable men
tion, Dclbcrt Bcaty and Stan Mc
Clintock. Two Plead Innocent
To Drinking Charges
Two Roseburg men pleaded in
nocent and requested jury trials
when arraigned in Douglas County
District Court Monday on charges
of driving while intoxicated.
Lloyd Albert Cole of 1919 NF.
Diamond Lake Blvd. was arraign
ed in connection with a sheriff's
department complaint issued May
3. His trial was set for May 20
at 9:30 a.m.
Ernest Wilslon Barker Jr., 40,
of 725 SE llnynes, was arraigned
on a sheriff's department com
plaint issued May 4. Trial was set
for May 13 at 9:30 a.m.
Shirley Craig Bowles, 39, of Rt.
3, Box 1680, Roseburg, asked time
to see an attorney when she ap
peared Monday in connection with
a shoplifting complaint. The case
was continued loday.
A complaint by Lloyd Stutsman
accuses the defendant with the
May 3 theft of grocery items
meat and walnuts at Byrd's Low
Cost Market.
Church At Azalea Sets
Night Of Special Music
The Salem Bible Academy will
present an evening of special mu
sic at the Azalea Community
Church at 8 p.m. Thursday, in
stead of Friday as previously an
nounced. The appearance date has
been set ahead one day, reports
Mr. G. B. Fox. Glendale corre
spondent. Richard Voth directs the
36-vnice choir.
Grange Party Postponed
Monthly card parly of the South
Deer Creek Grange has been mov
cd up (o Thursday. May 9. reports
correspondent Mrs. Albert Rad
elide. The event would normally have
been held on Saturday, May 11,
but the change had to be made
because of unforeseen circum
stances. Next month's can) party will be
held on Ihe regular meeting date,
June 8.
DU PONT '501'
Nylon Carpet
And Quality Wool Carpets
BOB ALLEN
noon, covirino
Pfcmt OK 2-1101
the Mav total to 4.82.
Rainfall for the Glcndale area
from Friday to today was totaled
at 3.94 inches by Robert Parcells.
Cow Creek was described as a
"raging torrent" but so far had
caused little damage.
A threat was posed to the Glcn
dale Road bridge near Highway
99 due to the washing action of
I he stream, but this situation w as
being watched closely, according
to Mrs. Gerald B. Fox, corre
spondent. U Of 0 President,
Research Head, Due
At Alumni Meeting
University of Oregon President
Arthur S. Flcmming and Dr. Hom
er Barnett of the anthropology de
partment will be in Roseburg
Thursday night to speak before a
meeting of alumni of the univer
sity. The joint appearance is set
for 7:30 p.m. at the Roseburg High
School library.
According to Mrs. James Rich
mond, one of the hostesses for the
evening, the meeting will replace
one scheduled in February and can
celed because of snow conditions.
All alumni and friends of the uni
versity are invited to attend.
Dr. Barnett, recent recipient of
one of the largest grants ever
awarded for a research project,
will tell of the "Pacific Project"
which he will head. Dr. Flcmming
will also speak.
Co-hostess for the meeting, at
which refreshments will be served
is Mrs. Don Scverson. Lee Wimber
ly is head of the board of directors
for alumni of this area and stales
that Thursday's gathering is one
of several such informal events set
up during the year for the purpose
of bringing alumni together to learn
of important programs of the uni
versity.
Cuban Premier
Sees Volgograd
VOLGOGRAD, U.S.S.R. (UPD-
Cuban Premier Fidel Castro
toured this war-famed city for
merly named Stalingrad today on
the first stage of a provincial tour
that will take him from the
Ukraine to Siberia.
Castro is expected to visit Len
ingrad in the north, the Ukrainian
capital of Kiev, the central Asian
city of Tashkent and several Si
berian cities before he returns to
Moscow May 23.
The bearded Cuban spent the
weekend talking politics with Pre
mier Nikita Khrushchev at a hunt
ing lodge outside Moscow. Details
of their talks were not revealed,
but the topics discussed presum
ably included the question of in
creased Soviet military and eco
nomic aid for the Castro regime.
Khrushchev did not go to the i
airport in Moscow to see Castro
off for Volgograd, but Foreign
Minister Andrei Gromykop, De
fense Minister Rodio Malinovsky
and Mikhail Suslov of the Pre
sidium (politburo) were on hand.
Housewife To Continue
Solo Flight Wednesday
SUVA, Fiji (UPI)-Mrs. Belty
Miller, 36, a Santa Monica. Calif.,
housewife, plans to take off early
Wednesday on a 1,250-mile solo
flight to Suva from tiny Canton
Island in the South Pacific.
It will be the third leg on Ihe
transpacific flight on which the
freckle-faced pilot hopes to be
cime the first woman to fly alone
from California to Australia.
Mrs. Miller indicated she plans
a 12-hour rest stop at Suva before
starting the final flight to Bris
bane, Australia, arriving some
time Thursday.
She arrived Monday at Canton
Island, a 3.5-squarc-milc atoll in
the Phoenix Islands, following a
2,000-mile flight from Honolulu
slarting Sunday.
Mrs. Miller left Oakland, Calif.,
April 30. She is ferrying a S50.000
twin-engined airplane to a new
owner in Australia.
Burglary Investigated
At Assembly 0( God
A weekend burglary of the As
sembly of God Church at 518 NK
Nash St., Roseburg, is being in
vestigated by city police. The
break and entry was reported by
the Rev. Clyde O, Ross, pastor.
F.ntrance was gained through a
door at the top of the fire escape,
it was revealed.
Missing are U to is In change,
a gold-plated figure and a lire ex
tinguisher. Zenith Hearing Aid
Representative
N.w
Chapman's Pharmacy
tvtry Wednesday
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
RlB4itl--tHtritl-Aectuorie t
for molt makes
SOUTHERN OREGON
HEARING AID CENTER
lilf " m ,
J'ilMLV 1
FAMILIAR FACE at the Roseburg Dramatic and Musical Arts Association concert May
14 will be'Mrs. Homer Grow, who is probably Roseburg's most-demanded accompanist.
This time, she will take the limelight herself as on organ soloist. She will also fill the
familiar role of accompanist for several of the ortists. The show is scheduled at the
First Baptist Church, featuring all Douglas County talent. (News-Review photo)
Five Rural School
Budgets Rejected
Five of 18 school districts in
Douglas County Monday rejected
the county Rural School District
budget, but their negative votes
were not enough.
..inong Ihc 17 districts report
ing, the amount of $743,130.95 out
side the 6 per cent limitation in a
total budget of $2,472,805 was ap
proved, 2,596 to 1,993.
Rejecting the rural levy were
Kiddle, Canyonville, Suthcrlin, Oak
land and Glide.
.Meanwhile, the only director to
be elected to the rural board was
from Zone A (northern Douglas).
The only candidate was Frank
White, incumbent, of Gardiner.
He received 598 votes from the
five districts reporting among the
six voting. No vote return has been
received yet from tiny Ash Valley.
Joe N. Campbell
Joe N. Campbell, 51, of Canyon
ville, died Monday evening at a
Canyonville hospital after a lengthy
illness. The body has been removed
to Ganz Mortuary at Myrtle Creek
and iunei-.il services will be an
nounced later.
AW) MA anyone
The Jut Magic Root wrap
is easy, sure, fast and fun.
The selected branch is gird
led and the Wrap placed
around the girdled areo,
seoling In plant juices (sap)
and sealing out air and
water. Then forget it until
the root callus hos develop
ed. MAKE LARGE
WELL BRANCHED
CUTTINGS &
SAVE 2 OR 3 YEARS
GROWTH
C & O Park-N-Shop
Southgatt Shopping Center , . OR 38423
Wallace Garden Store
261 W. Harrord Av, OR 1-1342
Farm Bureau Co-op Ex.
S53 S t. Wihmton At.. ... OR 3-2611
Roseburg Planners Study Permit
Plan For Zoning Trailer Areas
The Roseburg Planning Commis
sion flirted Monday with the idea
of studying the need for a special
zone to permit so-called "trailer
estates."
But no action was taken.
Special zones permitting develop
ment of mobile home subdivisions
have been established in other lo
calities throughout the country,
necessitated by the increasing pop
ularity of trailer home living.
In such a subdivison, a trailer
owner actually purchases a lot
and assumes all the responsibilities
and benefits of residential living.
In another matter, the commis
sion considered a request for a set
back variance from Mrs. Fred 1
Spinster of 1660 SE Marsters. The I
request was tabled to give other i
members of the commission oppor-'
tunity to view the site. The prop
erty owner desires to develop a
carport, the nature of which would
be in violation of the 15-foot set
back rule, a commission spokes
man said.
The commission also considered
a proposed minor land partition-1
in n
Urge well rooted shrubs,
trees, roses from cuttings
A Completely Mew Principle
EASY
FAST
FUN
CERTAIN
Jet Magic Root Wrap
draws heat to the collus
area, forming a full cir
cular callus, moitt, end
ready to burst into roots
when placed in the tooting
bed. The Wrap stretches
as the callus forms. A very
noticeable bulge tellt you
when it's time to remove
ond plant the cutting.
Multiply favorites from your own or friends'
gardens. Grow your own supply of shrubs,
frees ond roses for your landscaping needs,
at a small fraction of the retail cost. If
you start right now, with Jet Magic Root
Wrap you con have fully developed,
blooming rose bushes, well rooted trees
and shrubs by mid-summer AT A COST OF
PENNIES. It's easy, fast and fun. No muss
or fuss.
30 cuttings
from one
package of
JET MAGIC
ROOT WRAP
Campttft InUrvctiftfll
Included
ing for property located at NE Di
amond Lake Blvd and Winchester.
No action was taken pending an
interpretation by the city attorney
on one aspect of the ordinance
which covers the proposal.
The commission will make a re
quest that an official of the coun
ty clerk's office attend the next
commission meeting on May 20 to
discuss the filing and recording as
pects of minor land partitioning
procedures.
LIKES BRITISH TAILORING
LONDON (UPI) - Entertainer
Sammy Davis Jr. ordered eight
suits at a tailor's shop.
"I go for British tailoring in a
big way," Davis said.
Retire When You Please
In Time To Enjoy It!
Plan Now. With
Lincoln National Life
Ph OS 9.334ft
JACK PATTERSON
can grow
No disappointments when you root cuttings with
Jet Magic Root Wrap! This new rooting method
forms a root callus . . . while cutting is still
growing and receiving nutrition from the parent
plant a root callus that is ready to bunt into
roots when placed in the rooting bed.
Excess wood below the cal
lus is trimmed off and the
cutting placed in the root
ing bed. Becouie half of
the rooting cycle has been
'completed, roots sprout
quickly. The result a ful
ly developed plant, tree or
shrub in much less time
than ever before.
$i98 m