LIBRARY ARRIVALS
8 The Newt-Review, Roseburg, Ore. Thur., June 19, 1963
One Of History's Astounding Men
Brought To Life In Powerful Novel
The life story of one of the most
astounding men in all history is
told in "The Great Infidel" by Jo
seph Jay Deiss.
Wonder Of The World
Fredcrico II, King of Sicily and schools of Virginia met with grudg
Holy Iloman Emperor seven and
one half centuries ago, was known
to his contemporaics as the "Won
ilor nf tho World." 11a still is.
lie was I non-conformist on al-1 victory of this inspiring, eloquent
most every point in shocking con-1 nook.
her staying power. It was a lonely i 1922-1955. Bertha Mahrney; The
ihi .uri'ivpd ,h. (Dinner Party Cook Book (Mewart
scene letters and burning crosses, I Collection) Sunset (Per): Our
but reached its spiritual height Living Bible (Stewart Collection),
when actual integration of theings, Truman Capole; Ride West
lO I'UeuiO, wnssicjr ncai.
ing and bitter acceptance. Teung Moo.rns non- r'tuon.
That Mrs. Boyle was able to re- Moving Into Manhood, W. W. Bau
construct an unassailable faith iner; What You Should Know About
i,.i, n.t ..,1 -, i ih uiiimaia ! Communism and Why, Scholastic
Pork Chops, Rice
Happily Combined
In Casserole Dish
Indiana Visitor Leaves Area Following Sojurn In Melrose
flict with the times. He rose from
pauper king to the exaulted throne
of a Roman Caesar.
Three times married, three times
excommunicated his life, private
and public, was never for a mo
ment free of passionate controver
sy. He was accused of everything.
A master showman, he had great
intellectual interests. In a period
when most Europeans wero illiter
ate, he spoke nine languages and
wrote fluently in several. His epic
struggles against the temporal pow
er of the Papacy clearly foreshad
owed the Protestant Reformation.
This account of Fodciico's life
scrupulously follows the known his
torical facts although it is con
structed in a novel. It evokes both
moods and scenes of the astonish
ing past, picturing all the exuber
ant pageantry of the Midle Ages
not as a conventional world of
knights and armor, of troubadours
and ladies fair, but of people as
strongly and weakly human as our
selves. Above all towers the enig
matic personality of Federico So
condo, a man ahead of his times
but trapped by it. ,
Story of Crusade
"The Desegregated Heart" by
Sarah Fntton Boyle is Uie story of
a crusade, the more courageous
for the background out of which
it sprang a traditional Southern
upbringing in aristocratio Albe
marle County, Va.
The crusade began when the
University of Virginia refused to
enroll a Negro student. Confident
that this wrong could bo righted'
quickly, Mrs. Boyle went forth to
do her iharo, only to see her white
friends drop away and even tho
Negroei become wary, doubtful of
Best Book
An immediate successor to "Lord
of the Flies," the novel that has
made William Golding famous,
"The Inheritors" is regarded by
many, including the author him
self, as the best of his books.
This is the imagined account of
the last days on earth for the last
members of the doomed race wo
call Neanderthal man. There were
only eight of them left six adults,
a small girl and an infant.
William Goulding has written a
powerful, profound and haunting
novel about these essentially gen
tle innocents and what happened
to them after their encounter with
another race of beings. They were
beings somewhat like yet strange
ly different from them, and so both
terrifying and fascinating; beings
incomprehensibly skilled and so
phisticated, but cruel, guilt-riden
and already somewhat corrupt; be
ings whose descendants would
name their species "Homo Sapi
ens." Other new books appearing on
the library shelves this week are:
Adult Non-Fiction: Jusep Torres
Campalans, Max Aub; Westward
Expansion, Itay Billington; The
Person You Can Be, Itoy Burk
hart; Voices in the Snow, Alan Car
lisle; It's Bright in My Valley,
Philip Cleveland; Backseat Quar
terback, Perian Conorly; The Ori
gin of Races, Carleton Coon; Ten
nessee Ernie Ford's Book of Favor
ite Hymns, Tennessee Ernie
Ford; Sirens Should Bo Seen and
Not Heard, Hermlnne Gingold;
Ibamba, Thynant Hubbard; A r t
and tho Spirit of Man, Rene Huy
Rhc; A Shot in the Dark, Harry
Kurnitz; Newbery Medal Books:
Former Tiller Store Owners
Make Return Visit To Area
By MRS. MILTON HAMMERSLY
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tighe of
Long Beach, Calif., stopped recent
ly to visit Mr. and Mri. Vern Ler
will of Tiller and Mrs. Haicl Jen
nings ot Drew while on an extend
ed motor trip to Canada and
through eastern itatcs.
The Tighes at ono time owned
the ranch on Red Butlo Road now
owned by Mr. and Mrs. Paul R.
Densmore, and during the years of
World War II they owned and oper
ated the Tiller Store and post of
fice. Thoy left here about 1948 and
operated a liquor store in the Long
Beach area until recently, when it
fell victim to progress as a new
freeway was built. They are now
retired.
Mr. and Mrs. Wuyne I'eterman
and sons moved over tho weekend
to their newly-purchased home al
Tri-City near the Tri-Clty Rcdy
Mix plant. They havo resided at
Tiller for the past eight years while
Petcrman was employed by Na
tional Plywood Co. and its prede
cessors at the stud mill and veneer
plant upriver from Tiller. Since the
plant was closed a few months ago,
ho has been working at tho com
pany's Koscburg operation. The
I'etcrmana lived In the Scott house
now owned by Mr. and Mrs. Vern
Lcrwill and located next to the
LerwiU ranch. Mike Petcrman,
who just finished tho eighth grade
at Tiller, is remaining for tho slim
mer to assist on the Lerwill ranch.
Rattlesnakes Reported
Ralph Little and his Forest Serv
ice telephone maintenance crew ac
counted for the second rattlesnake
killed by Cow Creek Ranger Dis
trict employes last week when they
found the reptile on the highway
near Drew. Gerry Bouncy and Jim
Hunt dispatched the snake. Second
rattler to be killed within a week
un tho Tiller Ranger Station ground
was killed by Robert W. Squyrcs,
South Umpqua District forester.
near the lumber shed at the rear
of the station property.
Ranger and Mrs. Hillard M. Lllll
gren and Jon and Sandy had as a
weekend visitor Mrs. Lllligrcn's
nephew, Stephen Francis, from
Minneapolis, Minn. Ho was gradu
ated from high school there and
left by piano the fallowing day for
Roseburg, where lie was met by
the Liliigrcns. Monday, he reported
to the Wolf Creek Camp on Little
River where he will be employed
on the Forest Service regional fire
suppression crew for tho summer.
Rita Hunter, 0 year-old daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Hunter of Til
ler, is currently visiting her mater
nal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. E.
C. Forell of Redmond.
Mtdfordltt Visits
Mrs. Pearl Kitchen of Modford
spent three days recently at the
home of her son-in-law and daugh
ter, Mr. and Mrs. N. E. McCutch
con and family. She came especial
ly to see her grandchildren, Fran
cis and Trudy Carter, son and
daughter of Mrs. McCutcheon, re
ceive eighth grade diplomas from
tho Tiller-Drew Grado School.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Dahack
drove to Shady Covo recently to
attend the golden wedding celebra
tion or thoir lougliino friends, Mr.
and Mrs. Alvin t'onovcr. Recent
callers at the Dahack home have
been Mrs. Alma G. Meyer, Don
na Ashpole and C. A. Kissinger, all
of Eagle Point, former home of
the Daharks; Kdyth Wirt and Ma
rio Simpson of Trail; Mrs. Hullie
Hessclgrove and Mr. and Mrs.
Ken Nolle of Modford; Avis Trei of
Santa Ana, Calif.; Mr. and Mrs.
Hodgson of San Pedro, Calif., who
were vacationing at their Days
Creek cabin; and Mrs. lira Car
ver of San Francisco, Calif., who
accompanied friends from Rose
burg on the trip to Tiller.
Fur Trim Is Fashion's Roar
In New Clothes For Winter
By GAY PAULEY i dressed her collection in a varle-
UPI Women's Editor i ty of furs. A black sheath of a
Ktw yuhr. (L'l'l)-It is not cocktail dress, short length, had
uie oe-sinu io-animnis season on six-inch border of white er
ncvenin mcnuo u tney re the; mine tails at the hem. Ermine
luroearmg variety. tails lined the stole which went
Mir trim is the great roar of with the dress,
fashion in the new fall and win- A dress coat costume for even-
ter collections which manufactur-1 ing in white satin came with the
era for the last three weeks have! flared coat lined completely in
been showing the nation s store ; black mink. Opossum was dved
Diijors. ine new clonics will be-1 In a plum color to produce a
gin to arrive in retail stores in ; bulky jacket for a sleek late dav
late Ju y. wm) ,n.s, j ,nr Mme ,,um
The designers In tins the num- shade. Tho plum was repeated in
tier one garment center of the na-, the border of jersev stole topping
lion always have been in love j a slim-rut jersey "dres
with fur for trimmings and lin-i A snow leopard cape, in Its un
Inss. for the new season, the evenly spotted white and beige
love affair has grown torrid. Fox. j tones, covered a floor length
lynx, leopard, opossum, Persian, j wool dinner dros. Miss Trigere
seal, jaguar, chinchilla, ermine! put a sleeveless white mink vest
and of course mink abound as -over a sleek black crepe formal
trims and linings. Many are the And th,i topper of them all was
new treatments for the furs. her use of Mongolian lamb a
Several designers showed : shaggy, longhair in white. It is
sleeveless mink blouses in the considered a fur rather than a li
various beige and tarown muta-i ber, because the lamb's skin goes
iun nun iwmi aims, ine long
haired furs such as fox and lynx
go into hoods or as borders on
the jackets of both tweed daytime
suits and dressier eocktail suits
in velvet.
along with the outer coat
Mm Trigere produced it In a
floor-length stole measuring at
least five yards In length, worn
over sleek black satin formal.
It went Into a rape, shown with
Designer Pi ells a Trigere i black satin formal also,
Magazine; Custer Country, Ralph
Scudder; Forever Free, Dorothy
Sterling.
Young Moderns Fiction: Book of
Hugh Flower, Lorna Beers; Men
of Athens, Olivia Coolidge; Out
post of Jupiter, Lester Del Rey;
Four-Day Planet. II. Beam Piper.
Juvenile Non-Fiction: Who Lives
at the Seashore?, Glenn Blough;
A Play at Your House, Regina
Brown; Entertaining the World: P.
T. Barnum, Fred J. Cook; The
First Book of Camping, E. C.
Janes: Getting to Know Australia,
Margaret Parke.
Juvenile Fiction: Baseball Fly
hawk, Matt Christopher; The Prin
cess and the Lion, Elizabeth Coats
worth; The Ten Show Summer,
August Derlcth.
Easy Books: How Do You Get
From Her to There? Nicholas
Charles; A Horse Alphabet, Tony
Palazzo.
By NETTIE WOODRUFF son of Little Rock, Calif., recently,
Mrs. Jamea Snyder left this !"' I
week for her home in Farmland, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Schrader and i
Ind., after a week's visit in -Mel-! spent several days here visiting j
rose with her sister, Mrs. Wilbur I his brother, Wilbur Schrader, and
Thompson, and family. En route family and old friends and neigh
she planned to stop in Sacramen-' bors.
to, Calif., to visit the Thompson's Gregg Young, son of the Bert
daughter. Mrs. William Statts. and Youngs, is wearing a cast, having
Pork chops and rice aren't what family. ' broken his arm while playing base-
you'd call a new combination, but: 'ball.
prepared in this manner yru'll California Trip Made I Douglas Doerner, student at the
have to admit it's an innovation. iIrs Chester Vicrra and her ; University of Oregon, is SDendin','
These pork chops bake on top, daughter, Mrs. Casey Morgan, vis- the summer months working for
of rice pudding accented with rai-jid for several davs last week in1 the U. S. Forest Service at Di
sins and cinnamon. While the chops Wayward, Calif., with the Vierra's i amond Lake.
?re wnlnK V1? "ce can be cook-; el(est ail,l(,nter and family and ' Jliss princess Egbert of Grants
then mixed in and pUced in a bak-l wl,h fr,ends m Ked Blu"'
ing dish. Arrange the chops onj Mrs. Jcanine Blanchard, daugh
top, cover and bake. The milk will; ter of the J. E. Conns, was in
be absorbed by the rice and rai-1 Ashland recently to receive her
sins. , bachelor's degree at Southern Or-
This dish is particularly appro- egon College commencement exer
priate right now for pork and rice cises. She is a second grade teach-
are iwo oi me season s mon pienu-1 er at Tennule School.
gates from Melrose Grange. Douglas and Georgiana Sanders,
Attending the 411 summer school 1 Jean Preschern and Karea Lash,
at Corvallis were Alan Young. 'all from Melrose.
ful foods. Keep on the lookout for
pork "specials," advises R e b a
Pass visited Sunday with Mrs. D.
N. Busenbark, who is recovering
from recent surgery in a local hos
pital. Mannings Have Guests
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Six left Sat
urday for their home in Salem fol
lowing a few days' visit with her
Mr. and Mrs. . Harold Chitwood parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Man-
Staggs. home economist and meat "V" f W "; Mrand .!", "j sf
miihiiriiv ! English, Iowa, to visit her rela-iof Corvallis visited during the
GOOD WITH SPAGHETTI
Mix instant minced onion and a
little wine with cream cheese.
Spread on warm French bread or
rolls. Wonderful with spaghetti, la
sagne or ravioli and a green salad.
Pork Chop-Rice Pudding Casserole t,vcs and Possibly locate there. En
6 loin or rib pork chops, cut , route they stopped in Seattle to vis
1 inch thick ' 'I Mrs. Chitwood's brother and fain
2 tablespoons lard or drippings! 1 ;
1 teaspoon salt
n teaspoon pepper
1 cup rice
'i cup raisins
3 cups cold water
"4 teaspoon cinnamon
3 to 4 tablespoons ' sugar
1 teaspoon salt ' , . .
l'j cups milk i
Grease a 12x8-inch baking dish.
Brown chops in lard or drippings.
Season with 1 teaspoon salt , and
pepper. Add rice and raisins to
cold water. Bring to a boil, stir,
cover tightly and simmer 15 to 18
minutes or until rice is 'snder and
water is absorbed. Stir cinnamon
weekend at the .Manning home.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Johnson of
Portland spent the Father's Day
weekend with her parents, Mr. and
To remove rust stains from cloth-i Sand, and family.
ing, moisten with lemon juice andi Mrami J,rs- W",llam B omen
salt and dry in the sun. 1 and th,ce sons, and one dauShter
Here's a quick and easv sauce , 1,ae P'hased the former Jess
for croquettes, cutlets, fish "or poul- Plllo,n ?lace on Cleveland H i 1 1
try: Thin a can of mushroom, col- ?ad- Tnc-y moved here from Glen
cry or chicken soUp.with milk andldora' tallf- Mrs- Rlomgren is the
then add 2 tablespoons of instant i former Donna Dillon of Melrose,
toasted onions. . You'll have the Mr. and Mrs. George Weigum
mild, browned onion flavor with ind daughters took Mrs. Weigum's
none of the tears and cooking odors mother, Mrs. Vohs, to Portland
usually associated with it. Saturday to take the train to her
Uncooked foods, such as marin- nBme in uiasgow, aionu, ionowing
A little salt in your starch will
give cottons a glossy, like-new finish.
sugar, 1 teaspoon salt and milk into
rice-raisin mixture. Pour into bak
ing .dish. Place seasoned chops on
rice . mixture. . Cover tightly and
bake in a moderate oven (350 Dcg.
F.) 30 minutes. Uncover and con
tinue baking 15 minutes. 6 servings.
ades and salad dressings, should be
allowed to mellow. Add herbs as
far ahead of serving time as possi
ble. Use a vacuum cleaner on uphol
stered furniture as - well
a visit at the Weigum home for the
past two weeks. Mrs. LaFond of
Wenatchce, Wash., was a recent
guest at the home of her sister,
Mrs. Weigum.
Mr. and Mrs. II. A. Densmore
3 Wahl'$ C
ROSEBURG MEAT CO.
316 N.I. Winchester, ot tho Trionglt
Open Monday thru Saturday, 9 AM to 6 PM
LOCKEP.S FOR RENT OR 3-8091
FREEZER PACKS
Includes: Steaks,
Saufoge
25-lb. $13.49 ,o.,k. $25.98
RoasH, Stew Meat Ground Beef, Short Ribi,
BEEF
FOR YOUR LOCKER Klamath Falls
Grain Fed . . . Half or Whole lb.
45c
rugs. To brighten colors, sprinkle j spent last week in Oregon City at-
salt on flat surfaces before vacuuming.
j tending the Oregon State Grange's
annual session. They were dcle-
Old-Faihion A Ac Yon Dine'i Chunk AAf
FRANKS ... 39'" BOLOGNA . 07
Leon Chuck jr Bl""e Cut mm,
STEAK 49' ROAST .... 4r
7-B.. -Ai Leon Slab . .
ROAST .... 49'" 3AC0N . . . . 55Lb
Round Bon. mmfc MyBEEF fft
ROAST . . . . 5'u SHORT RIBS 29'"
BONELESS PAc BONELESS TOP '
STEW BEEF J9'b SIRLOIN . . 89"
T-Bono mlt r Well-trimmed Rib m m e
STEAK L, '9" STEAK 69lb
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STEAK .... 05'" STEAK .... 79,b
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