The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, August 13, 1963, Page 2, Image 2

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    2 The News-Review, Roseburg,
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SOME LUCKY FAIRGOER will receive his, (or her) weight in nickels Sunday evening at the
Douglas County Fair. Shirley Mclaughlin, cashier of the Roseburg First National Bank,
'is shown here pouring on the .nickels that will be' awarded, pound for pound, to the
ticket holder whose name is drawn during the final grandstand show. Connie Howard,
bank employe, looks wistfully ot the nickels, although it is quite evident that she would
never qualify for the 300-pound total (worth $1,400) available for the prize. A specially-built
balance and chair was designed for the event. (News-Review photo)
Bullet Sparks
Start A Fire
A boy shooting at a squirrel was
said to be responsible for a brush
fire shortly after noon Monday on
the Stuart Lawrence place on Res
ton Road about four miles from
Tenmile, according to Mrs, Walter
Coats, correspondent..1 .'
Richard Lawrence, ; 15-year-old
son of the Lawrencesy reportedly
missed his target with a' 22-ca li
ber rifle and hit a rock instead.
The resulting sparks-started. afire.
The incident occurred rjthin
view of the Lawrence house and
while the youth battled to put out
the blaze the Tenmile- Fire De
partment was called into' action by
Mrs. Lawrence. The Tenmile De
partment in turn called Dee Farm
er of the DFPA, stationed at Ten
mile, who responded with the
DFPA truck. A second truck was
sent from Roseburg.
The fire covered an acre of grass
and brush before being controlled.
Sparks from a trash burner on
the Lawrence Worley property on
Eakln Road near Glendalo sunt
the Quincs Creek crew of the
DFPA Into action Monday after
noon. The fire covered a quarter
of an acre in grass and piled lum
ber, but was prevented from
spreading to adjacent buildings and
a portable sawmill. '
The Roseburg Rural Fire De
partment was called at 6:48 p.m.
Monday to the Town and Country
Mobile Park, 2777 NW Mulholland
Dr., where an overheated electric
al extension cord reportedly start
ed a fire in the laundry building.
Damage was estimated at $100.
A minor fire Monday at the Civil
Defense Lookout in the 600 block
of Denver St. caused an estimated
$5 damage to the wooden walk,
according to the Roseburg City
Fire Department..
Two Tracts Sold
In National Forest
U. S. Plywood and the D. R.
Johnson Lumber Co. of Riddle
were successful bidders on two
tracts of timber In the Little River
District of the Umpqua National
Forest. i . .
The larger of the two sales was
the Lower Cullus Sale located 41
miles southeast of Roseburg on
206 acres with 10,200,000 board fect
of timber involved. The appraised
price was $183,180. U. S. Plywood
purchased the timber with a bid
of $183,280, paying the appraised
price for Douglas fir and pine and
$7.50 per thousand on western hem
lock and other species.
The Lower Cullus sale included
8,200,000 board fect of Douglns fir
and pine appraised at $17.95 per
thousand.
Other bidders were J. R. Stand
ley and Sons Logging and Nation
al Plywood, both of Roseburg.
D. R. Johnson Lumber Co. was
high bidder on the Camp Grant
Partial Cut Sale located 40 miles
east of Roseburg on 70 acres. A
total of 2 million board feet was
contained in this trad including
1,500,000 board fect of Douglas fir
and pine appraised at $28.25 per
thousand.
The hitfh bid entered by the D.
R. Johnson Lumber Co. was ten..
250, well above the appraised prico
of $48,775. The bid included $34.50
per thousand on Douglas fir anH
pine, and $13 per thousand on white
fir and other species.
Other bidders included Tilley
Logging. Sutherlin; Miles H. Fer-
ro ana rata B. Hult Lumber Co.
both of Dillard; and J. R. Stand-
ley and bona, National Plywood
U. S. Plywood and Douglas Coun
ty Lumber, all of Roseburg.
PEACHES
THE FINEST GROWN IN THIS AREA!
S vorletiet . . Rochester, Hole Haven Weslern
Pride, Improved Elbertai and Veteran. Come
out anytime.
ROGGE'S North Umpqua PEACHES
14 mi East, N. Umpqua Hi way Ph. 496-3134
c
Ore. Tues., Aug. 13, 1963
'I i
PEREZ JIMINEZ
... cause fails
Ex-Venezuelan
Chief Arrested
Miami rupn a ,nmmli.i.
of Venezuelan authorities arrived
aboard a chartered airliner early
today to take former dictator
Marcos Perez Jimenez back to
Caracas lo face embezzlement
charges.
The pilot of the four engine
DC6B Avcnsa Airlines plane was
told lo be ready to leave for Car
acas early today but hours later
the lime nf departure still was
uncertain.
The former strongman is ac
cused of looting the Venezuelan
treasury of $13.5 million dollars
during his reign as president.
In a last ditch move Perez at
torneys scheduled a hearing be
fore a federal court at Jackson
ville during the afternoon to seek
a stay of extradition pending a
ruling on appeals Perez Jimenez
has made.
Secretary of State Dean' Itusk
ended Perez' long fight against
extradition Monday when he or
dered the former strongman ex
tradited at the request of Vene
zuelan President Romulo Bctnn
court. Liquor Charges
Result In Fines
Keith Allen Mutcrs. 24. Grcsh-
am, pleaded guilty to furnishing li
quor to minors on arraignment in
Koscburg Municipal Court Mon
day. Judge Warren Woodruff fined
mm $100 and $5 costs.
Charles Vernon Kastwood. 20.
was fined $25 and $5 costs for il
legal possession of alcohol. Two
15-year-old girls and a 17-ycar-old
boy taken into custody with Mil
ters and Eastwood were turned
over to juvenile authorities. They
were arrested when the car oper
ated by Mutcrs was cheeked out
here by police and liquor found in
it early Monday.
tines of $70 and $5 costs lor
contributing to the delinquency of
minor anil a uirllicr tine ol $25
and $5 costs for illegal possession
of alcohol were meted to Jinimie
Alan Tihbcts. Tiller, and Daniel
Steven Criswell, Canyonville. both
18, on pleas ol guilty. A 15-year-old
Myrtle Creek girl with them
was released to juvenile authori
ties. In other municipal court actions,
Donald Weir Mitchell, 47. of 493
NW Sweethriar. forfeited $75 bail
for failure to appear in answer lo
a charge of being drunk in an auto.
Donald Bruce Kkholm, 24, of
Roseburg, forfeited $35 bail on fail
ure to appear on a disorderly con
duct charge.
Four vagrants were fined $25 and
$5 costs each. Another was fined
$10 with $5 costs, and a sixth was
fined $5. Two drunk cases result
ed in a fine of $30 and $5 costs for
one man. and a $.15 bail forfeiture
for a second.
$ -'if
' i ' ' i' ' "
1 t T' ' '
ft ' .' ? .
' ! L
Weight In Nickels
Is Prize At Fair
Some lucky fair-goer will take
home his or her weight in nickels
real, shiny, 5 cent coins, that is
when the 1963 Douglas County
Fair and Exposition rings down the
curtain with the big -fair finale at
9 o'clock Sunday evening at the
Fairgrounds.'
Along with an evening packed
full of entertainment others will
be given their weight equivalent
in such commodities as nails, soft
drinks, dairy products, motor oil,
sugar and canned goods.
Center-stage in front of the Fair
grounds grandstand will be a giant
balance where those persons whose
names are drawn from a giant
drum will be seated on a colorful
throne as their weight is matched
with their prize. Master of cere
monies will be brnie uryan
Scheduled for the cnteriainmcnt
portions of the program arc such
attractions as Jack and Sydna
Mann and the top winners of the
annual Rirkclts Revue and Tal
ent Contest.
Area merchants will participate
in thc prize presentations.
Runway, Street
Contracts Given
Roseburg Paving Co.. has been
awarded contract by the Rose
burg City Council to resurface
eight city streets and seal-coat the
runway at the municipal airport.
' The firm was sole bidder on
both projects. A bid of $9,893.60
was accepted for resurfacing eight
streets in southeast Roseburg.
Streets involved arc Jackson St.
from Court to Douglas, Main
Street from Moshcr to Hawthorne,
Main Street from Douglas to
Court, Fowler Street from Court
to Deer Creek, Jackson Street
from 100 feet north of Blakeley
to Mosher, Jackson Street from
llayncs to Waite, Overlook from
Chadwick to Terrace and Court
Avenue from Fowler to Jackson.
Also accepted was the firm's bid
of $6,363.99 for sealcoating the
airport runway. This project is
tentatively supported by a grant
ot $4,870 from the state Board of
Aeronautics.
Roseburg Paving Co. was also
low bidder on a proposed airport
ramp to be developed at a site
west of the present hangar build
ing. The bid of $6,542.50 was re
ferred to the Douglas County
Court for review. The city is hope
ful of obtaining a grant-in-aid
from the county to cover the full
amount of the cost.
Four Californians
Zited On Vagrancy
Cornea Luis Ramirez, 21, of Oak
land, Calif., was lodged in the city
jail on a vagrancy charge, after
the car he was driving was stopped
and checked out by city police
Monday night.
A 17-year-old companion from
l.os Angeles, and two 16-year-olds
from Oakland, Calif., also were
taken into custody for vagrancy,
lodged in the county jail and held
for juvenile officers.
Police said Ramirez told them he
was on a 60-day leave from the
Army. He had no operator's li
cense, except a military vehicle
operator's license restricted to that
use. He was cited for driving with
out a license. He had no other
identification.
He told officers he was headed
for Texas from California, but was
bringing his younger companions
to Eugene to see some girl friends.
The four were taken into custody
when their stories did not jibe.
$20,000 Bid Submitted
For Dillard Bottom Job
Roseburg Paving Co. Monday
submitted a bid of $20,440 for pav-;
ing of 3.830 lineal feet of roadway
in the Dillard Bottom Subdivision, j
Engineer's estimate on the proj- j
cct was $20,280.
County Road Engineer Al May
said the project is to be complet
ed this fall.
Involved is the street paving of j
Reston Avenue and 4th and Sth ;
Streets, which involve 50 property i
owners in the residential subdivi-1
"1 won't need this where I'm
g o i n g," Mclvin Millard, 62, of
Lakeview, told his ex-wife, Ruth
Lynch, who was staying at Briggs
Camp, as he handed her his bill
fold and other papers, then drove
away in his car.
That was Aug. 2. Millard had
not been heard from since.
Today, a body believed to be
that of Millard, has been located
on Lava Creek, in the vicinity of
Clearwater Park near Stump
Lake.
A radio dispatch received about
11 a.m. by the sheriff's office
from deputies and Dr. James K.
Gray, county medical examiner
who went there this morning to
investigate, confirmed finding of
the body about one-fourth mile
from Millard's abandoned car.
However, positive identifica
tion and cause of death had not
been fully determined.
Search for Millard was started
Monday afternoon, after identifi
cation of an abandoned car in
the area of the upper North Ump
qua River region was traced. It
was registered to Millard.
Check was made with the sher
iff at Lakeview, and Millard's son-
in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. John Dunbar of that town
were contacted.
Dunbar assisted Douglas Coun
ty deputies Monday in a search
of the area around the car, and
a party had been organized for
further search today. -
Millard was known to have had
a .22 pistol, and the empty holster
was found In the car seat. De
tails on finding of the body were
not clear. Sheriff Ira Byrd said
his office received a call this
morning from Diamond Lake
Lodge that the body had been
found.
Millard had not been seen since
visiting his ex-wife. She told of
ficers that Millard had threatened
suicide on other occasions, so she
had not taken his words seriously.
Report of the abandoned car
came from L. L. Harpoie. Kt. l
Box 392, Roseburg, who said it
had been there about two weeks.
A state policeman earlier had
checked out the car. but no action
was taken as the owner had not
been reported missing.
, The car was repossessed by a
Lakeview bank.
John Birch Croup
Coordinator Due
The state coordinator of the John
Birch Society will be in Roseburg
tonight to report on what he calls
"the olhcr side of the United Na
tions." The meeting is scheduled at 8
p.m. at the Umpqua Hotel.
The speaker will be Leslie Flem
ing. The society has gone on rec
ord as strongly opposed to the
U. N. Earlier, the Roseburg John
Birchers challenged the League of
Women Voters to a debate on the
subject because of the League's
support of the U. N. The League
turned down the offer.
Hospital News
Visiting Hours
2 to 3:30 p.m. and 7 to 8 p.m.
Mercy Hospital
1 Admitted
Medical: Donald Bishop, Rose
burg; Linda Redd, Mrs. Lloyd Ty
ler, Alfred Roberts, all of Winston;
Paula Greenwood, Brockledge, Fla.
Surgery: John Dunning, Lydia
DcRoss, Itiqucl Peacock, Mrs. El
vis McGivcrn, all of Roseburg;
Mrs. Wayne Hudgins, Winston;
Mrs. G. W. Winkles. College Place,
Wash.; Mrs. Ivan Egglcston, Suth
erlin. Discharged
Carl Willey, James Thrall, Mrs.
William White and daughter Toni
Lynn, Charles Gentry, Fred Old
field, Mrs. Fred Warren, Joe Guse,
Mrs. Edward Middendorf, Thomas
Bcntley, Mrs. Donald Driggars and
daughter Sandra Kay, Mrs. Wil
liam Graham, all of Roseburg; Le
Roy Kestcrson, Mrs. Clifford
While, both of Winston; Gary Mc
Donald, Myrtle Creek.
Douglas Community Hospital
Admitted
Medical: Tamara Bursik, Mrs.
William Rinabargcr, both of Rose
burg; Mrs. Carl Bicknell, Winston;
Mrs. William Goodwin, Winches
ter. Surgery: Mrs. Vernon Bentlev,
Dwight Coder, both of Roseburg;
William Smith, Sutherlin; Paul
Hansen, Oakland.
Discharged
Robert Severson. Danae Itab-
:... . 1...-, if i
hirchner, Horcnce Hutson. Mrs.
Charles Hughes Arthur Gilbert,
s ""J.U :'',rf
nuy Diu. iMMMini Dni.ra, uoyie
Bell, all of Roseburg; Mrs. Rodney
Pruitt and son Eddy Ronald, Win -
ston; Mrs. James Witt, Dillard.
William Regan Booked
State police report the arrest of i
William David Regan. 47. of 2937
Calkins R(l . on a charge of as
sault and battery.
Regan was booked at the county
jail under $500 bail. Arrest was on
a private complaint out of the
court of Justice of the Peace Ward
Watson at Sutherlin.
Zenith Hearing Aid
Representative
Now at
Chapman's Pharmacy
Every Wednesday
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Repoirs--Battrif.Acctsoritt
for molt makes
SOUTHERN OREGON
HEARING AID CENTER
President's
Draws More
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presi
dent Kennedy's new tax-cutting
formula drew a much more en
thusiastic response from congres
sional Democrats today than the
original plan he presented last
January.'
The revised plan was outlined
Monday to the House Ways &
Means Committee by Treasury
Secretary Douglas D i 1 1 i o n. It
would take effect next Jan. 1,
and provide net tax reductions
of $10.6 billion for individuals and
corporations with the relief
staged over two years.
Compared with Kennedy's orig
inal $10.3 billion tax-cutting pro
gram, the new plan would pro
vide slightly more total tax re
lief and more would go to in
dividuals and less to corpora
tions. But its chief political attraction
was that it was burdened with
fewer of the tax-tightening pro
visions that made Kennedy's orig-.
Glendale Board
Hires Teachers
Four new teachers were hired
by the Glide School Board and
one resignation was accepted at
Monday's meeting.
The new instructors for ti.o
1963-64 school year include Alfred
Price, Gordon Carrigan, Chester
Wood and John Edmiston. Price
comes to Glide from Burley, Ida
ho, and will teach drafting and
industrial arts in the high school.
Carrigan will serve as boys phys
ical education instructor and head
basketball coach. Prior to his as
signment at Glide he taught at
Mapleton.
Wood, a recent graduate of
Portland State, will teach German
I and II and English at the high
school level. He is from Milwaukic.
Edmiston will serve as an eighth
grade instructor at Deer Creek.
He is a graduate of Gonzaga Uni
versity and attended high school
in Hermiston.
The resignation of Russell Bnlcs,
teacher in the Deer Creek Ele
mentary School, was accepted by
the board, reports correspondent
Mrs. Arthur Selby.
Don Brown was installed as a
new member of the board at Mon
day's meeting, replacing Bert Al
lenby who recently resigned.
The board opened bids for the
purchase of the Bungalow school
site which wus inherited by the
school district. The property Is un
area 5.37 acres located between
the Clyde Hatfield and Justin F,i
fert property. The lone bid en
tered was $160 from Clyde Hat
field.. The board will make a de
cision at its next meeting.
In other action the board
changed the student insurance
plan from Oregon School Activ
ities Association to the Oregon
Physicians Service and William
Gilbert, Idelyld Park, was hired
as a custodian.
Game Animal Possession
Brings Fine In Court
Illegal possession of a game ani
mal brought a sentence of 30 days
in the Douglas County jail and a
fine of $100 and $5 costs for Jerry
Jean Roche, 30, of 1224 W. Har
vard Blvd., Roseburg.
Roche pleaded guilty before Dis
trict Court Judge Gerald R.
Hayes Monday, following arrest by
stale police.
Betty Lou Penn, 37. of 3640 Hook
er Road, Roseburg, pleaded guilty
to drunken driving. She was sen
tenced by Judge Hayes to 60 days
in the county jail and lined $150
and $J costs. v
Joseph Lynch, 75, Glide, plead
ed innocent lo vagrancy on ar
raignment before Judge Hayes,
and trial was set for 9:30 a.m.
Aug. 22. He is accused in a pri
vate complaint filed in District
Court by John Finnie of conduct
ing himself in a disorderly man
ner and disturbing the peace on
the Little River Road nine miles
east of Glide on Aug. 11.
Fair Booth Set
By Coast Group
The Lower Umpqua Chamber of 'r,ic , Courl of Gerald R. Hayes
Commerce will have a booth at! Monday on a charge of counter
thc Douglas County Fair depict- foiling a bank note, and the case
rr:nnnHnni nn
Pp.!
scall 0'f Rcedsport reports
- . The booth will be mannea by
battery ot tnamoer mcmoers wno
will serve throughout the ir.
! Chamber President Mike Puther -
Mck at this week's meeting called
for volunteers to assist in man -
ning the booth. Among those lined accused of attempting lo alter a
up are Mr. and Mrs. Clarence 1 S10 bill to make it appear as a S20
Hahn. Earl Sykes, Pctherick and ! bill, which was presented at a Win
Bill Bryant. i ston market Sundav.
Death Defying
World s
the
ARM. ll. "c
K,J,. 25c
inal plan so controversial. I
To compensate for this revenue
loss, the new plan would provide
reductions averaging only 20 per
cent in individual tax rates, com
pared with 23.3 per cent in the
original plan.
The initial response of influ
ential committee Democrats was
so favorable that it seemed pos
sible the committee might ap
prove the new plan with only rel
ative minor tailoring, if it de
cided to vote for tax cuts of $10
billion or I more. But that was a
big "if."
The magnitude of the tax re
duction was the big issue still
undecided as the committee sum
moned Dillon for a second day
of questioning behind closed
doors. The committee was not
expected to begin voting on the
proposed rate cuts before Thurs
day. Main Features
The main features of the re
vised plan:
SUMMER ENCAMPMENT preparations are being muue by mree members of Roseburg's
Co. B, Second Battalion 162 Infantry, Oregon National Guard, which will head for Ft.
Lewis Wash Thursday afternoon. Left to right are Sgt. Jim Huckins, Pfc. Bill Robinette
and Sgt. Bill Hagar. An advance detachment was scheduled to leave Roseburg today.
The two-week summer encampment will be spent practicing the tactics and maneuvers
which hove been studied in weekly drills. The local unit vill spend the first week in' the
field on bivouac and the lost week in the main fort stationed in barracks. The unit will
return home Aug. 30. (News-Review photo)
Innocence Plea
Made By Woman
June Elene Lyman, 24, Winston,
pleaded innocent to a charge of
contributing to the delinquency of
a minor an arraignment before Cir -
cuit Court Judge Don H. Sanders
Monday. Trial will be set at a la -
ter date.
She was indicted by the Grand
?Urfr, n!' ' VkTZZ Zl ".m
in front of a 16-year-old boy on
June 9.
Vclma Irene Bell, 47, of Salem,
also pleaded innocent to obtaining
money by false pretenses in con
nection with the alleged passing of
a worthless $10 check at the Rose
Room in Roseburg June 6.
The case of Lawrence Heiden
rcich, 18, of Idlcyld Route, Rose
burg, was continued to give him
an opportunity to see an attorney.
J. V. Long was appointed by the
court as counsel lo represent Hei
denreich. Judge Sanders refused to appoint
an attorney at the county's ex
pense to represent Roger Del Clar-
dy, 19, of Winston, on the lattcr's
I request.
I Clardy was arraigned in the Dis-
; inal cases must be done by a Cir-
a : cuit Court jmw all( onv in cas.
, , ...hp thp irmtnl is ,i,i-.hl m
fo2 hfre h own ?orm.l
1 a. T c w , i a,,orn,;;
: J"''ea .d,chrsr, i n "'"V"
1 ,he ca"? wl,h Clardy. 1 he youth is
-- Breath Taking I
Foremost Hazard Balancer I
great Uftnfvn I
t v m j mm w
appearing with MANDRAKE
Free Stage SHOW
8:30 p.m. Wed., thru Sat.
DOUGLAS
AUGUST 14-18 ROSEBURG
ew Tax-Cut
Enthusiasm
' Individual tax rates would
range from II to 70 per cent in
stead of the present 20-91 per
cent schedule originally recom
mended by the administration.
The lowest rale of 14 per cent
would apply to the first S500 in
taxable income of the single per
son and the first $1,000 of tax
able income of married persons
with joint returns. The top rate
of 70 per cent would apply to all
taxable income in excess of $100.
000 for single persons ($200,000
for 'married couple filing jointly).
Taxes on corporation income
in excess of $25,000 would be re
duced from the present 52 per
cent to 48 per cent. That coin-
pares with the 47 per cent rate I
u- :;t;.,llr I
which the administration initially
proposed. The tax rate on the
first $25,000 of corporate earnings
would be lowered to 23 per cent
from the present 30 per cent. The
administration originally pro
posed a 22 per cent levy.
-Limit the revenue-producing i
'Around-Glcck' Security
jConinues For Governor
j SALEM (UPI .-Around-the-clock
.. , ,. , ,, ,
1 SCCU11-V Prolcclion for Gov. Mark,
! Hatlicld is continuing, his office1
1 said today. '
I Uniformed members of a spc-l
i cial security detail under the ad-.
niinilrlton of the superintendent
i nf stlltp ,., h . ..
! the w mwBm. hr
ti, ; i .. i eludes five full-time members.
The s e c u r 1 1 v force was es
tablished after the 13 legislature! Travis Cross, press secretary for
adopted a resolution calling for'
strengthened security measures; was subject to change as condi
for Hatfield. ,jons mcrite(
The legislative action came' m
shortly after an incident in May
in which a disgruntled person LoCGI N&WS
fired more than a dozen shots! i-mwmi
near the governor's house. i
At the recent governor's eon
ferencc in Miami it was broucht
out that security is provided all!
governors who live in state-owned,
executive mansions, and that most!
nlher L'ovnrnnrs have snmp tvnp of;
' security provided either by stale
i or municipal authorities.
NOW ONE INSURANCE POLICY
GIVES YOU COMPLETE HOME
COVERAGE AT
SUBSTANTIAL
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SAFECO makes it easy for agents, like ourselves, to give
you the finest, most compUtg insurance coverage possible.
For example
Tody. Ihf nfw GENERAL HOMEOWNER policy prf.
rents dangerous coverlet Kps Mve you money loo!
SAFF.CO offers many other time-saving, money-saving
benefits. It would be our pleasure to discuss all the advan
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YOU CAN REIAX
WHEN YOU'RE
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INSURANCE AGENCY
830 S E. Rose, Roseburn ' Ph. 673-4428
formula
On Hill'
revisions in tax structure to less
than one-third of the $3.3 billion
originally advocated. So far as
individuals are concerend, the re
vised plan called for adoption of
only two major structural
changes which have not already
won committee approval. All of
the committee - voted changes
were accepted by the administra
tion. One of the two additional re
visions it . recommended would
provide a 'new "minimum stan
dard deduction" under which
many families with low incomes
would be able to claim deduc
tions in excess of the present 10
per cent standard. This would
provide tax savings of $310 mil-
linn trxf ciifh t:ivnnvpr Thp
lion for such taxpayers. The
other additional change would
gain $370 million in new revenue
by repealing the preference in
tax rates on income from stock
dividends in excess nf $50 a year
for single persons and $100 for
married couples.
Earlier this summer United
Press International revealed the
Federal Bureau of Investigation
had been called last December to
probe a threat on Hatfield's' life.
Announcement of the probe was
delayed at the request of the FBI.
, ",c r't security force in-
Hatfield, said the size of the force
! Allen Ellsworth, executive sec-
: rctary of the Pacific Northwest
Council of YMCA. and his ass
ciate secretary, Jack Wiley, ot
Seattle sverc visitors in Roseburg
at the YMCA over Friday, where
they met with executive board
. members.
Homeowners new can
cover all their household
insurance needs with one
policy and one premium
from one SAFECO Agentl
sion. !