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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 22, 1963)
Cabinet Approves Home's Bid For Parliament Opening Delay LONDON MJPn The new the vote. As a peer, he is nowibefore the first of the year. British cabinet today approved a decision by Prime Minister Lord Home to ask for a delay in the re-opening of Parlia ment until after he wages a Scottish by - election fight to win a House ol Commons seat. Lord Home met with his cabi net for the first time today aft cr telling the nation in his firstncw general election that must majoi' statement as prime min- ister that he looked forward to "real cooperation" with the Soviet Union in negotiating set- tlements of cold v ar issues. The new prime minister, who has announced he will resign his earldom and run for a Com - mora seal in a nuv, i luuisii by-election, plans to ask Queen Elizabeth II to postpone the re - opening of Parliament sched - u ca lor tnis monm unui ancr United States Warns Diem On TroooUse I SAIGON, South Viet Nam (UPI) The United Slates has informed President Ngo Dinh i Diem's government that theinedy. z.uuo Vietnamese special lorces'such j troops, used in the crackdown I on the Buddhists, will be cut off from their $3 million annual U.S. allowance until they , turn to combat. i Reliable sources said U.S. of - ficials told special forces com : mandcr Col. Lc Quang Tung , that his units, originally trained . to fight the Communists, will ' receive no pay or supplies from the United States as long as they remain around Saigon as security troops for the regime. The action was expected to ' anger Diem and his brother and political adviser, Ngo Dinh Nhu, who is believed to run the special forces through Tung. Tung's six battalions of troops were f'rmed about two years ago with the help of tho U.S. Central Intelligence Agen cy, the sources said. Their pur pose was to infiltrate Commu nist North Vict Nam and ncu tral Laos, where Viet Cong guerrillas were entering South Viet Nam, and to work with mountain tribesmen .In the guerrilla-infested central high lands. The sources said the CIA made "under the table" pay mcnts of $250,000 a month to Tung for upkeep of the forces, which also received U.S. com municalions, transportation and supply support. But when tho Buddhist oppo sition to the Ngo family reached crisis proportions last summer, the special forces troops were need on Nhu s or ders to raid th-i Buddhist pago das and arrest religious lead ers. . Since Ihcn, Nhu has kept al most all the special forces troops in and around Saigon, presumably to prevent demon strations or any attempted coup. . The sources said some CIA and oilier U.S. agency officials opposed giving Tung the Sep tember payment a few days after the raids on the pagodas. They felt continued payments would link the United States to measures against the Bud dhists. The October payment was delayed. The sources said the decision to cut off payments was made in Washington. Swim Star Loses Legs In Mishap SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A former University of California swimuiuig star who iosi ouui a.m. Ill the Douglas County legs In a bay accident Siinday'courlliouso. was reported responding t o . iroiiiuu'iu ui i.ouoi-mun vionor - nl llncnilnl Inilnv The victim, Jainos Small. 27jno a chanre tn n.irtirinnto in was still listed in critical condl-ltho meetings. At tho same time.i 'rl,c unusually warm Indian Serafin is the only Douglas Roseburg Junior Chamber of tion written on the card is also (ion, but doctors said his blood le advisory board hopes to so- summer weather may be a con- County realtor to hold an offi- Commerce attended the Jay- recorded on each carbon copy pressure had risen after he ro-Vurc indications of public fool- ,r'n ting factor lo the present cer's post in the association, jcees' fall board meeting in The hencath it and on the-perm-ccived 36 pints of blood in trans-lings on health matters involved. I out o''si'ason bloomings report-! Others from the ' Roseburg Dalles last weekend. anent backing card. This makes fusions. A hospital spokesmanl ' od recently, according lo amh-'aroa attending the meeting in-j Representing the Roseburg it unnecessary for parents to said Small was "conscious, re- ... T C I i'cllr horticul'mists of the area. 'eluded Scrafin's wife, Mr. and chapter were President Bob return the grade slips to the spunsivo and alert." (VI iSSIOIICiry 10 jDCQK 'in any event, some trees seem Mrs. Dick Stevenson, J. M. Be-! Stephens, First Vice Prcsidcnt school. Parents should not sign Coast Guard officials, nicnn- . 1 1 to be confused. i vans, .Mr. and Mrs. Ted Smalle, John Foust, Second Vice Pres-and return the slip. while, U'erc engaged in a lively debate over who was re-1 sponsiiiic lor 1110 bcchumu inaii almost claimed Small's life. ; ... . .. Small was among 12 nioinbors! a the Dolphin Club competing in a long distance swim across San Francisco Bay when thel 32 foot fishing boat :, the Pacific! " ..via . tin t .,.vv.. . 12 knots. The boat's propeller sliced off Small's right og' aoove uie mice, and loft thumb. - - Zenith Kecring Aid Rep. Now at Chapman's Pharmacy Every Wednesday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Repoin-BaHHi-Accliorii for most maki SOUTHERN OREGON Hearing Aid Center barred from conducting govern- ment business or defending! government policies in thejmer prime minister, recovering House of Commons, ' Confidant Of Victory Lord Home tcld cabinet mem bers in this morning's 45-min ute meeting he is confident the Conservatives would win the ne ncid within a year. in scries of television terviews Monday night Lordiuntil he can seek election to the Home denied his election as'House of Commons. 'prime minister, which climaxed He will contest a special one 0f the most bitter fights inflection in Kinross, Scotland, 'conservative history, had split! (ne party. He also paid a trib- u(0 t0 r a Butler, wno was 'pa6se(j over as a successor to !rctred Prime Minister Harold lMacmillan but agreed to join iir,m hri m sprrntnrv Home, who was Macmillan's, foreign secretary, repeated thei views ne expressca men inai Soviet Premier Nikita b Khrushchev appears to have phnncfoH hia luetics. But hC IlldUC III I.UIIIIIHH."-llfc i summit meeting with Khrush- chev. Macmillan was an expo- nent of frequent summits and: journeyed to Moscow in 1959 to meet Khrushchev. It was learned that Home also has no plans for the pres ent of meeting President Ken- Informed sources said meeting was unlikely Trial Of Diehl Has Resumed Trial of John C. Diehl; 67, Reedsport, charged with con tributing to the delinquency of a minor, resumed in Circuit Court of Judge Don H. Sanders today, but a good part of Uie day was given over to a trip to Reedsport by the jury to view the scene of the alleged crime. The jury was to view the home of Diehl, prominent Reeds- port insurance and real estate businessman for many years. The complaint accuses him of contributing to the delinquency of a 12-year-old girl on Aug. 31, 1962. Diehl pleaded innocent to the charge brought in an indict ment. of Aug. 2 The trial opened at 10 a.m. Tuesday, and tho jury was se lected by noon. A considerable part of the afte-noon was taken up with legal arguments by the defense attorney Dudley Walton and Deputy Dist. Atty. Thomas O'Dcll. The trial scheduled today for Donald Bruce Ekholm, 29, Rose burg on a charge of larceny of! an automobile, the property oftnorthwest Oregon with only Associated Discount Corp.. July 23, was canceled, when Ekholm indicated he chose to change his previous plea of innocence. Ho was scheduled for court ap pcaranco today before Judge Charles S. Woodrich. The trial of Dorothy Bell Moore, 37, Myrtle Creek, charg ed with unlawfully attempting to obtain public assistance, is scheduled to start in Judge Woodrieh's court Wednesday. Public Invited To Health Meet The public is not only invited but urged to attend the meet-', ing Wednesday of the state Buard of Health's advisory board . in Roseburg, according lu . ujiuii u uuui uu, mem ber of the advisory group. The advisory board will dis cuss the problem of domesticlPark road burst into bioom Sun- and wildlife animal rabies and day for the second time this sewage disposal problems crca-lycar, according to Mr. and Mrs. tod hy individual domestic andi frank unnell, owners ol tne. -lindustriiil sewage disposal sys-i property. InSTQllS jCrQtM - toms. The mooting will start at 9 Woodruff said tho meetings , . . . !vore holng spaced around the,nul l"cy uiso win uo cunsiu - l.-i..,n :.. !..- ... inrnrl t:iclv itfimi: minuinc tn ho HT InnyOnVllle InUrCn Tl.. 1 T I I Y!- '"- m-. i.umei runn.ui, a missionary to Tanganyika, Afri- home on a year s furlough, I will speak at the Assembly of God Church in Canyonville inursuny evening at tne youth somce. ----- - twice, has spent throe terms in Africa and is lecturing in Doug. ,m'U.cSloM R. E P .correspondent. n.. ...... n n.Z.. president of Christ's 'Ambaua amear on a '",ncl 8t ,ne - dors, the Assembly of God'Xen,iH? on. "S,a,e, Le8isl,t'on r" - " . "Vu w.uih F..II ..U; 1 1, 111K iu .lmuiK peupiu ami uiut'is interested at Canyonville Bible Academy. NEED OIL? Call 673-8356 South End Fuel Co. STANDARD HEATING OILS Macmillan's doctor, Sir John Richardson, said today the for from a prostate . operation would leave the hospital this weekend. Home assembled his cabinet today for the first time to dis- 'cuss the problems confronting it, presumably including his plan to postpone tne opening ot in-lthc fall session of Parliament regarded as a "safe" Conserva tive district. Gusting Winds II Ji A A ( Afict Q ( t VvUbl Causing Fire By United Press International High winds with gusts up to 73 miles per hour smashed into the State of Washington Mon day bringing damage on both sides of the Cascades including range fire that for a time threatened the town of Chelan A power line felled by high winds in the Okanogan Valley started the range fire which burned over about 3,000 acres before it was brought under control early this morning. On the other side of the Cas cades, the Coast Guard said it had its hands full as gale-force winds hit Pugct Sound. Two teenagers were rescued when the 18-foot sailboat they were trying to move to quieter walers capsized. Numerous oth er small craft were reported drifting loose and several log rafts were reported broken up near Seattle. Power lines were down in the entire Pugot Sound area. The winds blew out window panes in downtown Seattle and telephone service was interrupted in many communities. Several scattered power out ages were reported but no ma jor damage resulted from the slorm. Decreasing winds were fore-! cast for today along with scat tered showers in the Puget Sound area and in Eastern Washington. Oregon also had blustery winds and rain Monday. Astor ia, on the coast, had 1.7 inches lie. Portland and Salem had while about half an inch. The Weather Bureau S a i dl rams should decrease overIrodllctlve mcmbers of societyance of blindness is the first few showers west of the Cas- cades on Wednesday. Winds will be less than on Monday with gusts mostly 20 lo 30 miles per hour in shower areas. Several power outages were reported in northwest Oregon. a laiung irec snapped a umo and resulted in about 1,400, customers of Portland General Electric Co. in the Molalla area being without power for about an hour Monday night. Other outages were reported in the Wootlburn, Dayton a n d ITt'M OU1UIII Mil-US. Falling tree limbs resulted in some individuals service failures in Portland. i. - 1(101011 dUMmer UOVS . . COIuUSC ADDIS Tf66 An apple tree in a 70-ycar-old lorchard on the Whistler Bcnd:classes. i,lrs- rowers siu Kinnell reported that the many, doer in the area have been en- joying inc prosom crop oi up - pies. What they will think of ho blossoms and whether or . . i . . . - -: 1 , 1. : .1 scon, Finnoll said. 1 Roseburg Delegation ni-- n.i. 1 T.ir. running romana I rip ci.niv v u,.ml, coero. ilrv of ,"nc ymp(llia Savings and! . ' . . ,' f n,lseburg' js a delegate lo the 41th annual1 : convention of the Oregon Sav-, . h h .ri inrtinrt fjpf yj , . At,ending the convention with'onen bids Thursdav on a fire JH !1 !- ,,.., ,. Mr.., llarth. Harth is a director of; me association, nermann win association. Hermann win n.-ta v nun us vn vn 'Industries NOW YOU KNOW By United Pr.ss International ine worst DacR-yar Daroocue accidents are likely to occur when the chef freshens" an already started charcoal fire with kerosene, paint thinners, alcohol o.' liquid "starters. " according to the National Fire Protection Association. f' -O ;jy! :Vr . - , r'-i i t : MR. AND MRS. CHARLES SULLIVAN pose for San Francisco "Chronicle photographer Peter Breinig after his success story came to light in San Francisco. Run ning a thriving business empire consisting of bars, liquor store, juke box and cigarette machines as well as big-time concert promotions, Sullivan did not start this way. He is a former slave and is one of the richest negroes on the West Coast. Sold into servitude at the age of 2. Sullivan went on to be able to support his former master as well as his master's entire family. The information was revealed when welfare authorities tried to get Sullivan to take over welfare payments for his former master, whom their records showed os his adopted father. (UPI Telephoto) Roseburg Housewife New Leader Of Oregon Blind Mrs. Sam (Dorothy) Skenzick,. young Roseburg housewife, was reelected state president of the Oregon Council of the Blind at tne annual convention ot me 0f a slowly progressive con group last weekend at Eugene, genital eye disease which reach- au sessions were neio ai ine e(j jts cr,s,s years "fio short Eugene Hotel and drew some jv aftcr the birth of her son, 70 blind persons from through out the state including a dele gation of nine from Roseburg. Forty - additional persons at- tended the convention banquet.jiivec for tne past six years According lii Mrs. Skenzick, with her husband, Sam, and who has been blind for the past son, Steve, she does all tho 16 years, the aim of the group; work involved in caring for a is to advance the social and family and a six-room house, economic status of the blind, land, in addi'ion, devotes her mainly through legislative pro-1 grams, and to project the true image of the blind to the gen At-iil niihlip Apr-nrHino tn Mrs ;sken7.ick the old "tin cup, dark i-... i ,- f,ci hi--,,. pearing. Taking its place is theis very important," Mrs. Sken- nprpntnnpfi nf hlinrl nprsnnR nsVanb caiA nrlriincr that apppnt. First Aid Classes Due InTri-City A Red Cross first aid class will begin Wednesday at 7:30 n m , h1 TH.Cilv srhnnl with innB nlsnn i inslrn-lnr. Thplc ; n.wJ Polif Tri-City PTA is the sponsoring! group. I According to Mrs. Robert Powers, publicity chairman, each class will be two hours iong an(, one may stop witn 10 hours and receive a beginner's certificate or continue for 26 hours and receive an advanced certificate. The instruction is free but a small charge will be made for the book used as test. Registration may be made'tivity of the state group at the first meeting. Homcmakers in particular are "rEen 10 laKe advantage m uic KCfll CSlCITC BOOTO Roseburg realtor Pete Sera- nn was insiaiiou as a uirociui of the Oregon Association of Real Estate Boards at the as - I t I l.l jsocuuion s annual meeung neiu nt thn Villnan Hi-cnn in ( tMi - Grove Saturday night. 1 Ed Andes. Helen Glenn a n d John Fleck. Featured speaker at the an ual meeting was National As sociation of Real Estate Boards director M. L. Schmidt of Tilla- "look. Bid Opening Scheduled Fire Alarm System 1 . , . ., , .,,. .mi ":'" .Jm"s Imi'lilim. nl 74.1 SE Rose", f: . Roseburs's Cilv Council rc.!fnRle seat districts Dy Govern centlv ordered the installation cently ordered tne installation ito safeguard the many munici- P"l records which are kept in mc uiu uuuuiUK. Fire Chief LcRoy Sicbold de scribed the installation as a fire detection system that in the1 event of fire will automatical ly activate an alarm bell on each floor of the building and at ; the same time set off an alarm j in the fire station next door, I The alarm is set off by tern-, peraturc change within t h e building when recorded by rate jof rise indicators in the system.' without special favor because of their "handicap." Mrs. Skenzick is living proof ofl this new image. Blinded because Steve, Mrs. Skenzick went, through the rehabilitation cen ter for the blind in Minneapo-j i:. in Hnsnhnre where she has spare time to head the state organization in which she is vitally interested. Orientation Important "Orientation for the blind, adult as soon as sight is lostl step in rehabilitation. "There are around 3,000 blind persons in the state of Oregon and only 393 of these are on blind sub sistance, a record that shows that the blind, for the most part, are a pretty independent group," Mrs. Skenzick said. Blind rehabilitation centers ,. i. West in and jn Seattle. One aim of the Oregon Council is to see such a center established in this state. The state School for the Blind in Salem is not to be confused with needed rehabili tation centers for adults, Mrs. Skenzick said. Modification of White Cane legislation has been accomplish ed through lobbying at the state 'legislature, as one principal ac- ac- cording to the president. Two honors came to the Sken- - zieK lamny recently, in aoai- lion 10 Mrs. 3KIM1ZII.K 5 ic-uici;- tion as state president of the Oregon Council, son, Steve, was named News-Review "carrier of lh tnnnlh" fnr Sentpniher. and I received his notification last :veck. f V8 LOCQI J0VC66S i ... . IHIaMN DmMMM All Anl 41 icilll UUUI U HICCI . I Five representatives of t h e ident Don Akrc, Secretary Lar- ry Green and State Director - Glen Yates. - 1 Tho Jaycees passed two roso lutions at the meeting, one backing Portland Jaycees in'punched holes I their bid for the 1966 national, Bingham said. ' convention. The second calls for: I the circulation of petitions call-l ;'?':. " "il! Z 1 luuuiidi ii-tiaiuu miiivii uuiu subdivide legislative districts " wmild require districts with representative to be divided into uw vo"-c i""6"- " " k-c iRep. Robert Duncan. She will. Grange will be hosted by the GRANGE INSTALLATION SET, ,he Position recently causedjCamas Valley Grange this Sat- - i Installation of all newly-eloct- ed Grange officers of Douglas County will be held at the - Fairgrounds on Sunday, Nov. at 2 p.m. The putuic is invited is being established for the to attend. j permanent appointment. He said Howard Cracroft. former she is also eligible to compete county deputy and former state for the permanent position, steward, will head the install-l Mrs. Preston received the ing team. A candlelight scrviceunanimous endorsement of the will be used, according to Hilda Douglas County Democratic Walters, publicity chairman. (Central Committee. Erosion Due Along Coast From Ginny CAPE HATTERAS, N. C. (UPI) Hurricane Ginny drift ed sluggishly off the North Carolina coast today battering!john Farneman, 79, and his a disabled Navy ship witn its 80 mile - per - hour winds and causing beach erosion as far north as New Jersey. "Ginny appears to be drifting very slowly towards the south or southwest," the Washington Weather Bureau said in an 8 a.m. EST advisory which plac ed the storm about 165 miles southeast of Cape Hatteras. This was roughly the same position the hurricane, seventh of the season, had held since Sunday night when it sprang up as a menace to the eastern coast of the United States. A turn to the north was in dicated for tonight, the Weath er Bureau aaid. Warn Of Erosion The storm's center was about 15 miles southwest of its loca tion at 5 a.m. EST. "Rough seas and heavy pounding surf will cause ero sion to continue along the outer beaches of North Carolina to New Jersey," the Weather Bu reau said. Two rescue vessels reached the decommissioned Navy de stroyer escort Fogg, heaving on 40-foot swells, at about 9 o'clock Monday night to end a two-day air-sea search for the drifting vessel and its 10-man caretaker crew. The Fogg was en route to a mothball fleet in Texas when its tow line snapped and it uiiiicu near uie cemer ui me hurricane. It was located off Point Lookout, N.C., to south of the turbulent center of the storm which sent gale winds 450 miles to the north anH 170 miles in' other direc- tfons. Ships Stand By The Fogg's crew blinked out a signal saying evcrytning s okay" and "watertight integrity is good." Assisting ships stood by to try to take her in tow when the heavy seas subsided. A Coast Guard plane bucked 60 mile an hour winds to fly to the scene and direct the at tempt to hook the Fogg to a tow vessel. "Hurricane Ginny is expected to remain relatively station ary or drift slowly southwest- ward today and then probably turn and drift slowly northward tonight," the Weather Bureau said. "No important change in intcnsity is indicated, New Report Card Due MC Students Myrtle Creek students (high school and eighth grade) will take home a new type of re port card this week, principal Howard R. Bingham said to day. He said the new card will be taken home Friday by the high school students and will be mailed to parents of the eighth graders on Thursday for the. first six-week grading period. The new card, known as the Key-Sort card, is made up in pads with six carbon slips, one for each grade period, and a backing card. At the end of each six weeks. a separate slip will be sent home with the student for each class he takes in school. It will carry the name of the teacher, the name of the student, the subject, and the grade and cit izenship marks for that particu lar class. The eighth grade slips will carry attendance informa tion. Attendance figures for high school students will be found on the English grade slip only. The grade slips arc entirely ringed around the edge with holes. These holes arc punched out in a well-ueiinea code lo ..U .Un .....:in maini me iiuuiiiiuiiuii uiichi nn the sliDS SO that it is re- corded permanently. Informa- The Key-Sort system should prove a great boon to the ! schools since much sorting and - ifiling of cards can be done in'quickly by use of the code- in the cards, Postmaster's Job Filled At Canyonville chairmen for the evening - prPstnn . trmnnnrv nnttmiK. - ter at Canyonville will become - effective Oct. 25, reports U.S encclive Oct. 25, reports U.S. ; uie uinui ui r usuiitOii'i iiui man Hanson. Duncan said Mrs. Prcston'j.to be followed bv the business appointment would last several! 3. i months while a list of eligibles Page 2 The Newi-Review Aged Pair Plans Mushroom Hunt Despite Night In Woods FLORENCE (UPI) Retired couple about 9:15 a.m. Monday. Los Aneeles sheriff's deputy! She said they realized they wife, Ethel, 70, of Hollywood.lWhen it got dark, they found a Calif., made it clear today they: log and. sat down back-to-back, would not give up hunting; mushrooms in the dense Siuslaw National Forest despite an un planned overnight outing Sun day night. The Farnemans became lost Sunday while picking mush rooms and spent the night hud dled on a log without food or heat. "We knew we'd have to have help,' er a Mrs. Farneman said aft rescue party found the More About Big Race Track Suits Are Filed (Continued From Page 1) roundings, the complaint states. It says he is in a semi-conscious and helpless state, and full extent of his injuries is un known at this time. Dennis Mills asks $25,000 gen eral and $960 special damages, alleging he suffered lacerations on his chest, sprain of the lum bar spine, laceration on his left hand, other abrasions, bruises on the thighs and a sprained el bow. Andrea K. Mills, 21, asks $17,- 000 general damages and an additional sum to cover medical I expenses, for leg fractures, theisnrain of the lumbar sninn. kid ney trouble, numerous lacera-i tions, contusions and abrasions Elmer C. Mills asks $8,750 general and $300 special dam ages, claiming he suffered bruis es of the right costal margin of his chest, abrasions of his ab- dominal wall, and of his right lower leg; sprain of his lumbarjwork in the Roseburg District. spine and stomach nausea. All the injuries are claimed to be permanent in nature. Negligence on the part of the defendants is claimed, alleging failure to erect and maintain! suitable barriers and retaining walls to prevent vehicles oper ated on the track from leaving it; in erecting and placing a bleacher grandstand in a dan gerous location and inviting the plaintiffs and other customers to sit there, when the defend ants knew or should hav( known it exposed them to un reasonable risk of bodily harm. Further alleged is failure to! make an adequate inspection into the hazard of placing the grandstand in the dangerous lo cation; in allowing a bump to remain on the track near the curve where the vehicle left the track, creating a dangerous condition for drivers and people occupying the grandstand. The complaints further con tends that Van Ostcn was in vited to participate in the race when the defendants knew of his past hazardous operations of vehicles in such races. Pythian Knight Gets 50-Year Pin Roy O. Young was presented his 50-year jewel for member ship in Alpha Lodge 47, Order Knights of Pythias, Roseburg, at its annual roll call night, Monday. A potluck dinner was held at 6:30 for Knights and their ROY O. YOUNG . . . receives 50-year jewel lowed Past Grand Chancellor Thom as Hartfiel made the presenta tion to Young. George Hinsdale also was presented his 25-year jewel by Past District Deputy Wayne McCauley. John Hess and Bill Black POMONA GRANGE TO MEET Douglas Countv Pomona -i 111X13 V. 1 ne Eatnerin2 Will tea- jture a potluck dinner at 7 p.m. I meeting at 8 p.m. PHONE 673-8435 For Eipert Instollotion and Soles Carpats Formico Linoleum 1 1 Years Local Experience HOLLAND D. DAVIS Custom Floors & Carpets I Tuet., Oct. 22, 1963 were lost about i p.m. Sunday. dozing intermittently. Heavy rain drenched them during the night, but the tem perature remained in the mid 50s. Both said they felt fine, de clined to have physical exami nations, and said the only things they wanted were dry clothes. They left the mushrooms they had picked behind when they realized they were lost. "The irony of it all was that after we discovered we were lost, we saw field after field of beautiful mushrooms," Mrs. Farneman said. They didn't come away empty-handed, however. Local residents presented them with a souvenir package containing a pound of the delicacies. wayKspnir Changed By BLM 1 The Bureau of Land Manage ment office in Roseburg has announced an additional meth od of accomplishing road main tenance work. In the past, BLM mainten ance work has been accomplish ed by timber sale purchasers or by a Bureau of Public Roads maintenance crew which oper- tcs under the supervision of the BLM. The BLM is now requesting hourly rate quotations for the rental of equipment and opera tors for the performance of road maintenance work. This maintenance work will consist of grading and other road re pair work. BLM will enter into contracts with the low bidders for the performance of maintenance The rate quotations will be for a neriod from Novcmher 19R3 to June 30, 1964. I WOmeil VOIerS LeflgUe p . y . JCI I WW LUIUI IIICCI3 Continued support of the Unit ed Nations, one of the League of Women Voters' long-standing commitments, will be studied at the LWV's two unit meet- inSs Wednesday and Thursday in Roseburg. Unit No. 1 meets at the home of Mrs. Jack Garnet, 2233 W. Harvard Blvd., at 8 p.m. Wed nesday. Unit , No. 2 will meet at the home of Mrs. James Pratt, 326 W. Riverside Dr., at 9:30 a.m. Thursday. Since the Roseburg League !has alrcady studied the issue One - Nation - One - Vote," the units this week will discuss primarily "continuing negotia tions to reduce the risk of war." In addition, a brief summary of the current situation regard ing financing the UN and the aims of the Development De cade will be discussed, along with tho 18-nation conference tnd the history of the nuclear test ban negotiations. Chairman of the Roseburg League's United Nations Com mittee is Mrs. Arthur Wilson. Serving on the committee are Mrs. Gerhard Eckman, Mrs. Jack Garnet and Mrs. Lew Wright. DEFORMED TOENAIL Q. Mr left toenail U thick, ened, deformed, end very painful. One doctor wanted to remove the nail. Should thit be done? A. It is usually advisable, as your doctor suggested, to sur gically remove distorted, de formed, thickened nails, es pecially toenails. To simply trim away such nails does lit tle good because they soon grow again in the same dis torted manner. When the nail is removed surgically, re growih can be prevented by treating the nail bed. In many cases, . complete removal of the nail and bed is the only way to provide lasting com fort. CONTACT LENSES Q. 1$ there greater rink of in jury to the eye in the event of an accident when contact lemet rather tthan ordinary glasses arm worn? A. No, contact lenses do not entail any greater risk than do spectacles in the event of an accident. Remember the diagnosis and treatment of disease is the function of the pa . tients personal physician. Get our price on yonr next prescription. It's LOWER than you think. i