Library Tin; Or-j.-'n CO: Established 1873 12 Paget Roseburg, Ore. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1963 253-63 10c Per Copy BIG OCCASION Four officers of the Umpqua Post of the American Legion turned over the first shovels of dint to start construction of a new Legion home at 406 SE Oak Ave., Roseburg. Those with shovels, from left, are: Noble Goettel, finance com Hope Is Abandoned For Trapped Miners PEINE, Germany (UPI) -Hope was finally abandoned to day for 39 miners trapped in a flooded iron mine for 42 hours after' electronics experts said knocking noises picked up by a microphone were rattling rocks and not signals. A spokesman for the Ilseder Mines Co. said at 2 p.m. (9 a.m. EDT) 39 of 43 men sun trapped in the Lengede-Broi-stedt mine must be presumed dead. 1 Rescue teams drilled in re lays to drive a hole through to the mine's 270-foot side shaft, where four other men were working in a smaller tunnel when the mine was flooded at!mg to Mrs. G. B. Fox, corre- 8 p.m., (3 p.m., EDT)I Thurs day. , But hope of finding even the four alive was dim, the spokes man said. "They may have survived in an air pocket," he said. Rescue officials said the chance was a very slim.ne.;.,..; The company spokesman originally announced hope had been abandoned for the 39 at noon (9 a.m. EDT) He said death notices were sent to their families. But a few minutes later knockine noises were picked upi. sj u. .,,i i. by a supersenstive microphone lowered through a bore - note.: The spokesman then refused to; post the names of the lost min ers. ' ! Then mine experts analyzed the noises and said they were definitely not from miners, but were the rattling of rocks in the depths, a common sound in mines. 1 Similar knocking sounds heard for a time Friday turned out to have come from an air pressure hose banging against a metal pipe in the main shaft. Friday night seven miners PLAY BALL With United Fund Goal Score To Dote $37,43 S3i Meandering Days Appear About Ended For 'Ginny' WILMINGTON, N.C. (UPI) The bulletin placed the ccn-jsprlng. He also said he thought tinSAor,. r.innv uhioh chasedit... f r.innv nr latitude 33.7that primary would be a wide- 4,000 coastal residents from!north iongitude 77.1 westjfj "cJeM.U!, "-I!?f!!!"a. I 3' " TIZ and showed signs of breaking up A late weather bulletin said the eye of the storm had be - come poorly defined aiiring Thc San Juan Weather Bu the morning hours and that it' hi(,h .imi, ln h. j:,. had become almost stationary - "Conditions still favor re - sumpuon 01 an easi miru.c.si movement bdoui v miies an i"r,!ia'.f!' .,i,i5...mo!.ng!.,i.l and STwInEVm remain offshore," me vtrnuici '" said. The Weather AIRPORT RICOOS Pair wife morning tog Mrot Carolina . . ? .J? , ' Th .tnrm .Miwllv moved cl9udln.it Sunday ift.rnoon. Contlnutd cold. Hiahest temp, last 24 hours 40 Lowest temp, last M hours N Hifhott temp, any Oct. (SI) fl Lowest temp, any Oct. (S4) J4 Prtclp. lost 14 hours .W' Normal Ocf. Brocia. l.M Proclp. from Sept. 1 3.14 Precis, from Oct. 1 1.71 Swnoot teaifht, 4:14 p.m. Sunriio tomorrow, 7:42 a.m. !f, .t-; - I few ... w- : s ir - u mi ,Ja were rescued after a 23-hour or deal in mud and water follow ing the collapse of a giant sur face sedimentation basin. About 19 million gallons of water and Home Burns To Ground The James P. (Tim) McKern-i an residence three miles north of the ' Glendale Junction of Highway . 99 burned to ground early Friday morning, sDodent. McKernan and his wife awoke about 4 a.m. to find the house filled with flames and smoke. Smoke was creeping under the door of the downstairs bed room where the couple was sleeping. ,The made their way vcwju, safety'' 'through'' a Tiedroom window, said Mrs. Fox The family dog in the kitchen lost its life. McKernan, who isj a retjre(1 lieutenant commander from the U.S. Navy, said he believed the fire might have started in the kitchen, but had F jd ,he Douglas Protective Association I "fV Be was wrpnsea crm- . ut ..;cism of opening Oregon's was called to the scene but it was already too late to do any. thing by the time the McKern. ans discovered the fire. The couple had lived in Glen. dale for the past three years, and McKernan was doing ex tensive remodeling on the two. story frame house which was only partially covered by insur ance. The McKernans are staying temporarily at the Renus Mi' chel residence. CLOCK STOPPERS COMBE MARTIN, England (UPI) Residents of this Dev. on seaside village always won- dered why the church clock was stopping all the time. They discovered the clock stopped because pigeons sat on the minute hand. or about 60. mi.es southeast ol Wilmington, N.C. Another tropical disturbance,! Union. ntn lnsl some nf its ;pUnch during the morning, , turbance dropped from GO to W imUcs n hour M it m0Ved si jsand of Dominica nd ,n(o the Caribbcan. A late bulletin on Helena ?- !e f"" Iat""?.e or about 370 mUe, souu,cast of' San Juan, P.R. Helena was discovered in the tropical Atlantic Friday at an hour when the center of Ginny -appeared headed for the coast som -what closer to the North Powers' parents, who live ai Carolina shore during the night mountainous Pound. Va., would: tut this was because of the jut ;attend. " ' j I ting nature of the shoreline,! Powers mother said Friday and not because the storm had night: "I don't know much changed course. (about It. I'm tot going any- About 200 evacuees spent the where." The father added, "I nioht in Sal Cm hrltrra in can't attend wedding if I Wilmington. They had break- don't have an Invitation. Last Ij fast this morning while waiting heard he was to California. 1; ;to be sure Ginny was going to! didn't know he wa netting! 'continue out to sea. Imarried." 1 mittee member; Dr. E. B. Stewart, past post and stote commander; George Trapalis, finance commit tee member; and JocK George, post 'commander. (News-Review photo) ore sludge cascaded down into the honeycomb of shafts and tunnels in which a mine com pany official said either 128 or 129 men were working. Crawling through ventilation tunnels and up rope ladders, 79 miners escaped on their own. Drilling teams worked under floodlights throughout the night, boring holes to the 210 and 270 foot levels. This morning a six-man res cue squad emerged after a four-hour dingy search of air pockets in the sludgy caverns tneiand reported no sign of life "The situation is far graver than we thought," Armin Scmil te, Lower Saxony state mines official, said Friday night. He explained that the entire west side of the mine 180 feet under ground was flooded with sludgy water. Surprise Mark PORTLAND (UPI) Gov. Mark Hatfield, returning from speaking engagements in Arizona and California, said Fn. opening Oregon s special legislative session o n Veteran's Day, Nov. 11, "There wasn't any vacation taken on the battlefront, h e remarked at Portland Interna tional Airport after arriving from San Francisco. Hatfield said he expects a 5 to 10 day legislative session, based on discussions with the presiding officers of the two legislative bodies "If the legislators restrict themselves to the single issue of carrying out the people's will as expressed in the tax referen dum, there is no reason why they can't complete the session in that time," he remarked, In San Francisco Friday the governor told the Common wealth Club he believes former vice president Richard A. Nix. on is an "active" candidate for the presidential nomination in 1964. "Nixon is on the track and running fast," Hatfield said. He said he believes the 1960 Republican standard bearer's name will be entered in t h e New Hampshire primary next II 1 DIIa a - WJi I IIWI V(IJ License To Wed CATLETT, Va. (UPI) Fran cis Gary Powers, the U2 pilot who was shot down over Rus- Isian territory, was scheduled to be married today to Mary Sue f- ' DWney' f Arli"g The wedding was scheduled 'for 4 p.m., EDT, A relative of Mrs. Downey said the wedding would take place at the Catlett Methodist Church here in this small Fau inTu J?? Virginia. It was not known i Legion Home Work Started Officers and members of American Legion Umpqua Post turned out Friday noon to of ficially start construction on its new post headquarters at 406 SE Oak Ave. in Roseburg. They turned the first spade. fuls of dirt in a groundbreak ing ceremony on the cleared lot, the site of the former building which was ruined by the Aug, 7, 1959 blast. The building will be construc ted by Miller & Dimmick, gen eral contractors. It' will be a 40-by-to building facing Gateway Park and the South Umpqua River. The target date for comple- tion of the building is Feb. 1, 1964. On hand to '.urn the first shovels of dirt, were two mem. bers of the finance committee, a past state commander and the present post commander, (See pioti!reabovc):'-" ' " Others turning out were, from, left to right in the picture above: Second row: Mrs. Mary Ferche, member of the auxil iary; Martin Dimmick, contrac tor; Severen Ferche, chairman of the building committee; Mrs. Helen Wood, president of t h e auxiliary; Mrs. Ellen Post, aux iliary member; Ted Post, past commander; and John Rich ardson, second vice command- er. Third row: Roy O. Young, past commander and service of ficer; 'Alfred Allan and Lenore Kruse, legionnaires; and Bruce Mollis, adjutant. Portlander Is Crushed Under Wheels Of Train PORTLAND (UPI) -Jack Osborne, 49, Portland, was killed Thursday when he was crushed under the wheels of a Spokane, Portland and Seattle freight car being switched at the Portland yards. Officials said Osborne, a yard switchman, fell from a boxcar as six of the cars were being moved. The accident was under in vestigation. b oac i A aw. ts-m t r-' oM 1 xftnfiirr tA BWir HER MAJESTY, Jennifer Babbitt, reigned supreme during spirited homecoming activities ot Roseburg High School Friday. She is shown during the rally in downtown Roseburg Friday afternoon. She was se lected from o field of seven condidates. She is the daughter of Dr. ond Mrs. Clifford Bobbin. (News Review photo) i City Paints; Day Flight Is Resumed With a break in the weather Friday, city crews painted threshold markings on the run way at the Roseburg Airport, and West Coast Airlines rein stated its daylight flight after a day of interruption. The late afternoon flight, how ever, will not start again until threshold lights are put in along the runway, WCA officials re ported today. The daylight flight is one coming from Portland and ar riving here at 9:20 a.m. en route to Klamath Falls and San Francisco. The afternoon flight, which has not been reinstated, comes from San Francisco en route to Portland. It previously arrived at 5:25 p.m. However, starting Sunday with the return of the state to standard time, the flight would have arrived at 6:25 p.m., which would be about half an hour after sun set. WCA said it could not start the afternoon service until threshold lights were installed. The decision to stop service until the city had installed markings for the . touch-down patterns for commercial planes was announced Thursday. Serv ice was completely cut off Fri day. WCA said the service was "involuntarily" interrupted be cause of a Federal Aviation Agency requirement under which the airport did not meet minimum standards required for. safety of commercial air craft. The daylight markings were made 1,000 feet from the south end of the runway and 1,012 feet from the north end. Mean while, the city is studying the demand for threshold lights so the night flight can be started again. New Coucilman Will Be Named . The Roseburg City Council is seheduled.'to- appoint 'a--ew councilman to fill the unexpired term of Councilman Jack Garn et at its regular meeting Mon day night. Garnet resigned from the council following his an- nouncement he would leave Roseburg for business reasons The council will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the City HaU. Public hearings will continue on changing the name to "W, Oriole Drive" that portion of W. Oriole Ave. from W. Broc coli St. to W. Cardinal St. and from W. Harvard Blvd. to W. Bradford Drive. U.S. Plywood Manager R. J. Moore will convey the deed for a 14-acre tract of land adja cent to the municipal airport to the city. Applications for renewal of li quor licenses for four business es will be considered at the Monday night meeting. The council will discuss re quested annexations for single units of land in two locations on NW Calkins Road, one at the intersection of NW Lynwood Drive and the other lying east of NW Kline Street. Discussion of the off - street parking plans for the downtown area will hightlight the city manager's report. 9. -mr orocccams N I Dim eseirti ALGIERS (UPI) Heavilyi reinforced Moroccan , units launched a blistering new of fensive igainot Algerian troops in the sun-seared Sahara today. Amid apparent deadlock on conditions for peace talks President Ahmed Ben Bella an nounced he will leavs Sunday or Monday for Tunis or Tripoli for African summit peace talks. HOUSEWIVES WARNED Contaminated Fish Blamed In Deaths WASHINGTON (UPI) The nation's housewives were urgedfarea.1 today to destroy all smoked fish known to have been caught or processed in the Great Lakes area. Commissioner George P. Lar- rick of the Food & Drug Ad ministration (FDA) ordered the emergency measures into effect Friday night in a move to stem new outbreaks of the deadly type-is Dotulism poisoning. Larrick said the "destroy" order was aimed at smoked fish products that are "pack aged in sealed plastic wrappers and those that are sold m bulk without any package." Canned fish products are not involved. he said. Study Recent Deaths Larrick issued the order aft er receiving a report from FDA scientists and from an advisory panel of experts who made an independent study of seven re cent deaths traced to botu-lism-E and stemming from smoked whitefish processed by the, H. J. j.Hprnljos&Bios. po. an urana Haven, mien. In the course of the investi gation, the FDA said, traces of botulism-E were found in at least three other fish process ing plants in the Great Lakes area. ine ; emergency measures proposed oy tne panel were adopted "with modifications," Larrick said, pending develop ment of more complete infor mation on the sources of con. tamination. He said the FDA's investigation of the botulism hazard was continuing, In a notice to wholesalers. retailers and processors, the FDA urged that all supplies of smoked fish products made from Great Lakes fish or proc essed in the area also should be destroyed. Some May Bo Retained Larrick said that some of the fish could be retained if it could be established with cer tainty that: The fish was heated imme diately after it was packaged in a manner that would assure a temperature of at least 180 degrees for at least 30 minutes in the coldest part of the fish, The fish was frozen imme diately after packaging and has since been maintained continu ously in a frozen condition. Larrick admitted the inde pendent panel did not "restrict its recommendation to Great Lakes smoked fish." , He said its report was modi fied by the FDA, however, be cause all of the known botu lism outbreaks of smoked fish in the United States in recent years have been traceable to Moving Day Set For Quint Family ABERDEEN, S.D. (UPI) Next Friday is moving day for the Andrew Fischer family of quintuplet fame. Chamber of Commerce Man ager E. C. Pieplow said Friday! night a large, rambling homeito-8nneUon form from on the northeast nan of the dent of &e Keasey-Calkins ity is to serve as the tempo rary ' residence for the Fisch- ers. the ouintuDlets and the couDle's five other children un- til the city builds them a new $100,000 home. Pienlow said the Fischers; have not selected the site for1 the new home, but "probably the property owners, represent-1 Osborne said the only sure tilings will start moving on that ing two-thirds of the land and means of correcting the situ as soon as they're nettled in two-thirds of the valuation in ation Is by installation of a san their temporary home." jthe area. Itary sewer system. In his re- The quints still remain In SL City Manager Craig McMiek- port, he said annexation to the Luke's Hospital and were not cn told The News-Review he city appeared the most feasible expected to leave before the will request authority from the! means of getting this service, family moves to its temporary , City Council Monday night toj The consent forma have been residence. 'carry out a sanitary sewer ; given to residents ot the area Four are in bassinets, leaving master plan for that general on their request, the city of only first-born and finest Maryjr.rea so it can be determined Ccials pointed out The forms Ann in her iiolette. 'exactly where sewer lines could may be obtained at City Hall. h. OffffeiTDsive The eleventh hour Moroccan offensive, according to Algerian government sources, appeared aimed at Tinfouchi, 50 miles southwest of Hassi Beida, the desert frontier outpost for which the two armies have fought a seesaw battle for nearly a week. Its purpose, Algerial sources said, seemed to be to encircle Algerian army units in the area products from the Great Lakes Larrick said evidence indicat ed that the poisonous type-E botulism is limited to the Great Lakes area. DuraiHp Eyed As Sister City Durango, Mexico, moved into the limelight Friday as a likely prospect as a sister city for Roseburg. It was the maior subiect ofl discussion at a meeting of Rose burg's Sister City Committee at Harris Cafe. Chairman Peter B. Qerafin said the city had been suggested by the U.S. Informa tion Agency through the Amer ican Municipal Association. No contacts with the Mexican city will be made, however, un til other -information is received about common interests of the city with that of .Roseburg. Durango is- the capital of tne Mexican state of Durango. Lo cated 574 miles northwest of Mexico City, it has a popula tion of about 70,000 people. It is situated on the eastern smir of the Sierra Madre Mountains at an elevation of 6,300 feet overlooking a picturesque val ley. Among its major industries are iron mines, foundries, cot ton and wool mills, tobacco fac tory, sugar refineries and tan neries. It is a commercial cen ter. The city aas founded in 1563. Chairman Gel fin will request more information from the AMA on such subjects as tim ber industries, clubs and organ izations and. other activities. The next meeting of the Sis ter City Committee is scheduled Nov. 8 at noon, again at Har ris Cafe. , Road Project Gets Lone Bid J. C. Compton Co. of Mc- Minnvitle was the only bidder on a U.S. Forest Service lob calling for bituminous surfac ing of Steamboat Road about 48 miles east of Glide. The company bid $71,212, considerably over the govern ment estimate of $57,400. In another bid session, four firms submitted bids for re construction of Princess Creek Road about two miles east of the Willamette Pass in Klam ath County. Low bidder was Marvin Russell of La Pine. The bid was $1,089. Two other bid ders were Fitzgerald Logging of Roseburg $6,735; and Kinnan Logging of Camas Valley $14, 135. Keasey-Calkins Residents Show Annexation Desire Roseburg city officials today reported they have received about 30 requests for consent- area involved in a recent sew age survey by the Douglas I wuniy oanuauon Liepanmem. The city is investigating the 'possibility of annexation of the jarea by the "triple two-thirds" mctnoa, wnereny consent forms are required from two-thirds pemi WCOD" of Tindouf, a rich desert iron ore region in the extreme southwest of Algeria,. It followed close on Moroc can attacks Friday against the vital railroad and highway life line linking Algeria's main cen ters with Colomb Bechar, the Algerian army's advanced headquarters. Algerian army officials at Colomb Bechar, the staging area 450 miles southwest of Al giers, said Algerian troops in flicted "heavy losses" on the Moroccans, who abandoned sev eral burned-out tanks on the battlefield. At the same time, authorita tive Algerian sources said Mo rocco had launched two small scale attacks north of Colomb Bechar, threatening the strate gic railroad lifeline Unking Co lomb Bechar with Oran. Algerian troops beat off small skirmishing forces at Ben Zi regh, 19 miles north of Colomb Bechar, and Djebel Omer, 50 miles to the north, the sources said. Hassi Beida, a tiny oasis 250 miles southwest of Colomb Be char in the Sahara Desert area claimed by both countries, has been a key battleground in the undeclared border war between Algeria and Morocco. There were no reports of Al gerian losses in the latest fight ing, although Algerian sources said Moroccan planes strafed ' and bombed Algerian troops at several points. Despite the continued fight ing, the two countries appeared to be headed for truce negotia tions, but there was some doubt about when and where they would meet. A series of proposals were being considered for a three man, six-man or eight-man summit meeting of African ucaua ui.. suue. , , ;-.r .- ';. J. '"There " were also conflicting accounts of the fighting in the Sahara Desert border area. The Algerian army announced that it had the Moroccan forces "in full retreat." Moroccan headquarters claimed the "complete rout of Algerian troops." A Moroccan government spokesman in Marrakech Fri day suggested a six-man meet ing attended by King Hassan II of Morocco, President Ahmed Ben Bella of Algeria, President Habib Bourguiba of Tunisia. President Mobido Keita of Mall. King Idris of Libya and Presi dent Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic, The Algerian government made a flat statement four hours later that Hassan and Ben Bella had agreed to meet in Tunis Monday in an eight nation summit conference in cluding Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia and President Se- kku Toure of Guinea in addi tion to the other six. Tunisian official sources said Friday night the Tunisian gov ernment was "completely in the dark" about the conference. They denied that it had agreed to be host for such a meeting. GUILTY CONSCIENCE BIRMINGHAM, Eng. (UPI) British Railways officials here received $56 in postal orders Friday from a passenger with a conscience. The anonymous writer said he traveled from Birmingham to Glasgow 25 years, ago with out paying the fare. He esti mated the fare cost seven pounds $19.60 and the rest was interest. be installed to serve the area. County Sanitarian Jack Os borne, in his report issued af ter the survey of the area, said the surface sewage in the area could result in a serious out break of one of several com municable diseases. He said the 1 sanitation department will not sign loan approvals for any further construction in the area until the siuiatlon Is cor- ofjrectcd.