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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1963)
r, . ti j x.-'' ' , .. - ,h.-..n.. . j Youth Night Slated Saturday At YMCA Roseburg's Inter C h u r c h evening for three months. The Youth "V" Committee will hold. second is this Saturday nisht its second church youth "Y";and the third will In on Dec. night Saturday evening at the ; 28. wn IU Bt A KEALITT is o new Koseburg hirst Methodist Church, a scale model of which is shown here being examined by Mildred Gum, church secre tary. Bids for construction of the church plant were opened Tuesday night at a meeting of the building committee and the contract was awarded to the Todd Construction Co. of Roseburg, low bidder in a field of three. Construction of the new church, which will be located on West Harvard Boulevard., is expected to start within two or three weeks. (News-Review photo) Methodists Plan Early Start On Church Project Many years of planning fori a new Roseburg First Metho dist Church will be culminated within the next two or three weeks when ground will be brok en for a new church plant to constructed on West Harvard Boulevard. Bid opening was held at the church Tuesday Eugene Plywood Gets Tree Tract : Eugene Pywood Co. of Eu gene was high bidder on 6,700, 000 board feet of Umpqua Na-I tional Forest timber located on a 114-acre tract on the North Umpqua Ranger District 48 miles east of Roseburg which was sold at a USFS auction Tuesday. Eugene Plywood Co. paid $143,380 for the tract, apprais cd at $92,420. The firm paid $21.40 per thousand board feet for 4,900,000 feet of Douglas fir and pine appraised at $12.60 per thousand and the appraised $6. 65 for 1,800,000 feet of western hemlock and other species. Av erage price paid per thousand was $21.40. Other bidders were National! Plywood Inc., U.S. Plywood Corp., O. E. Clayton, Douglas County Lumber Co., and J. R. Standley & Sons Logging Co. all of Roseburg; and Carpenter & Wood of Sutherlin. Two tracts of USFS timber will be sold at 2 p.m. Nov. 18. night at a meeting of the church building committee headed by Floyd Wilson. Todd Construction Co. was low bidder both with a basic bid of $137,771 and four alternates totaling $42,113. Other bidders were James & Stritzke with a basic bid of $158,400 and Jack Mathis with a basic bid of $138,- 216. Plans were prepared by architects Morin & Longwood, Eugene. Plans call for a sanctuary of approximately 7,475 square feet with a seating capacity of 285 persons and additional seat ing for 120 in choir, chapel and guest seating space. The exter ior will have stained cedar sid ing, and the interior will feature natural woods. According to Wilson, a review will now be made of finances in light of the winning bid figures and a decision made as to starting date and alternates to be selected. The church plant will be built in several stages with the initial contract to in clude construction of the sanc tuary. Alternates will be select ed according to cost and expe diency. The present downtown Rose burg church is expected to be sold and the proceeds applied toward a total project goal of a church plant costing $391,000. Offices, storage space and ad dition of cooling coils to the gas-fired heating system will come in the later stages of con slruction. Gardiner Plant Picketing Ends The "informational" pickets' stationed at the gate of the In ternational Paper Co. pulp and paper plant construction at Gar diner by members of the Plumb ers and Steamfitters Union were removed Tuesday. Mrs. Dawn Pcseau, corre spondent, said the pickets de parted following a conference of the Pacific Crane and Rig ging labor relations director, the union's international repre sentative and representatives of local Plumbers and Steamfit ters Union. Work on the project is now proceeding at a normal rate, a spokesman for the contractor said. It was reported that the con trading firm, Pacific Crane and Rigging, has now rehired all men who were discharged as result of a jurisdictional dispute last month. Although the dis pute had appeared to be resolv ed earlier, picketing continued due to the fact that the contract or had failed to put back on the job 12 men of the original work force discharged. - Jurisdiction over the pipef it ting on the construction project' has been taken over by the un ion international and given to Eugene Local 481. Previously, Coos Bay Local .621 held me iici Coos Bay Local 621 held the jurisdiction. The pickets, reportedly estab lished without union authoriza-i tion, appeared last week at the work site in a protest of the contractor's failure to rehire the dozen pipefitters. YMCA. The first such program was held Oct. 19. Some 125 young people attend ed the first church youth "Y' night program, under the spon sorship of the recently-organized Inter Church Youth Y Com mittee, a group formed by rep resentatives of many churches in the Roseburg area to pro mote Christian fellowship among the youth of the community. According to Curt Weiss, chairman of the organization, churches which have not yet participated through their youth leaders in the committee are urged to do so. By having at least one member from each church on the adult steering committee, each church will have a voice in planning future activities, he said. He also said the church youth groups have been advised that one rule of participation in the vouth night at the YMCA is that one adult-from each church !n,,,cf DMinmnanu nnrl ciinnrviun the youth of that church. The group was organized Oct at the request of YMCA di rector Wayne Schulz and the Y" executive board. The Rev. James Smith served as chair man at the organizational meet ing. . Purposes of forming the com mittee were to (1) promote Christian fellowship among youth of all churches in the Roseburg area; (2) present an image of local Christian youth through the YMCA facilities; and (3) provide an environment suitable for Roseburg youth of various denominations to enjoy a sociable evening together. It was agreed at this organ izational meeting to present pilot program for senior high school students one Saturday Two items of policy were es tablished: First, one adult from each church must accompany youth from that church; and secondly, there will be no danc ing. The adult steering committee was formed Oct. 23. with Weiss elected chairman. Mrs. Arthur Lamka was elected secretary-treasurer. Planning troups arc to include two youths from each church youth group executive commit tee. Planning and participation in the "Y" nights is to be done much as possible by the youth themselves. ' Host Churches Named Host churches for the pro gram this Saturday night will be the Methodist Church, West Side Christian Church and Church of the Open Bible. Hosts for the Dec. 28 program will be the First Christian Church St. George's Episcopal Church and the North Roseburg EUB Church. Hosts for the first program were First Presbyter ian Church, Faith Lutheran Church, and First Church of God. There were 23 churches rep resented at the first youth night whick featured devotions brought by Judge Charles Wood rich, with a theme of "A chal lenge to teen-agers to stand for what they believe and be Christian witness' in their cV-1 eryday lives." Entertainment at that program included organ solos by Peggy Ostrqnder, piano interlude by Glcnda Schindler, the girls trio from the West Side Christian Church and a "Hootcnany" song test led by Doug Glover and Gary Riffe, with Leslie Anderson at the organ. Emcee for the. evening was Bruce Springer. Senate Winds Up Hearing On Billie Sol Estes Case W I VJUUJLTLSlZS I W M j I ' Satisfaction 1 H " 672-4811 Guaranteed or h-? . . Tour Money Back t 3 il ' ..-.' FN (lis 1 v 1 SAT ; :4 4:30pm ;j ! jT -V ' Open Thur. & Fri. Night Until 9:00 J II :a ! f ; JACK B. NIMBLE A . V. PORTRAITS ARE H f - J 3SA. I PARENTS' ) a-big 1.14 WASHINGTON (UPI)-Senate hearings into the get-rich-quick career of farm financier Billie Sol Estes were marked "com plete". today and investigators began working on a formal re port. The dark-haired West Texas farm boy. who built and lost- $150 million empire, moved briefly into the public spotlight Tuesday. He quickly bowed out again, however, after invoKing the Fifth Amendment against possible self-incrimination and refusing to answer questions lor the Senate investigations sub committee. Chairman John L. McClellan, D-Ark., did not press Estes with warnings of possible con tempt action. He explained that Estes, still in deep legal trou ble, would not be placed in a position where he might preju-i dice his cause in court actions against him. McClellan said no further wit nesses would be called in the in-' quiry which filled the headlines a little more than a year ago. He said the committee would now draft a report. The report is certain to con tain some criticism of the Ag riculture Department's handhngl of Estes' pooled cotton allot ments. In a presidential year,! such a report depending on its its tone could become some thing of a political document. Estes refusal to answer ques tions was not unexpected since he has pending appeals from fraud and conspiracy convic tions that call for prison terms totaling 23 years. He is free on bond and lives with his wife Wed., Nov. 13, 1963 The Newt-Review, Page 3 !. iui i .Mini lummy in m ii nil in. i feat ImM ml ill Mi M ) ii 4b Iummmbmm n tt- mni-r'nttiini J A CHECK for $50 for donation to the Elks Lodge Eye Clinic is being received by Roseburg Elks Exalted Ruler Ed Stitrr, center, from the Roseburg Emblem Club. Making the presentation are Mrs. Julius (Mildred) Benham, past presi dent and on right, Mrs. Adrain (Vera) Standley, ways and means chairman. The presentation took place at the Elks Northwest Ritualistic Drill Team Com petition heid ot the local lodge at the same -time as the Emblem Club state meeting. The Elks Eye Clinic is an Oregon State is operated in conjunction, with the University of (Clark's photo) Elks Association project and" Oregon Medical School. Capital Waiter Enjoys Junket and five children in Abilene Tox. Alter refusing to testify in closed session, Estes was taken into public hearing and asked to identify himself. He replied1 that he was "Billie Sol Estes, 70 Castle Drive, Abilene, Texas." To all else he sought the Fifth Amendment's protec- ittOB. He refused to answer 25 spe cific questions. He also told Mc Clellan that he had studied the group's list of 21 multiple part questions and did not feci he could answer any without pos sible self-incrimination. WASHINGTON (UPI) - It was just plain Ernest Petinaud, head waiter, today for the now celebrated House restaurant employe who enjoyed a briel fling as a $30-a-day foreign at fairs specialist for a congres sional delegation in Eruope. The likeable Petinaud,' a fix ture at the Capitol dining room, arrived Tuesday night from London aboard an Air Force jetliner with the delegation, headed by Ucp. Wayne L. Hays, D-Ohio. ' "I didn't do anything wrong," said Petinaud, "and I would be ready to do it again tomorrow." The trip was part of his three week vacation. Ho reports back, to work Monday. I Petinaud's presence on the delegation, which attended the! NATO parliamentarian's confer ence in Paris, triggered an up roar when it becume known last week. More than $200 in congres sional counterpart frnds were used to pay his expenses while iic served us a "messenger and liaison man" for Hays' groups, which included 10 other con gressmen. Petinaud also re ceived a free round-trip to Eu rope, courtesy of the Air Force, Most congressmen were reluc tant to comment on the actions, of a colleague, but Rep. H. li. Gross, It-lowa, the well known economizer, had no qualms. 11c attacked the "shenanigans" of the delegation and suggested that the bill to boost congres sional salaries $10,000 to $32,500 might suffer. Gross is an im placable foe of the pay raise measure. . Hays stoutly defended his ap pointment of . Petinaud to the delegation staff. "Ernest v, one of the hardest workers at the Paris conference," he said Hays, who was called "Ohio's Marco Polo" by Sen. Stephe M. Young, D-Ohio, Tuesday, said congressional staff mem bers normally are chosen for duties of the type performed by Petinaud "but Ernest had asked me to keep in mind for something like this. I think he is a nice guy and he deserved it." Hays said that during the del egation's four-day stay in Lon don he paid Petinaud's ex penses out of his own pocket (about $04) because "Ernest didn't do any work in London." Taste it toasted I Great way to start the dayl mm ' TTT n Roman Meal is the light brown bread with natural whole grain goodnessl BAKE0 BY WILLIAMS' PICTURE BUST VIGNETTE, SUITABLE FOR FRAMING AN EXCEPTIONAL WARDS SAVING... NATIONALLY ADVERTISED You select from 6 or more permanent photographs Let Wards skilled photographers cap ture the charm of your child's personal ity .. . yours to eheriih forever I limit one per child, two per family, ages 5 weeks fo 12 years. Children group pictures taken af 99 per child. Compare Ward's prices I Two Jump To Safety From Dynamite Truck LEBANON, Tcnn. (UPI) Two construction workers, smelling smoke, Tuesday jumped from a truck laden with dynamite and ran to safe ty before the vehicle was "blown to smithereens." The blast also broke about 200 windows, including those in the courthouse and the Leba non Airport. The workers, Lloyd C. Scott and James Newhy, were not hurt by the explosion, which oc curred at an interstate highway construction site near here. But officers said the men were so unnerved tlicy were un able to speak coherently for more than an hour. PLUS 50 for wrapping, handling, Iniwam. Additional portraits are available In all sizes and styles at exceptional WARP Savings! J 1 I ! Tax Suit Filed PORTLAND (UPI) -W. Em cry Hobhs, 47, owner of the Cas cade Food Products Co. in Sa lem, was indicted by a federal grand jury Tuesday on a charge of failing to file an income tax return. 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