Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, September 21, 1962, Image 7

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    EUGENE REGISTER-GUARD, Friday, Sept. 21, 1962 Page 7A
'Round the State
Woman Surrenders to Authorities
ST. HELENS Five years
ago Dorothy Burns, 16-year-old
Rainier High School junior,
walked away from custody while
awaiting sentence on a man
slaughter charge. A gnawing
conscience has brought her
back, her attorney said Thurs
day. She now is Mrs. Dorothy
Shawver, Seattle, mother of a
4-year-old girl.
Mrs. Shawver surrendered
herself to police in April, 1957,
saying she had shot and killed
her father, Robert H. Burns, a
logger. She was charged with
manslaughter, pleaded guilty,
and was being held in Multno
mar County Juvenile Home at
Portland for pre-sentence in
vestigation when she walked
away on May 10, 1957.
Tuesday night she came back,
looked up D. 0. Bennett, who
had been her court-appointed
attorney, and with him sur
rendered to Sheriff Spencer
Younce.
Bennett said she told him she
was relieved to get it off her
conscience.
Just where she had been liv
ing and where her daughter was
left was not revealed.
She is expected to appear in
Circuit Court Monday to answer
to the charge of escape.
Sentence Voided
SALEM (UPD The Oregon
Supreme Court this week void
ed a five-year sentence imposed
tin James R. Brady, 20, and
ordered him released from cus
tody. He has been in the Ore
gon Penitentiary for two years.
The high court reversed Mar
High
Dam
2ienmn mm J .jjum'M1 " 11 ' '"H
elites 4
How This Newspaper Helps Advertisers.
MEASURE OP
ion County Circuit Judge George
A. Jones, who had dismissed
Brady's petition for post-conviction
relief.
When Brady was 17 he plead
ed guilty to a charge of contrib
uting to the delinquency of a
minor, and received a suspended
five-year sentence.
Shortly after he turned 18,
his probation was revoked for
a violation, and he was ordered
to start serving the five years.
He appealed, contending that
juvenile court had exclusive jur
isdiction in the case, and that
circuit court lacked jurisdiction.
The high court agreed, with Jus
tice Gordon Sloan writing the
opinion.
Farmer Killed
TURNER ( A Sublimity
area farmer was killed Thursday
when his pickup truck over
turned on the Parrish Gap Road
about seven miles south of Tur
ner. The Marion County coroner's
office identified him as Frank
Joseph Wolf, 62, of Route 1
Sublimity.
State police said that Wolf,
who was alone in his truck,
apparently lost control on a
curve.
Election Ruled Valid
THE DALLES (UPD Circuit
Judge Malcolm Wilkinson has
ruled that an election approving
consolidation of the Chenowith,
Rowcna and Mosier school dis
tricts was valid.
The districts are west of The
Dalles. The election was held
last May 7.
Judge Wilkinson ruled against
Artist's drawing shows how Canada's
Portage Mountain Dam and 2Mi-mtllion-kilowatt
powerhouse will look when it is
completed in 1970. The dam will stretch
1.3 miles across the Peace River Valley
in northern British Columbia. Rising
615 feet above the river bed, it will be
the highest earth fill dam in the world.
A huge reservoir lake created by the
dam will cover more than 950 square
miles and take seven to eight years
to fill.
Ring up Sales
You have at your disposal the finest advertising research
system vr devised the cash register.
When you run an advertisement, you listen to the cash
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Call s this week.
This newspaper it a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations, a
nonprofit, cooperative monition of publishers, advertisers, and adver
tising arrnriM. Our circulation Is audited at rtfular intervals by experi
enced A. B.C. circulation auditors and their reports are made available
to eur advertisers without obligation.
IIRVICI
seven taxpayers who claimed
the election should be declared
void because of irregularities
in procedure. A new high school
is planned in the Chenowith
area.
Clause Retained
PORTLAND (UPD Workers
of the Wilbur Timber Co. north
of Roseburg have voted to re
tain the union shop clause in
their contract, the National La
bor Relations Board reports.
Of 54 eligible voters in Local
3-307 of the International Wood
workers of America, 23 voted
for the clause, 18 voted against
it, and 13 did not vote.
Weekly Planned
INDEPENDENCE flIPD Mr.
and Mrs. Dean W. Leonard,
publishers of the weekly Inde
pendence Enterprise, said Fri
day they will begin publication
of a weekly newspaper in West
Salem Sept. 28.
The new paper, to be known
as the West Salem Citizen, will
serve Eastern Polk county, the
Leonards said. The newspaper
will be printed at the Independ
ence plant.
Group Leaves China
HONG KONG jft A White
Russian refugee group from Red
China numbering 154 and in
cluding ages ranging from 18 to
73 sailed this week in the Dutch
liner Tjiluwah under U.N. spon
sorship for new life in Aus
tralia.
HME
OAkJ5
No appraisal fee. Fast, low cost
loans to build, buv. n-finaiv.
remodel. See Equitable. Ask about
n.r.u. nome loan protection.
41 TENTH AVENUE WEST
IN SniNOPIElD-441 MAIN
swat offici - roauAN), oeito
KlS1
1 people do read
i SPOT
I ADS
' W . . . you are
pi 5-1551
r I for complete
V I advertising
I services
m
c. . .O
MARK OP IHTIORITV
The Leonards have published
the Independence Enterprise for
four years.
Director Appointed
MONMOUTH ITJPD Donald S.
Mayo has been appointed as di
rector of information at Oregon
College of Education, it was an
nounced Thursday by Leonard
W. Rice, president of the school.
Mayo comes to OCE from
Guam, where he was coordina
tor of educational television pro
grams for the government of
Guam and a speech specialist
with the department of educa
tion there.
Senate Amends
Ship Subsidy Bill
WASHINGTON ifi Final
Senate action on a ship con
struction subsidy bill, amended
Thursday to eliminate a 6 per
cent differential for West
Coast yards, has been put off
until next week.
The Senate voted 50-29 to
write repeal of the 26-year-old
differential into the bill, which
continues the subsidy program
for three years at 55 per cent of
cost. Without the bill, the rate
would drop to 50 per cent.
Later, by a voice vote, the
Senate adopted another amend
ment providing that the differ
ential still would apply to con
tracts for which bids had al
ready been opened.
The differential applies to
the construction of government
subsidized merchant vessels.
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Rate Probe
Requested
SALEM tjpi Two slate offi
cials moved this week to com
bat low shipping rates on meat
and packing house products
coming into the Northwest from
Midwest points.
Stale Public Utility Commis
sioner Jonel C. Hill and Agri
culture Director James F. Short
asked the Interstate Commerce
Commission to investigate re
duced rales.
The rates were filed with the
ICC by the Rocky Mountain
Tariff Bureau, Denver. The bu
reau represents most of the na
tional trucking lines.
Hill and Short said the new
rates per 100 pounds are lower
by 30 cents on packing house
products and boxed meats and
about 50 cents lower rates on
fresh meats.
They said the present motor
carrier rates were decided by
the ICC in February 1960 fol
lowing complete hearings.
Further reduction from cith
er' motor or rail carrier may
well spell the end of local meat
packing and slaughtering indus
try in Oregon," they said.
Hill said the motor and rail
carriers have been fighting each
other for this westbound traffic
since 1956. He said each has
offered rates favoring Midwest
packers at the expense of the
industry in the Pacific Northwest.
II I; i 1 'I KlVN ilN i t
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Don 1 room In hiH 1 day or Ittt. Dries In 20 minutes.
Feinting toolt eletn up quickly In pleln weler.
So thrifty!
One gellon does tht welli of in tvtrtgt room. Oott ferthtf,
gives better 1-ooet coverage then most other well paints.
So beautiful !
Hundreds of lovely colors to choose from. All ere guertntetd
washable end they keep their "Just pelnted" look longer.
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'
Young Girl Gives
Fine Definition
COLUMBUS. Ohio CP
Capt. Donald H. Osterhout of
Lockbourne Air Force Base
had a bad moment Thursday
on a television show for chil
dren. He was to talk about a
"kid's day" open house at the
base, when Julie Graber, 4, a j
guest on the show, rose and
announced:
"I know what a sonic boom
is."
Osterhout flinched. He
flies a 1.500-mile -an-hour
F101 jet fighter and is well
aware of Air Force problems
in convincing the public of
the need for the sonic booms.
Then little Julie gave her
definition: "It's a noise an
airplane makes when it's de
fending the United Slates of
America."
Official Promoted
SALEM W The State De
partment of Agriculture has an
nounced promotion of Ben D.
Allen to assistant chief of the
Agricultural Development Divi
sion. He has been marketing
specialist since 1961.
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