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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1948)
4 ftOSGBURG NEWS-REVIEW. H6SEBURS. OREGON. FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1948 ELEVEN usy O. S. C. Graduation In June Set OREGON STATE COLLEGE Commencement weekend events this year, June 5, G and 7, will bein Saturday with what is ex pected to be the largest alumni reunion in history and will end Monday with far the largest graduation ever held here. 'Ap proximately 1175 degrees are to be conferred, some 300 more than BUTTER HEALTH! HMMrkM iMfal mm Ciln wfrit UUt ImM wMmit Hoapltal Write Of Mil for FUI MiJ llr-vi Priltjl HlMmtKM tvmmjii MU,. Wtdmadf, Mhi mut I Dr. C. J. DEAN CLINIC MyalcJoa atf Surgmm W 1- Corasr K. Burnald and Grand A the highest previous number. Alumni registration will start Saturday, June 5, at 10:30 o'clock, featuring the Silver Jubilee class of 1923 and the Golden Jubilee class of 1898. Mrs. Francis Ben son Roeser of Corvallis is heading the reunion committee for the "war ciass" which entered college the fall of 1919. It set a new high record of 522 graduates when it finished. Dr. W. J. Gilstrap, Port land, is heading the '98 class that had about 25 members in the graduation ceremonies. Reunion luncheons are sched uled at noon Saturday followed by a reception for alumni and faculty members at 4:30. Busi ness affairs of the alumni associa tion will start with a board of di rectors meeting at 10 o'clock and the annual general business meet- NOTICE Dr. H. B. Scofield Pacific Bldg. Palmer Chiropractor Summer Office Houn 10 12 and 2 . 5 Saturdays 10 12 A. M. X-ray neuro-calo-meter service for spinal correction. CHIROPODIST FOOT SPECIALIST Dr. E. W. Carter 1291 N. Jackson St . (Over Rexall Drug Store) Hours 9 A.M. 5 P.M. (Evenings by Appointment) Telephones Office 1170 Residence 495-L SAWDUST SLAB WOOD PLANER ENDS Immediate Delivery DENN-GERRETSEN CO. Phont 128 402 W. Oak TICKETS FOR SHERIFF'S POSSE RODEO on sale STARTING SATURDAY, MAY 15 Look For Booth At ROY'S STORE This Year! All Seats Numbered And Reserved TICKETS 1.50-3.00 Fed. Tax Incl. OPEN DAILY FROM 12-5 ''.uitiT,,ijjgBwwgi'.-"" ; Budworm To Be Attacked With DDT An- QUITS HIGH COURT William L. Hillyer, 80-year-old lawyer, poses in his Washington home after resigning the right to prac tice before the Supreme Court in protest against what he term ed a growing tendency for the court to write its own law. He told a reporter he believes he is the only person to quit the high court bar. (AP Wirephotol ing at 3 o'clock. The newly or ganized O.S.C. Foundation will hold its annual meeting at a din ner given by President A. L. Strand. Baccalaureate services will be at 11 o'clock Sunday with com mencement at 10 o'clock Monday. Both of these events will be broadcast over the state station, KOAC. Norway, Denmark Ask U.S. Arms for Defense WASHINGTON. May 20 Knrwnv and' Denmark have ap nea pel lo mo unueu amies iui arms and ammunition to bolster their defenses, government oni cials announce. The officials reported the ad ministration is giving theso re quests "sympathetic considera-tion." Both countries, the targets of rnnontMri nttneks bv Radio MOS COW recently, have expressed keen interest in American ma chineguns, rifles, anti-tank and anti-aircraft weapons and ammu nition of all kinds. This is the first disclosure that any member of the Scandinavian block is turning to the American government for military help in the present tense world situation. Atomic Plant Scientists Facing Loyalty Check OAK RIDGE, Tenn., May 20 (ffl-Wo Oak Ridge scientists have been suspended from access to restricted atomic information pending clarification of their loyalty status. (An atomic energy commission official in Washington said the In vestigation "involves character and associations" as well as the regular loyalty check made of all Atomic commission employes;. This was disclosed yesterday by an Atomic Energy Commission official who withheld use of his name. , , . The official said the scientists still were employed in atomic re search and that their status had not been changed "except that they no longer have access to re stricted data." PENDLETON, Ore.-(.W Other forest killer is to get a taste of DDT. Supervisor Carl Ewin" an nounced today that about 5.000 aci-es of Umatilla National For est near Heppner will be sprayed this spring to test the killing power of DDT on spruce bud worm. He said a budworm Infestation was threatening about 710,000 acres of Eastern Oregon and Eastern Washington fir forests. Not many trees have died yet but the outbreak has reached a "critical stage," he said. Spraving with airplanes and helicopters will start about June 15. The experimental area 6,720 acres, will be divided into 15 420 acre plots. Twelve of these will be sprayed and the other three left as checks, Ewing said. Tussock moth virtually was wioed out in 14.000 acres of for est near Troy, Ore., last year by DDT sprayed from pianos out its effectiveness against budworm has not been verified fully, he said. The experiment in the HeDpner district will attempt to test the lethal powers of various solutions of DDT. The budworm. a pale green caterpillar less than half an inch long, eats ine neeaie ouus oi fir, pine and other trees when thev beein to swell in the spring. This stoDs the tree from "breath ing. The tree cites it most oi us needles are destroyed. John B. woods, Jr., assistant state forester, will boss the nroj ect, Ewlne said. Ground surveys will be made to determine status of the infestation in each plot prior to treatment. A temporary lnmlintr field will Be Bunt in tne area and headquarters will be established June 1 at Tupper Guard Station. Ewing said cost of the project would be about $10,000. It should be completed by Aug. 1. Al Flegel Meets Old Friend Unexpectedly When Mayor Albert G. Flegel said farewell to the party of Har old E. Slassen, Republican presi dential aspirant, at the Umoqua Hotel Wednesday morning, one of the press correspondents told him, "I know vou. You're Al Fle gel. Who am 1?" Flegel, somewhat taken aback, said, "Wait a minute. Your name is Davles. Lawrence Davies. I knew you at Willamette Univer sity in 1920." Davits, now San Francisco correspondent for the New York Times, was an outstanding athlete at Willamette in his student days. r.iegei recaneo. ne nnu l.wils had not seen each other since then, but Davies knew one of Fie- gel's brothers in San Francisco, i He remembered the name, when I it was announced here. ! lower retail price for milk In stores. Sinner said he had resigned because he has come to agree with the argument of a major chain store that store outlets should be permitted to sell milk one cent below the price for home delivered milk. He ex plained he wanted to be free to speak as an individual on the milk issue. Sinner said home delivery costs are higher, because of bottle breakage, credits and door-to-door service, a:id should be higher. TRAFFIC FINES LEVIED Twelve persons paid varying fines on an assortment of over load violations in the Justice Court this week. Justice of the Peace Hartfiel reported Wednes day. He said they included: Scott V. Ferguson, Calvin O. Person, Clifford D. Wheeler, each S10; Clell H. Holleen, Wilbert D. Weaver, each S15; James E. Laney, $20, and Oral T. Harris, $25, all overloads; Morris B. Strader, Gordon B. Larson, Clif ford D. Crandall, and Benjamin O. Hadley, each $10 all axle over loads; Kenneth S. Anderson, speeding with truck, $10. ENDURING QUALITY Bad-Breath Pupil May Be Whipped, Board Holds BECKLEY, W. Va May 20. IJF) The Raleigh County Board of Education has upheld a school principal's right to whip children who come to class exhaling the odor of "ramns." The ramp is a particularly powerful branch of the wild onion fnmily, which children herealwuts sometimes nibble on the way to school. Fred C. Roberts, principal of the Trap Hill High School, testi fied the smell "could be likened to that of a polecat," and said some of his pupils were made ill by the breaths of offending classmates. Milk Distributors' Head Quits Over Price Policy PORTLAND, May 20 CP) J. L. Sinner. Portland milk dlstrib utor who resigned the presidency of the Oregon Milk Distributors association, has broken from an association policy opposing a ilii RICH-MAID Ice Cream 1.39 per Gal. Car Sundaes & Milk Shakes to lake out Always Parking Space 632 S. Stephens Phone 1181-R Foreign and ' Domestic Granite Monuments Designed To Your : Specifications ORDER NOW FOR MEMORIAL DAY MONUMENTS-MARKERS-MEMORIALS HARRY G. RAPP Representing: L. L. Jones & Son 7330 S.W. Macadam Portland, Ore. Phone 621 707 W. Moiher Son Flees with $6,000. Grandma's Life Savings CLEVELAND, Mav 20. UP) Lakcwood police were informed today by a worried mother that her 12-year-old son had run away from home witn b,uuu. i-ossiDiy three other boys are with him, police said. Mrs. Laverne Beyer of Lake wood said her son, Kenneth, dis anneared with the money his grandfather's life savings late yesterday, Lt. Robert cormn re- nnrled. She could offer no reason for his behavior, Corbin said, since there .had "been no trouble at home.' T ": House Votes $4,000 For Victim of Vaccination WASHINGTON, May 20. UP) An Army doctor's vaccination of Miss Sylvia M. Misetich of Portland, Ore., will cost the gov ernment $4,000 if a House-approved bill becomes law. Miss Misetich, a civilian em ployee of the Army, asked for $7,500. Saying she was unable to use her left leg for a year as a result of an infection which de veloped from the smallpox vac cination. The House reduced the amount to $4,000 in sending the bill to the Senate. Cottons at New Low Prices TRY PHYLLIS CAFE for home cooked food. 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