I GLENDALE School Expansion Plans Discussed AtPTAMee By MRS. GERALD B. FOX Glendale District 77 Parent Teachers Association at its final meeting May 9, heard a discussion on the proposed new four-room school addition. Supreintendent Theodore Lang and School Board Chairman Howard Edson discuss ed the proposed $65,000 bond is sue for the school annex, modern ization of the old building and construction of a teacherage. They also discussed school voting laws. New officers, elected at the last meeting, were insialled as fol lows: Mrs. Flo Cox, president; Mrs. Stanley Jantzer, vice-president; Mrs. Howard Mart, treasur er, and Mrs. Joe Fachet, secre tary. Refreshments were served bv the first grade mothers. Celebration Planned Glendale's Chamber of Com merce is looking forward to a big Fourth of July celebration, com plete with fireworks, sports and oratory. According to present plans, an eight-man committee is to be ap pointed for the occasion. The planning board will be composed of Glendale, Azalea and Wolf Creek residents. Negotiations are being made with a carnival company, and chamber workers express hopes of obtaining a full assortment of rides, shows and concessions for the crowd's entertainment. Returns for Mill Job A. C. Kenny, former general superintendent for the Robert Dollar Company, who has been more recently with the Roseburg Lumber Company in Roseburg, is back in Glendale as local man ager of the Hayward Mill here. Mr. Kenny assumed his post May 1, with the Hayward Mill having ' been thoroughly re-built and modernized in recent months. Contacted at the mill Thursday, Mr. Kenny expressed himself as being glad to be back in Glen dale. He had no comment on his appointment, saying that since his return he had been too busy with the woods operation to spend much time around the mill and the town. Ball Swells Fund The firemen's ball, held April 30 in Giendale, cleared $315.33, which will be added to the fund the Volunteer Firemen are at tempting to raise toward a down- payment on the purchase of a new fire engine. The fund now amounts to $336. Other affairs are being planned to raise addi tional amounts. A party and box social will be held in the near future. The fire truck being con sidered at the present time will require about $3,000 down pay ment. Utility Lines Extended California-Oregon Power Co. Is extending its electric service in the vicinity of Glendale with a new line down me old Reuban Road to a point three-quarters of a mile below Reuban, across Cow Creek and back up the new Reu ban Road toward Glendale. It will- give service to all those In that area who do not yet have it. Fourteen new customers are al ready being served, and eventu ally, the line will bring electric service to a total of 44. Most of the holes for power poles are al ready dug, and completion of the line Is being delayed only by the difficulty of clearing rlght-of-wav. particularly in one stretch of land the owner of which has not yet been located. Animal Gifts Available Local residents had supposed the Glendale Branch of the Ro bert Dollar Co. dealt only in lum ber, but it has come to com munity attention that it Is also in the "free pet" business. The company offers, free, a - large and friendly mother cat her four new kittens born in box after she wandered Into the Dollar office 10 days ago, are spoken for but have to stay with their mother a wnue longer. Other free pets on the list, to be inquired for at the Dollar office, are four Irish setter puppies, all female, but according to their owner, nice dogs. PALLS FROM LADDER Paul Sloan, pre-school son of rushed to the Josephine General ment May 7, following a fall from a ladder, placed against the siae 01 a nouse. rus mjuuca aic not believed to be serious, and he was allowed to return home. BROWNIE GROUP EXPANDS The Glendale Brownie Troop has grown so that the leaders, Mrs. Flo Cox and Mrs. Joe Fatch- ett. were forced to ask for help, and the group has been divided into two sections. The new lead ers are Mrs. L. A. Boone and Mrs. Jess Mitchell. BIBLE QUIZ CONTINUES TUa RtHla Omit Klria nrnpram is being continued in the Glen Aa Rnntict Church. The win ner for May 1 was Sylvia Boone, and the w:nner on the evening of May 8 was Erwin Boldt. Chap ters studied for the respective evenings were mar, i ana &. Emily Post Offers Booklet On Auto Manners NEW YORK .P "A gentle man will no more cheat a red light or stop sign than he would cheat in a game of cards." Emily Post speaking. "A courteous lady will not 'scold' raucously with her automo bile horn any more than she would act like a 'fishwife' at a party. "Primitive, Irresponsible, dis courteous and impatient behavior behind the wheel of an automo bile has no place in society , . . "The well-bred person will see courtesy and well-mannered hu man conduct in practically every traffic rule." These are quotes from a traffic safety booklet, "Motor Manners," issued by the National Highway Users Conference. Mrs. Post, whose name has been synonymous with rules of eti quette for many years, wrote the pamphlet free of charge. It's to be distributed free to individual motorists. The grateful highway users an organization of groups such as truck drivers and the American Automobile As sociation tendered Mrs. Post a luncheon. The principal speaker was Fed- Hot Dogs, Ice Cream To Vanish In Tomorrow's World, Savant Predicts NEWARK, N. J. UP) There'll be no hot dogs and Ice cream in the world of tomorrow. They are too expensive on a eral Works Administrator Philip B. Fleming, general chairman of the President's Highway Safety Conference. He said: "Mrs. Post has put her un erring finger on the very heart of this whole matter of highway safety." "geochemlcal" basis. That's the prediction of Prof. Eugene G. Rochow of Harvard. But there will be compensa tions. There may be machines that build your house with earthenware bricks as it digs out the foundation. When you wake up In your new adobe house, you'll pull off your pajamas and eat them for break fast. The professor was awarded a $1,000 prize for his research In Thur., May 12, 1949 The News-Review, Roseburg, Or, sand derivatives. The ban on hot dogs and Ice cream must come, he said, because the world is eating up its resources too fast. Prof. Rochow said meat and eggs must disappear from man's diet because the animals produc ing them consume too much food. Si' that leaves tenderloin steak out of the picture too in Prof. Rochow's bright new chemical world. Clothes must come from syn thetic materials, he said, and must be made so they can be turned Into sugar and eaten. The mainstay of man's diet, he told the North Jersey Section of the American Chemical Society, would be trees. He suggested the could be made digestible by converting the cellulose in them Into sugars. Prof. Rochow has a name geochemistry for the science that can turn us away from our present "suicidal trend." BOY CUTS CHIN Eric Ross, first grader, fell off the Glendale School's merry-go-round Thursday and had to hav three stitches taken in his chin. The World Moves So Do We Packing Crating Storage See Us for Free Estimates Agent for Lyon Van Lines Phone 927 Evenings 329-J-3 Roseburg Transfer & Storage By PopularRequest ... i We REPEAT this RED HOT SPECIAL! 8H M Aiifl 1 I U CUT FROM THE SAME QUALITY BEEF AS OUR BEST T-BONE STEAKS' Here's Some More Real Values in Our Meat Section! Fresh-Lean PORK SPARERIBS LB. 45c GROUND BEEF Ground fresh daily lb. PORK SAUSAGE Country style lb. LINK SAUSAGES Pure lean pork lb. PORK ROAST Meaty shoulder cut lb. PORK STEAKS Tender meaty lb. 59' FANCY HAMS Sugar cured BACON JOWLS Bean pot delight lb. SLICED BACON Fancy, lean 'b. PIECE BACON Cudahy's Puritan FANCY FRYERS Ready for the pan lb. ,, 55' 25' 59' 65' SIRLOIN STEAKS Lb. 69c GARDEN-FRESH PRODUCE Enjoy these flavorful spring varieties now. Every item is carefully selected by our expert buyers I RED RADISHES GREEN ONIONS Heap a bowl on the dinner table tonight Large C Munch J Sweet PEAS Gardenside Brand Grown in the Northwest TOM Aft Canned Food Values Fancy Peas b.h. no. 30) ctn 1 6C Westvale Brand New, Solid Pack No. 2 I Mont. Ne. 2 can 15 19c Spaghetti (With M..t l.lli) eenSI' 35 New Potatoes o. Spinach Emerald lay Ne. 2' can Tuna Fish Biltmort, saaionad. 'A can Celery Soup camPb.n i io', c14c Coffee Savings Hob Hill Coffee K; 47c L 93 Airway Coffee ff, 45e 1 89c Edwards Coffee lisic k.2.01 Swift's PREM With beef added 39' Can HOT SAUCE Gardenside 4ns19( No. 2V2 Can At Random Values Tender, young Peas 2 lbs. Plump, Green Or Pods XJC White Rose No. 1 New Potatoes The Kind You Like 4 lbs. 23c Graham Crackers e-ib. Pia.49 Enriched Flour "Zl ,JV Tillamook Cheese D. R;nd ib.65 Candy Bars ft 6 , 25c V; 98 Butter Fingers 6 25c b,Y 98' Air Wick Killi enpleeiant tie bol. 69C Red Polish om j . 25 ASPARAGUS lb. 29c 8c GOLDEN CARROTS Smooth tender onet lb. SPINACH 2 b. 25c LETTUCE HEADS Q Fresh, crisp leaves lb. GREEN PEPPERS Fine for stuffing It RHUBARB For perfect piei SQUASH Zucchini solid TOMATOES Red, ripe flavorful I2-oi, 29c lb. 419c lb. 225c 25c fiktt in this ad eYecfve thru Saturday. rVt reserve fAe right to limit ROYAL SATIN 3-lb. Can SHORTENING 83c CRISCO Famous 3 Lb. Can SHORTENING 89c HALEY'S 16-os. Can MEAT BALLS 39c WELCH'S Peach or Apricot Preserves ub.jar 27 PLAYPAIR Popular Dog Food 3 cans 23c DUZ Granulated SOAP 20li-ox. pVg. 29' PAR-GRANULATED Largo Size Improved Soap 53c WHITE KING SOAP Granulated Reg. pkg. 29' Bath O AIT Ai3e size Mm bars 4aV Reg. for afcijF LUX TOILET SOAP 2