The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, June 23, 1949, Page 5, Image 5

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    KRNR
The VJe ef 1U
Rttlttrj Ntws-Rtvlcw
IEMAIMNO HOIHJ TODAT
, 4:0ft Fulton Lewis, Jr.
4:18 Prank Hemingway.
4:3&Pa.ng Parade.
4:45 News.
5 00 B Bar B Ranch.
8:30 Adventure of ChampioB.
S 43 Tom Mix.
8:00 Gabriel Heatter.
8:15 Mutual NewsreeL
8:30 Sport Page.
8:35 Musical Interlude.
6:40 Local News.
6:45 Three-Quarter Time.
8:55 Bill Henry.
7:00 SporUcast
7:15 Music You Remember.
7:30 Here Comes the Bride.
8:00 Hopalong Cassidy.
8:30 Fishing & Hunting Club of
8:.H Mel Venter.
9 00 News.
9:15 Slim BryanL
9:30 Gene Meigs Trio.
9.45 Fulton Lewis, Jr.
10:00 The Falcon.
10:30 Rhythm Rendezvous,
31:00 Dance Orchestra. .
11:30 Sign Off.
FRIDAY, JUNE U, 1949
6:00 Sunrise Serenade.
6:15 News.
6:20 Music.
6:30 Two Ton Baker.
6:45 Music. . .
7:00 News.
7:15 Breakfast Gang.
7:30 Music.
7:45 Local News.
7:50 Music.
8:00 Wally a Coffee Time.
8:15 Victor H. Lindlahr.
8:30 Modern Home.
8:45 Sentimental Memories. '
9:00 Book of Bargains.
Cabinets and Millwork
We have every facility for the manufacture of
first class products.
ASK FOR FREE ESTIMATE
COEN SUPPLY COMPANY
Everything
Floed Sl Mill Sts.
For
6 DAYS OF
FARISS FRIDAY FOLLIES
Everything for
home in this
GREAT SALE
Davenos
Refrigerators
Dinette Sets
Chairs etc.
i
1 ,
ttr
(&(i)lip
Special at Both Stores Jr.
" ' " ' lW f S,0r" N- 2
r-mTTTm1fmTFlmTWmmTP'Q1 S Hiway 99 at
u IJ I 1 4 I "Tl 1 J L"C.X Hy I ' I ,x Garden Valley Rd. '
J1"' ' f WmMmmrm During This Sale Except
tmfh7mm T Sot. 4 Sun.
I 111 IlllllliaisVIIIJIU
i 1 ' f
i , J 4
i h I
J u I
'fSS"5 Rlowouts Harmless
with
SAFETY TUBES
LitrGuard Safety Tubes may someday save
your life . . . they'll certainly save you money.
For LifeGuards will outwear as 'many as three
sets of tires . . . with every tire mile safe from
blowout dangers. You can't get better protection
to save your life.
jaiaStiv:
MBS.
1490
On Ytur Dial
9:15 Music.
9:30 Man About Town.
9:40 Musical Interlude,
9:30 Shopper's Guide.
10:00 News.
10:13 Gospel Singers.
10 30 Say It With Millie.
10:45 Easy Aces.
11:00 Ladies First
11:30 Queen for a Day.
12:00 Music at Noon.
12:15 Sports Page.
12:25 Music.
12:40 Local News.
12:45 National News.
12:55 Market Reports.
1:00 Man on the Street
1:15 Party Line.
2:Q0 Against the Storm.
2:30 It s Requested.
3:00 Johnson Family.
3:15 Music.
3:30 Show Time.
3:45 Local Loan Show.
4:00 Fulton Lewis, Jr.
4:13 Frank Hemingway.
4:30 Parsing Parade.
4:45 Music.
3:00 Meditation and Melody.
5:13 Music.
5:30 Adventures of Champion.
3:45Tom Mix.
6:00 Magic Garden.
6:15 Mutual NewsreeL
6:40 Local News.
8:45 Three-Quarter Time.
6:33 Bill Henry.
7:00 Home Sweet Home.
7:15 Sammy Kaye Showroom.
7:30 The Cisco Kid.
8:00 Straight Arrow.
8:30 Carmen Cavaliers.
8:43 Bob Eberle.
9:00 News.
8:15 Hi Neighbor.
9:30 Scandinavian Melody Time.
The Builder
Phone 121
JSLE
17 AVp
.H,inm.".fnn"l.u:i,imt,f-mnmi)HI. II liMunwsisasawsie
Any fire is a
safer tire with er
Safety Tub
Went U Ktty . . .
D
I, Ordinary
tubi har
. .. i.
o u i wun uu
blowi, tub blowi too.
3. The Life
Guard Tub
fcai two air
chamber!. In
caie of a blowout, only th
outer chamber givei way.
COME IN AND SEE OUR
LIFEGUARD DEMONSTRATION.
LEARN HOW -. -.
l"ssasjBPp
SAMrfaiJkiAsaiM
HANSEN MOTOR CO. TIRE DEPT.
OAK & STEPHENS
ROSEBURG, ORE. PHONE 446
BRITISH BOLSTER HONGKONG FORCE8 British troops disem
bark trom the troopship Empire Halladale to bolster land forces In
Hongkong. Most" of the troops were of the First Battalion, Royal
Leicestershire Regiment. The colony is busily building defense
against possible Invasion of Chinese Communists.
9:43 Fulton Lewis, Jr.
10:00 Affairs of Peter Salem.
10:30 Rhythm Rendezvous.
11:00 Dance Orchestra.
11:30 Sign Off.
The News-Review -lassifled ads
bring best results. Phone 100.
r WALLPAPER 1
ZOO Patterns
18o te S1.20
Poj. Lumber &
164 E. 2nd Ave.
Phone 242
Fuel
s.
2. Instant!
both tire and
tube go flat,
t r e q uent ly
throwing car out of contro!,
4. Reierve oi
air in the
trong cord
fabria Inner
chamber tupporti the car
long enough for a lafe grad
ual stop.
Terms as IdW ei
1
week
ft
(NBA Tttephott)
Dead, Missing In
Typhoon Mount
To Large Total
TOKYO, June 23. UPl The
welfare ministry today counted
137 dead and 1,086 missing in the
furious typhoon that swept South
ern Japan.
Figures differed on the death
toll, however. Police said 93
perished.
Property and shlppine damaee
! soared into the millions of dol
lars.
Included in the missing were
131 Japanese who may have per
ished when the vessel Aboa Maru
foundered off the Southern Hon
shu coast. An American and one
Japanese were rescued from the
ship. The others were feared lost
in the turbulent seas and high
winds.
Most of the missing are fisher
men in the Bungo' strait between
Kyushu and Shikoku, both large
southern islands.
' The Japanese Marine Safety
Board listed 161 fishing boats
sunk and 678 wooden fishing
boats missing.
Reports to the welfare minis
try indicated approximately 2,000
homes were destroyed and 4,000
damaged severely by winds that
reached 93 miles an hour.
No American have been report
ed injured in the typhoon which
swept near the big American base
on Okinawa Island.
'Wholesale' Firecracker
Sale Plea Is Failure
PORTLAND, June 23.-UP)
Emery Bock, 45, sold two pack
ages of firecrackers illegally on
June 14, a Circuit Court jury de
cided Wednesday.
District Judge Frank Day de
cided Bock could continue to op
erate his fireworks stand, now
that sales are legal, and will come
In for sentencing after July 4. Re
tail sales became legal Monday.
Bock at his trial said his sales
were at wholesale which is legal
at any time. He added that he was
being "framed."
SPECIAL
2 FOR 1
JUNE RATE
Type Jobs for Price
ef One
Console combination or au
to radio, and table model ra
dio, both repaired at the cost
of one labor operation.
RADIO DOCTORS
30 W. Lan.
Phone 491 -J
mmJmmmmmmmmmm1 j wonders, he'd be able to get along j aj n J
I DLEfJPEP WHISttEYrl latFM
Of E)
A penny postcard can give
day vacation. It's all embodied
accolade that the "Queen for
starting with Its Monday, June
goes to Hollywood. You, who nominate her by post-card, stay home.
A vacation for both. "Queen" producers have decided that a ten-day
holiday in Hollywood, San Diego, Tiajuana, Mexico, Catalina Islands
and San Francisco, complete with hotel accommodations, sightseeing
and transportation, would be desirable to all concerned. A wardrobe
valued at one thousand dollars and a new automobile will also be
presented to the fortunate mother-in-law, to make her holiday a
completely enjoyable one. Jack Bailey will select one possible
winner from the royal chest on each broadcast beginning Monday,
June 27, and will follow this procedure through Thursday, July 28.
Then, on Friday, July 29, the "Mother-ln-Law-Queen" herself will
be chosen.
. Program notai for tonight: Miss Mlldren Chrlatianien,
a rodao attendant to th. Queen In Roseburg's recent rodeo
celebration, and Jody D. Marsh will divulge marriage plans,
courtship happenlnge and miscellaneous anecdotes on a
personal Interview for tonight's "Here Comes the Bride"
' program at 7:30. At 8, the "Hopalong Cassidy" series makes
. its debut over KRNR. Bill "Hopalong" Boyd, by the way, Is
the most popular personality In show business these days.
He receives hundreds of requests a month to attend various
public functions. ,
Timely sportsmen's tips, fun with the experts, and valuable
prizes feature tonight's "Fishing and Hunting Club of the Air"
broadcast at 8:30. By all means
originating from the Shallmar Room featuring Roseburg's most
popular musical ensemble The Gene Meigs Trio in an all-too-short
fifteen minute session. Fulton Lewis, Jr. brings you the latest
Washington scoops at 9:45 . . . and there's mystery on 'The Adven
tures of the Falcon" at 10. '
Modern Man Will Destroy Himself
Unless He Returns To Spiritual
Ways, Student Of Modern Life Says
' By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK-W Tired of eating the same old things? Want
a new flavor thrill?
Then why not try some tasty marrow from a woolly mammoth
aged for 10,000 .years In nature's northern Icebox? You'll never
forget it. ,
Charles R. Knight has remembered the sensation for 25 years.
He is an artist famous for his pioneering paintings of prehistoric
life. ,
"About a quarter of a century
ago the American Museum of
Natural History got some bones
and flesh from a woolly mam
moth, trapped in the Alaskan ice
perhaps 10,000 years before," he
recalled.
"We were curious as to what t
would taste like, so we tried some
of the marrow. It tasted exactly
like rancid grease."
Nobody asked for a second
helping. Knight feels he was
luckier than some Russian scien
tists who dined on the flesh of an
other woolly mammoth caught
long ago in the Siberian deep
freeze. '
'They got awfully sick," he
said.
All the world's a graveyard to
this 74-year-old . artist, who per
haps as much as any one man
has helped the past come alive.
Since 1894 he has specialized in
painting prehistoric men and ani
mals, and he was the first to do
so scientifically based on recon
structed fossils.
His large-scale murals hang In
a dozen well-known natural his
tory museums across the country,
and his work was collected by
such nature lovera. as the late J.
P. Morgan, Governor Pinchot of
Pennsylvania, and Historian
Charles A. Beard. His fifth book,
"Prehistoric Man," soon will be
published.
Cro-Magnon Our Equal
His 55-year study of the earth
as it was in the days of the dino
saurs has convinced him modern
man doesn't have too much to
brag about.
"Ancestral man has existed for
perhaps a million years," said
Knight, "but he didn't assume his
present manlike shape until the
Cro-Magnon man of Europe, some
30,000 years ago.
"And the Cro-Magnon was Just
as good a man as we are, men
tally and physically. The Cro
Magnons averaged 5 feet 9 inches
tall, but some were 6 feet 3 or 4
inches.
"You could bring a Cro-Magnon
man to New York City today and
after you had shown him a few
wonders, he'd be able to get along
all right."
kOJg)
you and your mother-in-law a ten
In the new "Mother-In-Law-Queen'
a Day" program will inaugurate
27, broadcast. Your mother-in-law
catch tonight's 9:30 broadcast
He'd be able to appreciate tele
vision as well as the next cliff
dweller.
Modern Man "Fool"
Knight Is convinced that "man
kind's biggest defeat is his fall-
COMING
I A . v Jl & i s .si tun! rW f'.i
Thur., June 23, 1949 The
Defense Counsel
In James Trial
Held In Contempt
SEATTLE, June 23. UB The
defense attorney in the trial of
Mrs. Florence Bean James
was
adjudged guilty of contempt of
court by Superior Judge Donald
A. McDonald in a heated session
here Wednesday. The judge said
he would impose the penalty after
the James trial is over.
The action came as John Caugh
lan attempted to hang political
motives on the Legislature's Un
American Activities Committee
which held Mrs. James in con
tempt when she refused to state
whether she had been a member
of the Communist Party.
. Caughlan was quizzing former
Rep. Sydney A. Stevens, a mem
ber of the Legislative Committee,
on motives of the group in an at
tempt to prove that Mrs. James
had been discriminated against.
"Don't you know I've ruled on
this?" the judge asked sharply.
"I gave you warning repeatedly."
"That's deliberately prejudicial
to myself and my client," Caugh
lan replied heatedly.
At this point the judge dis
missed the jury and lowered the
boom by judging the attorney In
contempt of court.
ure to develop spiritually.
"With all our advantages we
haven't advanced spiritually, as
we can and should and must," he
said. "I don't think that spiritual
ly we are better than Cro-Magnon.
"Confucius, Christ, Mohammed
these and other Messiahs have
told us a thousand times what to
do. We know what to do but we
dont' do It.
"I don't know what to make of
modern man. He throws away his
possibilities. He is a deliberate
fool the worst kind of a fool."
But Knight thinks there is lit
tle use for man to trust that na
ture will ball hlrrl out of the
trouble he is getting himself Into.
"He will destroy himself unless
he returns to more spiritual wavs.
He's a goner.
Nature never helped any ani
mal out of a hole. She won't heln
man out either. And he has prob
lems just like any other animal."
SATURDAY AND
SUNDAY ONLY
Al "Lash" LoRue
"Dead Man's
Gold"
SUNDAY
Newt - Review, Rosebura, Ore. S
Britain Buys U. S.-Canned '
Salmon With ECA Funds
ASTORIA, June 23. The
British government has bought
35,000 cases of canned salmon
from, three Astoria firms con
siderably aiding the packers in
clearing out their 1948 stock.
The shipment, bought with ECA
funds, is the largest canned fish
shipment out of the Columbia
River since 1939.
The sale was made by Co
lumbia River Packers Associa
tion, Union Fishermen's Coop
erative Packing Company, and
Point Adams Packing Company.
BIG DANCE
WINSTON
Western Music
Friday, June 24
9:00 P. M.
At Howard's
Hardware
Winston Community Club
STARTS
SUNDAY
nCUFF
w Mora's TOMIUSENTEtTMKtlKa
SMOKY ImUNTjulTlOYsTiSCMH
THE RADIO ROGUES
; ISABEL RANDOLPH eat imsms
' HARRY "PAPPY CHESHIRE
'Tkt TENNESSEE MMtLERS
FRANK ALBERTSON
JOHN CARROLL ADELf MARA
THOMAt OOMIS IAITON MmIANI
NOW SHOWING
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