The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, July 12, 1949, Page 9, Image 9

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    Lack Of Full-Time Health Officer
Means Loss Of U. S. Aid To County
EUGENE, July 12.-VP) Coun
ties lacking a full-time health of
ficer will lose federal reimburse
ment for the work after a three
months grace period.
The State Board of Health
made the decision here over the
weekend and said health district
units lacking a full time health
officer are Polk and Benton
NOW OPEN
Umpqua Riding
Academy
East Douglas and Ramp
Road. Watch for Sign.
Horses for hire by the hour
or day.
Guides if Desired.
Counties and the district formed
by Union and Baker Counties.
Dr. Harold M. Erickson, state
health officer, explained that be
cause of the wartime shortage of
physicians, federal payments had
continued even If standards were
not met. Personnel is now avail
able, he said. The three months
grace period hinges on hiring an
officer or being committed to
finding one.
Federal grants were approved
i for a new 100-bed wing to the
Sacred Heart General Hospital in
Eugene, for $95,000 to assist re
j building a burned portion of the
I Fairview home in Salem; for a
i $37,000 chronic disease hospital
i at Nyssa and for $128,000 to cover
one-third of a new detached hos
i pital at the State Hospital in Sa-ilem.
Final grants for federal funds
for the 1949-50 fiscal year were
listed as $477,611. New items list
ed were $12,208 for water purifi
fication and $23,341 for heart dis
ease work.
Federal reimbursements on
county salary funds will be limit
ed to separate quarters of the
year. Unexpended funds applied to
other quarters will not be reim
bursed, the board said.
I'M:;. ;
Incomparable!
The dignif-od charm of many
an admired room can be cred
ited directly to tasteful use of
graciously designed Corner
Cabinets. Imagine how one of
these Cabinets would . bring
grace and charm to your din
ing room! Ask us to tell you
how LITTLE the cost is.
Preservation Of Resources
Urged On West By Visiting
Izaak Walton League Head
wf-. ' ' ' ' j
WALTER FRYE
National President, Izaak Walton League of America.
People everywhere are In favor of conservation but few of them
know anything about it.
The foregoing conclusion has been reached by Walter Frye,
national president of the Izaak Walton League of America.
Mr. and Mrs. Frye, of Wooster,
Ohio, were overnight visitors in
Roseburg, stopping at the Hotel
Rose en route back to Portland
after a trip to Grants Pass for
; discussions with waiionians re
'garding proposed construction of
j high dams on the Rogue River.
After visiting at Giants Pass
they went to Gold Beach and
Iwere taken on boat trips up
1 Rogue River, then traveled the
Coast route and Roseburg-Coos
Bay highway into Roseburg for
an overnight stop.
Mr. Frye reports he Is combin
ing a vacation tour with a good
will trip as national president of
the Izaak Walton league, travel
ing at his own expense. He has
visited conservation leaders in
Washington and Oreeon. and will
make stops in Montana and
North Dakota before returning
POINTERS FOR LONG
DISTANCE CALLERS
How you can save money on your
cross-country calls-and help
us give you still faster service
a r , S
... v-Tr
1. Even before you call, you can start getting the most
for your money. It's a good idea to make a list of the things
you want to talk about. A few handy notes can help make
sure you- won't think of something you really wanted to
say after you hang up. Experienced long distance user
keep paper and pencil at the telephone and make notes
while they're talking, too.
"WM-W ;: Til
'V V"'.' J- if i' : .4 y ..a
2. When you place your call, you can save time all
around if you give the information to your long distance
operator this way: First, the name of the town you're
calling. ..then, the number if you know it, or the address.
(Good idea to keep a list of the outof-town numbers you
call most frequently.) Next, if it's a person call, give the
name of the one you want to talk with.
4. Wise use of the telephone either local or long dis
tance helps you get the greatest value from it And serv
ice is constantly growing more valuable. A local call is still
just a few pennies. And you can make a daytime station
call from coast to coast for only $2.50, plus tax... a real
bargain in these days of higher prices.
3. When you complete your call, be sure to hang up
promptly and properly. If you remember to use these
pointers every time you call long distance, you'll be cer
tain of getting the most from your call for the least money.
With really efficient use of the telephone, you can pack as
many words into a three-minute call as you can in a letter
and you'll get an answer to your questions right away.
. Your telephone is one
of today's biggest
bargains.
The Pacific Telephone (m mp company
American Husband Enjoying One
Of History's Greatest Comebacks
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK.--W) The American husband hat becom the
eighth wonder of th modern world. s
The other seven are (1) Sophie Tucker, (2) the Berlin airlift, (3)
the four-dollar British pound, (4) the Empire State Building. (5)
Texas andor California, (6) Soviet Russia's foreign policy and (7)
Joseph Paul DIMagglo, the Yankee clipper.
Like "DiMag," the U. S. hus
band is enjoying one of the great
test comeback in history.
Time was when he was merely
a crass beast of labor responsible
only for bringing home the ba
con. The rest of the tlnje he was
just an over-stuffed lump of pro
toplasm that sank Into an over
stuffed piece of furniture and
gave off annoyed grunts when
disturbed.
But all that's changed. Papa's a
new man. Mama has to call him
"daddy" again now and she has
a hard time keeping up with him.
She can't afford to let herself get
frowzy and fat. Papa's taken the
inner tubes off his midriff, and
if she doesn't do likewise, why, he
puts her on a 9-day diet He knows
what grub has the most vitamins
and grows the least blubber. He
doles out her calories like a miser.
This 1949 husband is a bird of
fresh plumage. . He's doffed the
dun uniforms he's worn for the
last fiftv years. No longer does
he back away from pastel shirts
or shy from summer neckties that
look like a cross-section of the
northern lights. Pap's discovered
color and he likes It. He Is also
the first one under the family
sunlamp and the last to leave.
Gives Mama Lessons
Yes, sir, the old man seems to
have made up his mind that any
thing his old lady can do he can
do better. He's got mama taking
lessons in interior decoration, and
he thumbs through the ladies'
magazines looking for new reci
pes he can amaze neighbors with.
He may leave the kitchen a mess.
but when have you ever tasted a
more wonderful salad? (The gar
lic flavor usually dies out of your
lonsus in tnree aays. .
to the Midwest for a series of
conferences. He conferred in
Roseburg with Bruce Yeager,
newly elected president of the
Oregon Wildlife federation, and
Charles V. Stanton, a director In
the Roseburg Rod and Gun club,
the Umpqua Basin Conservation
council, and a member-at-large in
the Izaak Walton league.
Leadership Lacking
People of the United States are
rapidly becoming conservation
conscious, Mr. f rye reports, but
there is a definite lack of leader
ship to direct the public in an ef
ficient program. Too few people,
he said, know the fundamentals
of true conservation and, without
leaders, the conservation senti
ment is leading in many wrong
directions.
"For many years," he said, "a
majority of our people thought
that conservation concerned only
fish and game. Then a few peo
ple began to realize that it meant
more and better crops more
wheat, more apples. Now we are
becoming aware that conserva
tion means the difference be
tween starvation and plenty. We
are discovering, in some areas at
least, that conservation of water
means the difference between
life and death. We have yet to
teach people that conservation
means coordinated management
of soil, water, forest and wildlife
and that all are so closely inter
woven and Interrelated that none
can be considered without equal
consideration for all."
People in eastern states are far
more conservation conscious than
are the people of the Far West,
Mr. Frye said.
This," he added, "Is because
our problem in the East Is one
of restoration. We have allowed
our resources to become depleted,
our streams to become polluted,
our forests to be destroyed, our
land to become exhausted. We
face the difficult and expensive
job of restoring these resources
we have so carelessly and negli
gently wasted.
Here in tne ar west you stm
have your resources. You should
Drofit bv the experiences oi our
eastern states and save the things
you have."
tnrouie nonn irom KoseDurg
this morning, Mr. and Mrs. Frye
stopped at Winchester to inspect
the Umpqua river counting sta
tion and the Roseburg Rod and
Gun club's recreational grounds.
Papa isn't satisfied with just
dishing out the weekly household
budget money. He's become a bar
gain hunter himself now. He
prowls the shops on his days off
like a beagle hound looking for
the cheaper pork chop, the sale
priced sport shirt.
'These men shoppers are worse
than the women ever were,"
growled our family butcher the
other day. "And the way they
watch the scales you'd think
they never saw an honest man in
their life."
Some time back I wrote a piece
about how papa was taking more
Interest in household affairs. Back
came a number of hooting letters
from unbelieving ladies saying:
What husbands? not mine!"
1 Well, girls, It's true. Papa's go
ing to give you more and more
competition around the place.
He's discovered that keeping
house Is fun as long as you don't
have to do it all the time. And
he's going to take more of a hand
In it.
Dare Gets Results
I know a teleeraDh editor out
In Joplin, Mo., who told his wife I
she ought to make her own 1
clothes. j
"If it's so easy, why don't you
do It?" she said.
Darned if he didn't. Now he !
makes clothes for the whole
family.
In Alabama the husband's are
getting so good at camellia grow
ing they take the prizes at flower
shows that their wives used to
win.
"Well, at least It keeps them 1
out of pool rooms," said one frus-'
trated lady. j
The low-down In business Is '
making husbands even more j
thrifty, Recently a friend of mine
went into a store to buy some
hand-knit wool socks, The price I
Tu., July 12, 1949 The Newt-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 9
Triplet Sons Born To
Eugene Negro Couple
EUGENE. July 12. - UP)
Triplet sons were born here Mon
day to Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Johnson, who promptly named
their new offspring Terry, Jerry
and Perry.
Dr. Daniel Bond, who delivered
the youngsters at the Negro
family's home, said the boys
were wrapped in different col
ored blankets to prevent any
mix-up.
Each child weighed more than
six pounds at birth and were
healthy, Dr. Bond reported.
$7.50 a pair shocked him.
"I can make them cheaper than
that," he said.
He's taken up knitting.
NEW LOCATION!
Dr. H. B. Scofleld
Palmer Chiropractor
Rifl Range Road
410 ml. North of
County Shops
ORlo Houra 10-lt ind S-S
Saturday! 10-11 A. U .
X-ray nturo-calomttcr aanrla
for iplnat corrtctlon.
FLOORING,
SIDING and FINISH
PAGE LUMBER t FUEL
164 E. 2nd Ave. S. Phone 243
In Oregon It' .
McCredie Hot Mineral
Springs Retort
Highway Travelers ,
Welcome, Too.
On Short-Cut Highway it
McCredie Springs, Oregon
Special!
General Electric
10 Cat Pop Machine
(Water Cooler)
EXCELLENT CONDITION
$150o
Canyonvlllo Bible Academy
Don't Mist tht Savings On
Chrome Dinette Sets
5-Piece Set 3-Piece Set S-Piect Sa
3988 4988 5988
AND MANY OTHERS
FREE DELIVERY-EASY TERMS
222
W. Oak
r IrM.llthts il
Phone
348
250 to 50oo
-K down buys you
YOUR OWN
HOMESITE
Your choice of these desir
able homeslte lots Just $25
to $50 down, the balance on
easy terms. I have a tract
of 22 lots adjoining the
"Fair Acres" tract, 3'i
miles north of Roseburg off
Highway 99. The lots mean,
ure 60' x 85' and 100' x 85',
your choice of orchard or
view lot while still available.
For sale by E. Rldenour,
owner. -
All lots are accessible, city
water and Copco electricity
available. Full selling price
Is $100 and up depending on
the lot of your choice. To In
spect these homesites drive
North on Hlway 99, turn
right at the Log Cabin store
and continue to end of street
and inquire at Ridenour resi
dence. Or simply phone
7.I0J-5 for more Informa
tion. The choicest sites will
sell first so we ask that you
inspect these lots now
whether you wish to buy at
this time or not.
It Is LOWELL'S policy not to carry over seasonable merchandise. Many
items, while very wearable in the wardrobe must not stay in the store.
IN THE GIRLS DEPARTMENT
GOWNS & PAJAMAS
NOW
r 2
48
PANTIES
SLIPS
Rayon or cotton white or
Pink Sizes 2 to M. 69c value-
pair tor 100
NOW or 30c each
Ono group
cotton, white or
for clearance. Rayon or
pink. Tailored or lace.
NOW
for 1
I
1 00
BLOUSES
Slightly soiled on group only
NOW
GIRLS DRESSES
Both regular or chubby sizes
Rayons & cottons. Sizes I to 14
1 00
I50 250 350
Size 10 to 14. Dressy
SUB-TEEN DRESSES andacn7cao-,oRnayon
SUB-TEEN SKIRTS
Size 10 to 14 Ideal for
the smaller figure.
00 2j00 00
550
150
IN THE LADIES DEPARTMENT
DRESSES DRESSES
DRESSES DRESSES
All dresses reduced for clearance, Juniors, Misses, half-sizes,
sheers, crepes, cottons. 1 and 2 piece. Both regular and maternity.
JJ88 J88 988 88 3
88
SLIPS
Tailored and lace trim white.
Tea Rose and Black 32 to 42.
5.98 quality Now
3.98 quality Now
GOWNS
Sizes 32 to 40 In assorted Seersucker, Now
styles and colors both O00 i00
tailored and fancy.
Rayon, Now
PAJAMAS
Sizes 32 to 40 in assorted colors Seersucker, Now
and styles. Both man-tailored Q00 00
ers T
and dressy styles.
All other
CXAIki CI IITC 1 ond 2 piece styles in both 6.00 quality, Now
jVTIIVi JUI I J knit and Lastex. Asst. colors.
7.98 quality, Now
lOO 00 roo
SKIRTS
Clearance of summer skirts.
Includes cotton, gabardine, and worsted.
300 4c
GIRDLES
Discontinued line reduced
for clearance. Tea rose only. One group
388
)38
500
338
5oo
5 00
600
600
388
MANY OTHER SPECIALS STILL IN EFFECT .
All Sales Final
All Items Sube
to Prior Sale!