12 The Newi-Revitw, Roseburg, Ore. Sot., Aug. 20, 1949 Copy Of Marketing Agreement Now Available To All Filbert Growers J. F. Bonebrake, chairman of the Douglas county agricultural conservation committee, today reminded all local filbert grow ers that they may receive a copy of the marketing agreement and order recently discussed at a publiq hearing In Portland by contacting the local A. C. A. of fice, at 321 Pacific building Rose burg. Copies of the proposed agree ment are also available from the county agent of the agricultural extension service in the Post Of fice building. Discussed at Monday's public hearing in Portland was a pro posal to establish pack specifi cations relating to grade and size requirements for unshelled filberts. Minimum standards o f duality designed to prevent culls and off-grade filberts from being marketed as unshelled nuts was also considered. Under the proposal, all filberts marketed in unshelled form would be required to meet pack specifications and minimum standards. Federal-state Inspec tion would be required. Market able supply of merchantable un shelled filberts would be adjust ed to demand each teason, by establishing a salable percentage applicable to each handler's transaction. Surplus filberts YOOR SNAPSHOTS J mom than em ( WHiH HIARCtD 99 OUR EXPERTS J Then big prints make wonder ful additions to your Kodak Album. They're olio luitabU for framing or mounting. See us today. Prompt service. Clark's Studio and Camera Supplies 105 S. Jackson Phone 331 IT'Sfl V vrvr With r ' &S I y,m rmn I ff J favorite " I, dance - eoon iniitantljr available the year 'nmntl. IroMrly frozen foods retain friginal flavor ami mW Dfii, too. And preparing food for freezing U a rinrh compared to old fashioned method. You'll wonilrr how you trot along with out HAKIrlHreea once yon hae one In your home. Ninea trip. Nnir timm. Save money, frerenta tMMfe. fc'ntfi rirtuigmry. would be shelled or exported. The proposed program would be administered by a seven-man board selected by the secretary of agriculture from a list of nom inees submitted by the Industry, and would serve for a one-year term. To obtain funds for operating the program, handlers would o assessed at the rate of two-tenths of a cent for each pound of un shelled filberts marketed. Nude Lady Stalls Boston Traffic; She's 5 Years Old BOSTON, Aug. 20 LT) A pret ty blonde nude except for while panties stopped traffic at Bea con street and Massachusetts av enue. Horns sounded tne motorists whistled. Then traffic officer Jo seph Ahearn took her to the Back Bay police station. There she explained after much prompting that her name was Brigld McHugh of Cam bridge, daughter of Massachu setts Institute of Technology stu dent. She was hustled home some distance from the scene of her traffic conquest. Oh, yes, her age five years old. Her mother said she'd done it many times before. The least used letter In the English alphabet is the letter "z." FORD ENGINE Wan parts restotl with new, Gm uiitt Fwd Parts whirl Ktasury. $11950 96 yovr old mngkm Lockwood Motors Rosa and Oak Phone 80 f Vifi Short irith ---r liar tier Mrvvz I tame Iochvr 1UH in It inHni-'.RFYera mntea In Vhmt (12. 18, and 2t ru. ft.) or I pright (9 and 18 cu. ft.) MmlcU. ith ample rapacity for storing hundreds of fro sen delicacies. ilve voiir familv a ntr fmni thhllt with llAKltfcKf ree lw rric! imv yw food a in altun- in and out nf f r f flHaf I III I BOUGHT THIS TO CHECK UP ON r JZH ' SOUK. PAINTER'S COLIC FROM L I. PAlNTINCi TWO SCREENS...VOUR WWyZ '!; 'CHARLEY HORGES" FROM TH' LAWN- WK f MOWER REAP THIS A CHARLEY j I HORSE IS A STIFFNESS IN ARMS WZlL. , ! V AND LEGS OT BALL PLAVERS." fVXE , . GET BACK TO kiW Um j 1 TT LAJ LAWNJ WHY MOTHERS GET ORAV J OUT OUR WAY By J. R. K. Of C. Urges U.S. To Cast Off Moscow Stooges PORTLAND, Aug. 20. .) The Knights of Columbus organ ization is urging the United N Hons to shuck off the Russian Europe. A resolution passed at the an nual convention of the Catholic lay organization Friday decri ed the "brutal totalitarian re gime responsible for the deten tion of archbishop Beran and the torture and imprisonment of Car dinal Mindszenty and Archbish op Stepinac." The U.S. representatives to the United Nations were asked io "take all steps available to them to bring about the condemnation of these crimes against human rights, and to purge the United Nations of their perpetrators." Delegates passed unanimously the resolution, announced earlier. opposing the Burden bill that would limit federal school aid to students at public schools. The resolution asserted there was no chance of "the possibility of union of church and stute, if that might be conceived as a dan ger, occurring from aid to other than public schools." Another resolution favored cre ation of an international zone at Jerusalem to assure "free access to the sacred shrines." -INSURANCE-AUTO LIFE AUTO FIRE State Farm Mutual Insurance O. L. ROSE P. O. Box 489 Phone 288 116 W. Cass Over Douglas County Bank my at Urn tlrtti -41 Modeling Course Taken By Canyonville Woman- Miss Helen Adele Hoskin of Canyonville has completed .ier course in the Barbizon School of Fashion Modeling in New York City and recently returned to Canyonville. While studying at the model ing school, she was given the privilege of modeling In a fashion show sponsored by the school on Hlin avenue. She was also photographed by tne jew York Mews In Kocke- teller Center, with a display of gifts sent by Hawaii to the United States, consisting of a chieftain's thatched roof hut filled wih birds of paradise and hundreds of beauiful orchids. On the outside of the hut were banana trees, pineapple plants and many other varieties of plants and shrubs. Miss Hoskin completed the ten weeks' course In three weeks by working extra hours. As she pre fers to work on the West Coast, she has returned with recommen dations for fashion modeling in several West Coast cities. Huge Liquor Bill Of Americans Told At WCTU Meet PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 20.-CB A temperance leader asserted today that Americans are spend ing $1,004,566 an hour for alco holic drinks. Violet T. Black, of Evanston. III., told the Woman's Christian Temperance Union at its 75th dij mond anniversary convention she arrived at this estimate "by di viding the number of hours per year (8,760) into the $8,800,000, 000 reported by the U. S. Depart ment of Commerce to have been spent by consumers in this coun try last year for alcoholic bev erages." Miss Black is treasurer of the WCTU. She said, "This money, wasted for a product which is mankind's greatest enemy, would finance the building of 100 acutely need ed homes, costing $10,000 each every hour of the day or night." She concluded: "The total drink bill, however, cannot be estimated without add ing a sum equal to that spent for beverages, to cover the cost nf drink-caused crime. Insaniy, disease, broken homes, poverty, and other human and economic waste." Mrs. Olivia B. Davis, of Dal- ipE Ifv OUI WINDOW I MM Williams las, Tex., director of the WCTU's Christian Citizenship depart ment, remarked that the aboli tion of the liquor traffic in Ameri ca "would greatly advance Christianity in all foreign fields." Bad Example Abroad She declared: 'The greatest detriment to the advancement of Christianity in India, according to its lead ers, is the drunken American who reels along the streets of its ci ties. The Mohammedan mind cannot differentiate between an American and a christian." Mrs. D. Leigh Colvin, of New York, president of the WCTU charged "drinking by U.S. offi cials at the Yalta and Potsdam conferences was greatly respon sible for concessions made to the Soviets during the talks." The WCTU head said U.S. rep resentatives at the conferences wondered "how the Russians could consume such large quan tities of Vodka and keep sober, when it had such an intoxicating F CONSISTENT ADVERTISING IN THE NEWS-REVIEW PRODUCES A PROFITABLE RETURN ON YOUR INVESTMENT Whale Dead For 18 Years Sheds Odor In Casket ST. HELENS, Ore., Aug. 20. l.P) The residents along Batche lor flat road had almost forgotten the mighty whale until the wind shifted one day. "Whew," they cried, "what is that?" Authorities found It was Indeed a mighty whale dead for 18 years. It was the celebrated whale that frolicked in 1931 in the Columbia river at Portland, 100 miles from the sea. Two orchardistg harpooned it, and had the 1500-pound body em balmed. Thousands went to see it on display In a Portland street. Then for a while Jt hung by its tail in the county courthouse t Portland. Later it went on tour about the state. But the state also claimed the whale, and for eight years Ed ward and Joe Lessard, the har pooners, fought the case in courts. The Lessards took final possession in 1938. But the public had lost interest. So the Lessards put it in a casket in their Batche lor flat orchard above ground. Casket cracks obviously devel oped recently. Authorities have ordered a burial for the mighty whale at long last. effect upon the Americans." "But," she added, "we have learned since that Stalin and the Soviets outwit the representa tives of other nations by plying them with Vodka while the Rus sians drink water from Vodka bottles." SHETLAND PONIES Rides for children on picnics and special occasions. CALL SHETLAND ACRES 529 Pitzer St. Phone 1105 J Stud service also available FLOOR SANDING and FINISHING Estimates Leslie Pfaff 320 Ward St. Phono 1349-J A MERCHANT THINKS TWICE BEFORE GOING INTO PRINT. HE SHOULD THINK TWICE BEFORE STAYING OUT. Truman Health Insurance Program Stirs Hot Dispute Between Medics WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 A decision by Minnesota doctors to advertise in the newspapers stirred up a hot dispute Thurs day between the physicians and backers of President Truman's health insurance program. The Committee for the Nation's Health, a private organization supporting the President's pro gram, called the action "an open bribe to the press of the state" in the battle against health Insur ance. The doctors promptly denied that. So did a spokesman for Min nesota publishers. The flare-up was touched off by a statement issued here by the Committee for the Nation's Health, which is headed by Dr. Channing Frothingham of Boston. "In its fight against national health insurance and the other measures of the Truman health program," the statement said, "the American Medical associa tion's $3,500,000 lobby is throw ing overboard one of'the essen tial standards of strict profes sional integrity which has been observed as a tradition through the years to protect patients from euacks and commercialism." j The committee added: J "The wording of the resolution (passed by the doctors) made It I clear that the sacrifice of medi- j cal ethics was being offered as Do Not Lose Money Because of Saw Break-Downs! It costs you money when your power chain saw la broken or does not operate at top effiicency. Bring your chain saw to your repair headquarters, Pacific Chain Saw Co. Many repairs are only small and It takes so little time to have them repaired when first detected. Small bugs In your motor now can mean bigger re pair bills if not corrected soon. P ACIFIC CHAIN SAW CO. Hiway 99 North Phone 1152-J X an open bribe to the press of the state." In Minneapolis, R. R. Roseil, executive secretary of the Min nesc?. State Medical association, denied that, adding: "If we wanted to deliver a mes sage to the public, we couldn t expect the newspapers to carry it except on an advertising ba sis." Allan Mcintosh, president of the Minnesota Editorial assocla clon and publisher of the Luverna I Minn) Weekly Star Herald, said: "The whole thing is so absurd It's hardly worth commenting on. There is no deal as far as Min nesota editors are concerned. W haven't solicited the doctors in Rock county for advertising and I doubt whether doctors in other counties have been approached by newspapers." French traders and missionar ies first settled in Wisconsin in 1670. i PAINTS All Kindt PAGE LUMBER & FUEL 6" ti. 2nd Ave !. Phon- 2t? A v f R0SEBURG REFRIGERATION X FURNITURE COMPANY J Phone 270 324 N. Jockson 117W. Cast Phone 10