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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 18, 1950)
COO O 12 The Nows-IUvlow, Roseburg, Ore. Mon., Sept. 18. 1950 Annual Flower Show Will Be Event Of Oct. 10-11 At Methodist Church Annual fU (lower show spon sored by the Roseburg Woman's club will be n event of Oct. 10-11 in the basement of the Methodist church, according to n announce' ment made today by the co-chairmen, Mrs. Sig Kelt and Mrs. J. J. Kester. All Douglas county flower growers, nurserymen and florists are invited to exhibit. Special arrangements will be in charge of Mrs. R. L. Whipple with Mrs. Harry F. Hatfield in charge of the dahlia exhibit and autumn flowers, weeds, grasses, and everlasting flowers to be ar ranged by Mrs. C. W. Dishman. Mrs. Kenneth Kord will have charge of fuchsias and tuberous be gonias. Arrangements in copper will be under the direction of Mrs K. L. Tauscher with pitcher ar rangements in charge of Mm. Clyde Carstens. Mrs. Velle Broadway and Mrs L. W. Josse are planning a special Halloween decorated table. Speci men exhibits of foliage arrange ments, potted plant, miniatures and cacti are planned. A candy booth will be conducted bv Mrs. E. J. Sullivan and Miss Alice Ueland and a plant sale will be held with Mrs. Otho Gosnell and Mrs. A. F. Feller as chairmen. All exhibits are to be named and marked and those having exhibits are asked to furnish their own containers. GYPSIES MUST SETTLI PRAGUE ,(At Gypsies still on the move around the fa mom Bo hemian spa of Karlovy ary (Carlsbad) have been told they must settle down and take jobs Many already have done so. Houses for the gysy families are to be made ready in the vil lage of Minchov, the newspaper I'race aaid. Here wn 7. r EVERY Individual And Family Need! GUT MONEY FROM US TO . . . Pay bifli, taies and Insurance premiums l Buy clothing, kerne furnishings and ether needed things Provide for medlcol and dental often- M X Make home aitef oar repolrt Meet any emergency Prompt, friendly service . Monthly repayment . , t Come in or phone Calkins Finance Co. PHONE 466 307 (3rd Floor) Pacific Building M-377 Stat Lie. S-264 Control Of Steel Set By British Labor Government LONDON UP) The Labor government announced it will take over the British steel industry about Jan. 1 Winston Churchill, the Conserva tive leader, promptly declared he would ask the House of Commons to adopt a virtual motion of cen sure. The motion will be debated next Tuesday. If passed, it might lead Prime Minister Attlee to re sign and ask for a new national election. In view of its hairline majority in Commons now only five votes the Labor government had been expected until recently to let the explosive steel issue lie dor mant tor at least a few months The bill placing the iron and steel industry under state owner ship is effective Oct. 1. The gov ernment did not, however, have to set up the corporation to run it or to fix a date for the actual take over at that time. But George Strauss, the minister of suppply, announced that officers of the corpoartion will be named Oct. 2. It will be headed by S. J. L. Hardie, chairman of the British Oxygen company. Strauss, under whose depart ment the industry will operate when nationalized, said it will be taken over on Jan. 1 "or as soon as practiceable thereafter." Churchill jumped up and said he will offer a motion "regretting that at this most critical period in our national safety and affairs abroad we should be by this act of the government plunged into the fierc est party controversy at home." Clement Davies leader of the Liberal party, chimed in with a similar criticism. Rice Valley -O By MRS. CECIL HARTFORD Frank L'lbrigt, Bill La Mar, and Cecil Hartford jr. spent three days in Salem attending the Stale Fair. They also visited at the home of Bill's uncle while there. Mr. and Mrs. Jamea Kidwell are spending their vacation in Reno, Nev. this week. Mrs. Cecil Hartford entertained the county home extension com mittee at her home iii Green Val ley last Saturday. Plans were completed for the officers train ing program which is to be held in Roseburg on Sept. 19. Mr. and Mrs .A. B. Castor of Portland visited last week at the homes of William Castor and Er- I vin Kice. Mr. and Mil. johnny Aemo and two children, of Springfield, vis ih"d last Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Shepherd. Mrs. Aemo will be remembered as Ethel Jean Huckins, formerly of Yoncalla. The regular mmthly card party will be held at the Rice Valley hall on Friday evening. Sept. IS. i Refreshments will be served and prizes awarded. The public is wel come. The Rice Valley club and Grange purchased one dozen new folding chairs for their hall last week. They plan to get one dozen rrore in the future. SCOUT LEADERS MEET LISBON UP) Scout leaders from 17 nations are meeting at the eighteenth century fortress of Das Maias, near Estoril. One of the main items on the agenda was a discussion of what to do about displaced and refugee scouts. W Arthur Mackinney is representing the United Slates. Oregon Traffic ' Death Toll 239 So Far For '50 Incomplete fatality report for Aiisiiat have (Bused Uie eight month traffic death toll in Oregraf) to an increase 01 jo over uie corresponding period in 1848, Sec retary of Slate Earl T. Newbry reported today. The figure could go higher when the final count is made. Oregon's traffic accident pic ture, Newby Mated, looks darker now than at any time in recent years. Reports indicate that traffic accidents and deaths are contin uing the sharp increase first noted early this summer. Such an in crease ta particularly dishearten ing, the secretary said, because it marks the end of a five-year downward trend in traffic fatal ities in the state. . o At the same time, the secre tary's traffic safety division pointed out that large share of the blame for increased deaths could be put on high speeds o n open highways. The division re minded that speed coupled with careless driving are lethal combi nations on the highways. O EVENTFUL DREAM SEATTLE UP) Takashi Arai, a Japanese stevedore, got tired while loading cargo in the No. 4 hatch of the steamship Charles E. Dent at Yokohama, so he went to sleep. , He got a shipboard view of the Seattle harbor Friday. Arai didn't awaken until the Dent was 270 miles at sea. PRUDENTIAL LIFE Insurance HORACE C. BERG Speelal Agent Offlre 712 J Res. S71.J COMPLETE LANDSCAPE CONSTRUCTION New Lawns Now ORNAMENTAL ' SHRUBS & TREES Phone 1210-RX Raymond E. Knotts GARDEN NURSERY 4310 N.Stephens St. raw & u swell people . . . (: and good friends of ours o MIM1EI. HOMITOWK AIIY NIVYlrArUS o Dad reads the sports page . . most of the editorials . . never misses the Hometown news . . and mighty little of the Important national or world happenings. The real Head-of-the-Family catches all the items . . large and small . . on the women's page . . keeps mighty close track of the local news . . looks over most of the comics . . hits almost everything in this Hometown daily newspaper. And they both read the local ads . . over 90 per cent of the women readers and more than 75 per cent of the men (our research experts tell us) read local ad vertising In Western hometown daily newspapers. The point? Why, if you want these good people for your friends and your customers . . we'll fix up an Introduction quick. Just call our advertising department .. pronfoi 0 News-Review PHONE 1 00 O o o o o o o o o o o o tj o o ... 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