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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 2, 1950)
o o o c. s. Chistmos Shipping ;pU7 frr - y. VriOrPINSUvi Clirslmas CAR AILING? Then It Needs the Attention of a Highly Trained, Welt Experienced Specialist Authorized Hudson Mechanic MECHANICAL REPAIRS ON ALL MAKES Body & Fender Repairs AUTO PAINTING Use Our High Quality Work Phone 1768 Roseburg Hudson Co. 702 S. Stephens Jimmy White Jw Trio fSp? Now Playing at o oo t5)n 379 fofreservltioni i. o. In October a vs. E) M E) By CAROL KERR A it grocery clerks haven't al ready got enough to do. the Mu-! tual network press department has' been thinking up some pretty com-1 plicated ideas to add to le cares and burdens of the lads in the ! white aprons just when the latter would like to be listening to the World Series baseball ?ames. Says the network press department's "press - exploration suggestions sheet" briutit item number lu: ''Supermarkets or other tood chains, particularly loose stressing saav of eggs, might go for a 'how many goose-eggs will be chalked up' tie-in with the M uti'al World Series broadcasts. Displays of their white eggs, surmounted by an inning-by-inning chart of game progress, would be the basic idea. As a matter of fact, where ciphers are to be enlred in th line-score, they could mount these white eggs instead. A sure picture-grabber. ' (Series begins on KRNR Wednes day, Oct. 4 . . . . 9:45 a.m.) TONIGHT: "Cisco" and his faithful companion, Fancho, ride into a situation to rescue a sheriff vho haled "The Cisco Kid," during trn episode titled "The Sheriff Who Hated Cisco" (7:30-8:00 p. m.) . . . "The House that Jack Built" titles tonight's adventure drama with George Valentine on "Let George Do It" (8:00-8 30 p. m ). Bob Bailey, star of the highly rated program, has unleashed another talent. Bob has written his first screenplay in collaboration with Bill Hawks, brother of filmogul, Howard. Titled "By Torchlight," it is an adaptation of Violet Mc Neil's novel "Four Whit' Horses Talking About a Home? So many people do noth ing but talk about it! But it yn really want o n our home, consult me now Persona1 ittention. Economical terms RALPH L RUSSELL Loans ond Intu once Loan Repretenative Equitable Savings A. Lean Atari. 11? W. Cast Phona 913 iinr.U o BO 3 B and a Brass Band." Book's author is the famous ex-pitrhwoman of carnivals and the Chataugua cir cuit Washington, D C. will be linked with the Korean Theater of Operations for Mutual-Don I.ee'1 "War Front-Home Front" tonight (10:15 10:451. In the na tions capital will be MDL com mentators Fulton Lewis Jr., Frank F.dwards and Joseph Mctafferey, with Everett Holies as moderator. Frcip Tokyo, Mutual bureau chief Robert Stewart will have with him two war correspondents who have just returned to General MacAr thur's headquarters from Korea. An unusual feature of this pro gram will be playing, from the Tokyo broadcast studio, of a typi cal "Seoul City Sue" propaganda broadcast by th North Korean Communists and obtained by Slew t from the UN command au thorities in Tokyo. PROGRAM CHANGES: Week day "Break.'ast Gang" program will be heard in its entirety, first portion and second portion, (7:15 7:45 a. m.) . . . "Sons of the Pi oneers" shift to the 7:45 to 8:00 a. m. lime period, weekdays. KRNR Mutual Broadcasting System 14t On Yrur Dial Remaining Hours Today 4 00 Fulton Lewis Jr MBS 4. IS Hrmirtwiv-MBS 4 :m Homemakrs Club 4 4.V Sm Hue MR4 5 0O Mark Trail MRS 5 10 Challenf of ih Yukon MRS ott Mafic Urfn A IS World of Sport W Silver Shower 6 4.1 Sam Ha 'tS (CM Rill Henrv-MHS 7 oo Sleep time Tale 7 IS Brown Orchestra 7 to Cico Kid MRS 8 00 Let George Do It MRS S TO You Name It 4.1 Cedrie Fntr MRS f isO Newt MBS II Fulton Lewla Jr. MRS IW-PI Neighbor a 4.1 t'er-tonaltty Tim f .VI Ftv-Mtnu Final MR 10 oo I Love a Mvitery MBS 10:11 War Front-Home Front MRS 10 4.1 Hank Mu.ie Shop 11 2.1 New Nighlfap 1130 Sign Off titfsdat. orTonrx t. ms oft Coffee Club Caper ;to Farm Fair 4.1 Rioe and Shirt-MBS 7 00 Hemingway MBS 7 II Breakfast Gang MBS 7 ;io Son of Pioneer 7 4.1 Local Nvwa 7 V Muile 8 m Cecil Brown--MBS ft; 11 Favorite Hvmni R;tO-Haven of ReM-MRS A -on Modern Home A' 1.1 Piano Favorite 0 ;tn Man About Town ft 4.1 Brighter Sid IfllHt New MBS 10:1.1 Tello-Tet MBS 10 30 Sav It with Muiir 10:4.1 Ma gar.ine of tii Air 110nl,adie Fair MRS 11 :m Queen for a Dy MRS 12 (n World Newi 12:1.1 Matinee Melodlce 12 .10 Local Newt 1?:.V1- Market Report 100 Man on the Street 1:11 TreaMire Chet 1 ,-u Modern Concert Hall 2 oo Tune-O 2 ;(0 National Guard Show 2 4, It' Roquented n .TO School Show ,1 4.1 Good N'rwi Pgm. 4 00 Fulton Lewit Jr. MRS 4:15 Hemingway MBS 4 7-Behind the Slnrv MRS 4 Sam llae- MBS I oo straight Arrow -MRS 5 IIO Skv Kmc -MRS 5 .VI Bo'bhv Benion MBS fl'00 Gabriel Hew tier MRS '1.1 World of Sport r);io SiUer Shower 4.1 Sam Have MBS 6 1.1 Bill Henry MBS 7 OO Sleepvtime Tale 7 1.1 Chuckwagon Jamboree 7 TO Melody time ft OO Song of Libertv MRS 8 .Hi Joving Jamboree 900 New-MBS 9 1 5 Fulion Lewi Jr. MRS 9 10 f e tor More 4.1 personality Time 5. VI Five Minute Final MBS 10 OO I Love a Mv.tery MBS 10 IS Muiic You Want 10 4.1 Hank a Muaic Shop I I 2.1 Newi Ntghlrap ll.:K-Sign Off Raymond F. Davidson On 'Showboat' Carrier One of the "Showboat" sailors in the Far Fastern area is Ray mond F. Oavidson, seaman, USN, of 828 Hamilton St., Roseburg, who is a crew member aboard an air craft carrier participating in the Korean campaign. His ship, a carrier of the Essex chss. was titled "Showboat" by her crew, the name stemming from the fact that she was fre quently used as an orientation ship for civilians and military person nel on training exercises. WORLD SERIES BEGINNING WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4 9:45 A.M. ' o G O o o Yankee Soldier Now Able To Appraise Korean Campaign With Real Sense Of Humor ly HAL On the road toi Ion a th front. out l An For tht first time th A marie art look t the Korean campaign with ot humor. Ha hait lost hit aruAam tat'tnti For long weeks ha was daxed by the realize- U -iJ f M tionr,that h wat an outpost warrior of a land Jtl waalthy bayond befiaf but a land too waalt lA-r M militarily to quickly tattle t ptaca-thrtateninq war in an obicurt and backward oriental nation. Men and machines now have appeared on th battlfront to and tKa days of sacrifices and to muicle through to victory. And that hat restored th faith of army men in th Ameri. can homeland. Soma of them have been overseas so long that subconsciously they had com to think of th Unitad Slatai chiefly as a supply bas that had helped them occupy Japan in comfort. The middle and upper level army i trass, however, is less happy than. the average rifle-carrying foot soldier. The casualty rale, as usual in warfare, has been particularly hiKh among junior officers and nun ! corns. They arc the ones who must generally tell the men to get up! and go and who must them per- sonally lead the privates into battle. ; At ih. i-nmhut l.v-l th- .,n,v feels it has lost, in a small-scale 1 war. too many trained soldiers who ought to be saved for a possible large scale action. These include the battle exper- World War and ihe young grad- ueles of West Point, in whom the country has invested thousands of dollars lo learn Ihe tactics and the strategy of warfare. I A cynical officer of the national; guard would put it this way: "The war in Korea come up so fast that Ihe regular army had lo light. They didn't have lime to; corral and train the civilian draf tees." But a staff officer of the regular army said w h.t tn fiuhi wiih uht I had. We have lost in combat men!1!"0 from down comforts to Arc. who ought to serve as a trainmgt lie Jackets And the hearing barelj corps for the future. na", ,,rl, before Kmanuel Lien 'Anrt u In' tilled nfr rutnrn 1 leadership here during ar emer-1 gency that we may need later in a bigger war. The west I'oinl class of 1949 in particular had been hard l it. We have lost 1'eutenants we might want as generals 10 years from now. And they are gone." This doesn't concern the aver age soldier in an army he joined for security and which suddenly had plunged him into the insecur ity of battle. More signed up to learn trade than signed to hold Bonds To Speed Highway Jobs Approved By Board PORTLAND .P) A proposal to issue bonds to speed road im piovemenls in Oregon got a mea sure of approval Friday from the state highway commission. The proposal came from a Jack - son county delegation, urging wid - ening of the Pacific highway lo four lanes from Ashland to Cent - ral point. Commissioner Charles Reynolds, La Grande, commented. "Bond is - cum r n.r.v it no .r bring our highways up to proper standards.' Other commissioners indicated they also might look with favor on bond issues, hut said legislative approval would be needed first. The Jackson county delegation advocated the bonds as a way to finance improvements speedily. They said that with bonds it would take only four years to do what otherwise would require ten years. C ommissioners also told Ihe Jackson delegation that the entire Pacific highway through Oregon is being studied for improvements. Mony years of service A , BERGH'S APPLIANCE M'wayi dependable v For To con'tae- w,on9 Maytatj Washers The washer supreme and Automatic Washers Absolutely efficient Term, (o Suit Guaranteed service '200 S. Stephens St. EXCLUSIVELY OVER o o K R N cR IOYLI mere n titt ot laughter soldier can r e raal tenie I hit eauntrv. I " a hill in Korra. But they re tinJing fun again now just aa the drafted soldiers did in the last world war when the tide turned. They've got back to quarrelling about thr tram that will win the World series, "The war is all over," jokes veteran. "Really no kidding?" says recruit hopefully. And the answer comes: "Yeah, all over the next hill Bl,t ' ' " The United Nations n ""I hr' w,r in a long HroP lor ra peace. FOafTl Rubber HdS pAntht?r IndlJltrV W"' l,,UUJI1 J Badly Ruffled . Bv ARTHUR L. r.DSON WASHINGTON I.T) The feather industry has its feathers rufi.ed, and it's all because of foam runner. This came out at a Federal Trade commission hearing. J he fit is trying lo work out fair trade rules for the fealher and down people, who make every vl 4" 1 m He's a duck man himself. Ren esenls the growers out on Long Island. I.icht said he'd like the fair trade code to forbid a feather merchant from advertising his produce as "non-allergic." "Non-allergic," 11 turns out, H a fighting term in the feather in dustry. "The foam rubber business," I.icht said, "has got Ihe public ' fully prejudiced against feathers "They began their campaign In 1948. They derided our industry, and claimed that their product Is non-allergic." Here Licht paused for effect. "There isn't such a thing as "nothing is non-allergic in itself. I People can be allergic to any thing." Maybe you never have thought 1 about it, hut feathers can be com 1 plicated. The hearing bogged down for 20 minutes over a definition of 1 the word "down." Here's Ihe way Ihe FTC pro- 1 Ved to define it: 1 "Down means the underrating of waici'fowl, consisting of clusl- , " ot lich J1""? arb or fila mcnts grown from one quill point, without any quill shaft." After working that over, the feather men got along okay until they came to a definition of "crusht'd feathers." One fellow said crushed feathers could be either (A) crushed or (B) curled. Another fellow said, no, that isn't the whole story. His couyiany. he said, twists it crushed feathers. That's all I ran tell you about feathers. I slippe d uncertainly away, completely crushed, curled and twisted. o o HAL BOYLE Mon., Oct. 2, 1950 TH Ntwi-Rviw, Rotcburj, Or. I Trek Of Students Affects Nation's Labor Picture W'ASIUNGTON l.in Both em-1 ployment isil unemployment i dropped betwcV August and September as large numbers of , sludenia left Ihe labor force to re turn to classrooms. The census bureau, reporting this, said: 1. The number with jobs declined t l.2Jii.wio tn September. This was 1.141.1X10 below August's record high, but siill the greatest number ever recorded for the month of September. 2. I'nemployment fell 1.W.0O0 to a September total of 2,341.000, low est since December. 1948, when there were 1.941.000 jobless.' There was nothing in the date ta diminish fears of a growing man power shortage as the nation ap proaches expansion of the defenseJ eiiori. The September employment total "exceeded last year's (September) level bv about 2.000.000" and was 1.000.000 abov the number ot work ers in boomtime September, 1!K8. The bureau said employment on fauns accounted for 34H.OOO of the decline in workers this month while non-farm employment was drop ping 792.000. "School-age persons accounted for virtually all of the changes," the bureau said. The armed torces, just beginning a steady expansion, increased from 1..137.0O0 in August, to 1.4.13.0O0 as of September 9, thus taking 116.000 men out of the lalior force, the bureau reported. North Korean People Given U. S. Assurances NFW YORK -J.Vv-Voice of America broadcasts to North Ko rea are stressing that the North Korean people will not be held responsible for the war acta of their Communist leaders. A spokesman for the Stale de partment's radio said that pro grams beamed to Korea also are assuring unification of the I country, and the stamping out of rvnn.'n;. militarism. 1 OIL TO BURN for prompt courteous meter ed deliveries of high quolity stovt and burner oil CALL 152 Ask for our automatic fuel check . . . It's FREE. We Clve St H Green Stamps With Every Purchase MYERS OIL CO. Distributor of Hancock Petroleum Product For Douglas County TONIGHT iifruw eaasaeaaV HII.L W ILLIAMS - ANE NIGH RAIPH MOKtiAN -ALSO- 4l i h 1 W W li j TiCHtfCOlOA MAM MCftTtZ JON HALl SABU-MHANBEX J iishriCUMMIfJGjf UaVti Dun fJS-J scott.jtnn r!;, STARTS WEDNESDAY ra m aa m Mr Passion Play Ends With Heavy Attendance Mark OBKRAMMKRGAU, Germany UPi The curtain went down Friday night at this year s last perfor mance of the 31fi-vear-old Oberam- mergau passion play, Tn, pay na, been performed every 10 yeara since 1634, with interruptions only during World War 1 and World War II. Play official! estimated that 500,000 visitors from all parts of the world came for this year's ! performances. They paid som $.000,000 Deutsch marks ($1,900. 0001 lo see Ihe perlormances. Tha biggest group of foreign visitors were ftu.ooo Americans. COMING !?DANCELAND October 12 WANDA HENDRIX JOHN LUND TATL0CK$ MILLIONS1 2ND FEATURE 0ARDER mm RicaraaMONTALBAN George MURPHY HcwtftMM bmMHIM HimM MOSS UtoM fWiM Ends Tonight JOHN WAYNE "Sands of IwoJima" -AND "Campus Honeymoon" BOXOFF!C OPENS 6:30 NOW SHOWING A f ootboJJ Hero and a Rose Queen in Trouble In College lV DlaNA CHARLES VI ivwM.rnRiioM k T LI II II VUWUI1II CREINWQOO COMING WEDNESDAY r v v Tomorrow -3 DAYS tA MIOWION I ROOT CALHOUN I o (Xfuwvmua Qooo o F 0"o oo 14900nYturDialOO -a