Friday, Ftb. U. 1951 Th Newi,Revlew, Hosebuifj, Of. I 1 v ' - V r 1 I A'-, f! .A - - ... e-. BJTJ""! " I I I . S . 1 k. F - I . " II i WW I (v A - iv x i & 1 ft 1 1" 1 PRESENT MUSIC FESTIVAL Pupils of the third and fourth gradei I wlntor music festival Wednesday afternoon In the Benson school of Rose, Fullerton, Riverside and Benson schools held their annual I gymnasium. The first and second grades held their program that morning. A large number of parents were on hand for the jsenting a dance number. Singing and Instrumental numbers war occasion. Third graders of Rose school are pictured above pre-1 included in the afternoon's entertainment. (Jenkins Photo) Comic Strips Aid Parents, Psychologist Learns LOS ANGELES WB Instead of causing delinquency, comic strips are a definite aid to parents who want to understand the men tal processes of their children. That's the opinion of David Cole, Occidental college psychologist 1WF mm who has just completed a study of children's preferences in comic strips as related to their personal ities. The professor's findings: Children who have the greatest liking for adventure comics are likely to be the ones most "tied down" at home. Youngsters maladjusted in their home relations were found to pre fer escapist funnies interplane- . WHY BE SICK? Vou've Not trid everything until you see DR. SCOFIELD X-Ray Chiropractor 3 minutes from town on . Rifle Range Rd. i Phone 273 tary war, rocket ,men and other fantasies. "In many cases," says Cole, "the comics simply provide a harmless medium where in the child finds a mode of expressing what his home environment has denied him. The delinquency, if any, is not the comic's fault." Stolen Eugene Safe Found In Gravel Pit Pool EUGENE UP) Police have recovered a safe reported stolen Jan. 29 from Lucky's Club Cigar store in Eugene. The heavy safe, with the door blown off, was found in a pool of water in an abandoned gravel pit between Jasper and Pleasant Hill. Cash, estimated at $900, and some watches, were missing al though the safe was still crammed with soaked checks and papers. GETS RW MOT M 30 SECONDS HEDDAN APPOINTED Young Resigns Farm Bureau Post; Six Resolutions Adopted At Meet ouse ""V THE djmK Westin&i UNIT ON THE II II I v!!-i,Ai"w '" 'in9' ,ihU SEE HOW YOU CAN PREPARE: or doublt-ovtn modeli Piping Hot Soup for four in 3 minutes Afternoon Tea for a quick pickup in 2 minutes Fresh or Froien Vege tables from a cold start to steaming hot In 3 minutes. Ask About Our Layaway Plan OTHER MODELS FROM 179.95 Gets RED HOT FASTER than any other range unit on the market today. 36 N. JACKSON ST. TELEPHONE 268 C. E. Young resigned his post as county director of the Douglas County Farm Bureau at the monthly meeting of that group Feb. 13 in the Roseburg chamber of commerce room. Charles Hed dan, Umpqua center, was appoint ed to fill the position. Considerable interest was shown in the Livestock Marketing as sociation being formed, by which members would be able to pool their stock shipments and ship di rect to stockyards. Bob King, state organizer, out lined plans for a tour of California Farm Bureau offices and centers. Various stockyards are on the schedule and a banquet is on the agenda. Relayed For Approval Six resolutions were received and sent to the Various centers for; approval or rejection. They are as follows: 1. It was resolved that five cents per 1000 feet be assessed on all logs cut in the state, proceeds to be used for seeding logged off areas with an approved grass or legume, to alleviate erosion. 2. It was resolved that the gov ernor be urged to instruct the state highway commission to ease trim ming restrictions so that brush and trees under telephone and elec tric power lines on state high ways not hamper service to out lying communities. 3. It was resolved that the gov ernor be urged to instruct the State Highway commission to re move grass which has been mowed along the hghways, caus ing fire hazards. ORNAMENTAL SHRUBBERY M. LEHNE NURSERY 10 Miles Out In Garden Valley Phone 31-F-15 4. Contending that undue delay by the State Highway commission in granting requests to cross state highways with power lines had hampered irrigation and power systems, the group resolved that the commission be Instructed by the governor to act, immediately on such requests. 5. The group recommended that future state legislative sessions be devided into two periods: the first, to file bills, form committees, study bills and acquaint the public with same, and await reaction; the second, to act on the bills. 6. The group recommended op position to centralization of the public school system untler a single commissioner and state board of five men. thereby taking control away from local school boards. Barring Of Reds To Oregon Ballot Splits Senators SALEM UP) The senate elec tions committee split wide open on the question of whether to bar Communist party members from the ballot. Sen Thomas R. Mahoney, Port land Democrat, asked the com mittee to support his bill to make all candidates for public office swear they aren't Communists, and to state whether they ever be longed to the party. He said his purpose was to con vict Communists for perjury II they swear they don't belong to the party, and he added that two Communists in Portland regularly run for office on other party plat forms. Sen. Warren Gill. Lebanon, and Sen. Richard L. Neuberger, Port land, aisagreeu. "I'm for disclosing the facts a bout whether candidates are Com munists," Gill said, 'b'ut it's not American to keep Com munists from running for office That's far more un-American than anything the Communists do. It's overthrowing a principle of Ameri can government. II you outlaw the Communists from running for of fice, then the next step would be icSi-- to outlaw other minorities, like the Presbyterians." Neuberger said the bill wouldn't do any good because the Com munists don t mind signing false oaths. He said "the problem is to establish security without endan gering our own liberty. Another committee member. Sen. Rex Ellis of Pendleton, suggested amending the bill "to put Com munists in concentration camps." Mahoney said he would be wil ling to accept an amendment pro viding that Communists could run for office, but that they have to sign affidavits saying whether they belong to the party. Mahoney also asketl the cm- mittee to approve his bill remov ing all limits on campaign ex penditures. He said the present limits are violated by all candidates, a nd that the law "is a fraud on the people and an incentive to per jury. The law is evaded by prac tically every candiUate, and I've evaded it myself." The committee took no action on either bill. Philippines Flooded With Phony U.S. Bills MANILA OP) -Police Chief Antonio Amor of Panay city said todfcy an international ring appar ently has flooded the Philippines with $1,500,000 in counterfeit U.S. bills. Amor said the statement was based on a notebook taken from one of four Americans arrested with $8,000 in counterfeit $30 bills in their pockets. The chief said notes in the book showed a syndicate "with all the earmarks of an international ring" delivered the bogus U. S. bills to dealers In Manila, Cebu and Da I vao. The Mason and Dixon Line was established to settle tlissensions between the Lords Baltimore and the Penn family. Home Renovator USE THE BEST TO CLEAN THE BEST THE KIRBY COMPANY of Roseburg SaUi end Service for Douglas County Ivon Molvin Distributor 727 Niba Phone 20S9 eas 'T r.0" -toe We are pleased to announce the addition of H. E. "Dick" DeBar nardi, Jr., to the staff of the Ken a Bailey Insurance agency. Visit ufat our new location Itvhind 0 the Rose hotel Qn Rose St. or phone 398 for answers to your Insurance problems. Ken Bailey Insurance 220 S. Rose St. Phone 398 W-jpy r III K rfMr It. VkW, $42.50 Only ELGIN has the DuraPower Mainspring. ELGIN guarantees it will never, never jireokl Presented for your selection by sltcrat jewelers "The Little Store with the Big Brands" 106 S. Jackson Phone 961 -R