f a A ' i
MODERN ROMEO SENTENCED Costa Kephaloyannis (right I
tits In the courtroom at Canea, Crete, durinq his trial on charges
of forming an armed band to kidnap 19-year-old Tassoula Petra
cogeori (left). They were married last September, 12 days after
he seized her and carried her off to Mount Ida. Costa, who was
arrested when the couple went to Athens to seek the blessing of
the church, has been convicted on a charge of carrying arms
without a permifSand sentenced to two years in jail. (AP Wire
photo I
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Phone 1865
Movie On Cancer
Shown At Kiwanis
Club's Session
Cancer is the uncontrolled growth
of one or more cells or tissues of
our body.
This information was brought out
in a motion picture, "The Cell,"
showed to Kiwanis club members
nd in literature distributed at the
club's meeting Tuesday noon in
the Hotel Umpqui.
The film was shown by Miss La
vinia Fulton, county health nurse.
in cooperation with Dr. E. J. Wains-!
cott, county health officer.
The motion pictures showed the I
composition and action ol cells,
described as the basis of all ex
istence and the smallest living or
ganism. The growth of cells in the
human body under normal circum
stances was first shown, and then
the growth of unnatural cells, or
cancerous growths were illustrated.
The literature pointed out that
cancer is not a disease of the or
dinary type not a germ not con-
! tagious nor communicable it is
! not inherited, although the ten
i dency to develop may be inher-
itcd. Cancer deaths are expected
j to xcd 175,000 persons, 83,000 of
whom will be men, in tne uniiea
States this year.
Early recognition of the symp
toms of cancer and prompt atten
tion by a physician may save many
lives, it was brought out.
Dr. Wainscott, who is chairman
of the Kiwanis underprivileged chil
dren's work, reported that 18 cases
have been cared for and that three
or tour tonsilectomies on children
have been performed without cost
to the patients. Cases are carefully
screened and only thos which can-
"Blondlt" Comic Strips
Delayed By Rail Strike
"Blondie" comic strip readers
are asked to force a smile for
just a few days longer and the
famous strip will again appear in
The News-Keview.
The comic strpi Is distributed
by a syndicate with headquarters
in New York City. During the re
cent rail strike, the shipment of
the comic strip "mats" wasvde
layed. This has resulted in no
"Blondie" in the paper on Tuesday
and today.
Soldier's Gripe Kept
From Public Record
WASHINGTON - V A gripe
from a soldier in Korea saying "to
hell with a country" that sends un
trained youths into combat was put
into the congressional record and
almost immediately withdrawn.
It was- relayed to the House by
Rep. Tackett (D-Ark) in the form
of a letter which he said came from
an Arkansas national guardsman
now serving as a master sergeant
in Korea. Tackett did not identify
the writer but said the guards
man comolained about untrained
youths being sent into combat
while trained regulars remain in
the United States.
Tackett withdrew tne letter ana
his own remarks after Rep. Cox
(D-ga) said it might furnish
"headlines to the Russian press."
"I am fearful" Tackett explained
in seeking permission to withdraw
the letter, "that the remarks made
might be of some service to the
enemy." '
not afford to pay the cost them
selves are taken over by the club,
he said.
UMPQUA NEWS
THE NEW BABY OF THE 4TH ESTATE
CANYONV1LLE, OREGON
How to put a
dial telephone to work
February 24
(at midnight)
Roseburg's dial telephones will give fast, accurate service
Your new dial telephone, with its new num
ber will go into service at midnight, Saturday
February 24. For that's when hundreds of switches
at your telephone company central office building
click into place. You'll then begin "giving orders"
to your telephone . . . calling your number with
your finger tips!
Installing more than 5,500 new dial telephones.
putting in complex switching equipment. . . build
ing the new central office home ... all this has
taken time and money. But now we're ready to go.
We're expanding with Roseburg . . . and want our
telephone customers to enjoy the most modern
telephone service.
Three easy tips for swift dial service:
1. Look up- all Roseburg telepnone numbers in the new directory . . . betoiv.
you call. Numbers you are using now . . . and will continue to use until February 24
at midnight . . . will then become "wrong numbers."
2. Listen for the steady "hum-m-m" of the dial tone before you dial. That's
your signal that the dial equipment is ready to handle your call. Please wait for
it . . . you'll save time.
S. Dial carefully and promptly, keeping your eye on the dial. Turn dial each
time all the way to the stop, letting it return at its own speed. (But please remember
not to use the dial until the February 24 change-over.)
February 24
(at midnight)
Pacific Telephone
' " - ft ..... :.- '. :-!-' ... . ;
t'-Z'ff; f-rAV ' v.
U r . ? M Hi i J
!
Wtd., Fab. 21, 1951 Th Ncwi.Ravlew, Roseburg, Ort. 3
of Mr. and Mrs. J. F.
by tin r-oi Mustang
CAPTAIN ROBERT R. BONEBRAKE.son
Bonebrake, Roseburg, is shown standing
fighter-bomber prior to taking off on a close support strike over
North Korea.
Capt. Bonebrake was commissioned in December 1940 at
Kelly AFB, Texas. In January 1949 after various assignments
throughout the air force, including overseas, he was again alerted
for movement overseas, this time to the Far East air forces, being
assigned to the Fifth air force. At the outbreak of hostilities in
Korea, Capt. Bonebrake was transferred to the 18th fighter
bomber wing in Korea as an F-51 Mustang fighter pilot.
At this advanced Fifth air force base, Capt. Bonebrake has
helped make it possible for this Wing to complete over 7,000
close support strikes for United Nation ground forces against the
Communist invaders.
The Captain's wife, Betsy R. Bonebrake is presently residing
at 1 13 Davis Ave., Taylor, Texas.
Baptist Church
Dates Features
Rev. Raymond Schaeffcr an
nounces that a number of special
features has been slated at the
First Baptist church during the
next several weeks.
On Feb. 25. a special film, en
titled "Good News," will be shown
in the church parlors at 7:30 p.m.
The film is the story of a Baptist
Negro school.
Mrs. Raymond Schaeffer will
give a talk on the Ne?ro church
extension work in Sou hi Carolina
on Feb. 25 at 6:15 p.m.
On March 4, a film entitled
"Chrisitan Centers" will be shown
at 6:15 p.m. At 7:30, the same
date, Mrs. A. V. Peterson, a horn
missionary speaker from Alaska,
will speak at the church.
An evening service will be con
ducted by the Baptist Youth Fel
lowship March 11. The service will
be preceeded at 6:15 by a Baplist
in town and country work pro
gram.
frequent accident types were side.
swipe collisions and other colli
sions Involving turning and back
ing maneuvers of the heavy ve
hicles. These accidents inflicted 36
injuries, none of which were fatal.
American Soldier In Korea
Under Far Less Strain Than
Civilian In United States
Bv HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (AP) Coming back from Korea to
America today is a disturbing adventure.
It is a voyage from an uneasy war to an uneasy peace.
The soldier there is less tenseinmany ways than is the ci
vilian here.
That is a startling first impression to one returning to
the United States after more than half a year in the Far
East war theater. When you are in a battle area, home be
comes a shining paradise you long to get back to. You for
get it has fly specks.
School Patrols
Prove Effective
The work of Oregon school pa
trols apparently is paying off, ac
cording to a recently completed
study by stale highway department
accident analysis.
Accidents involving school age
pedestrians were cut 50 percent in
the first six months of 1950' as
compared with the same period
in 1949, the report shows. Only
1.2 percent of all school age pe
destrian victims were struck at
crossings guarded by police of
ficers or school patrols, with no
resulting fatalities. In 1949, a 2.4
percentage was recorded.
More than 100 such patrols are
now in operation to supervise the
street crossing actions of other
youngsters, under an accelerated
program sponsored jointly by the
secretary of state's office and the
highway department with the ac
tive assistance ot state and local
police. .
The study listed 193 school bus
accidents during the school year
1949-50, 136 of which took place on
rural roads and highways. Most
lnJf
- . - - r . j years is a
" "V. 1 ' m e" 1 "
l 1 man haa to
wdMswabf c o n d 1 1 i (
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a lot about HADACOL, but just
didn't quite believe it. Finally, he
decided to give it a trial and was
amazed at the results. He started
feeling better after the first bot
tle and says he is going to con
tinue taking HADACOL. Mr. Nix
found that HADACOL contained
Vitamins Bl, B2, Niacin and Iron
which his system lacked.
Here is Mr. Nix's own statement:
"Sometime ago a friend of mine
recommended HADACOL very
highly to me. At the beginning I
was very much amused at the
thought of HADACOL. However,
I did decide to give it a fair trial,
and to my amazement, it helped
me greatly. 1 was rundown, tired
and had no appetite. After the
first bottle of HADACOL, I felt
better. My appetite had picked up,
and I really felt like eating at
mealtime for the first time in a
long time. I feel that the Vita
mins and Minerals, which HADA
COL contains, have built up my
rundown condition, and I intend
to continue using HADACOL."
But I suppose the extraordinary
tension here, so surprising at first
glance, is only normal, considering
the troubled times.
Nothing causes tension more
than uncertainty. The soldier in
Korea is more relaxed in some
ways than the civilian here because
he basically knows better what to
expect. On the next hill, or the
hill beyond the next hill, are en
emy Chinese or North Korean
Reds, and he must fight them. But
the American civilian is beset bv
nameless fears about his clouded
future. He doesn't know for sure
what is coming across his horizon
next, and the shadows he sees
are black indeed.
The chief worry everybody
seems to have is, "I don't know
what to plan for." That goes for
the teen-age boy, the old couple
caught between a fixed pension and
rising prices, and businessmen
who don't know whether they will
be able to go on making buttons
or have to start turning out gre
nade pins.
Tension With Prosperity
Everywhere thre are signs of
a tremendous prosperity, enriching
more people than any other period
of good limes in history. More peo
ple have more money to spend
than ever before. And as vet there
is more to buy with it than ever
before.
But it is a tasteless prosperity,
a banquet of plenty under that new
sword of Damocles the atom
bomb. There is a widening fear
that the bomb will fall and the roof
cave in, destroying the banquet
and the diners.
The greatest shock of my re
turn home came when 1 entered
the elevator to ride up to my apart
ment. The first thing I saw was a
poster telling what to do in t h e
event' of an air raid. That jolted
me. A year ago it would have been
thought silly to put up air raid
warnings in Manhattan.
Another thing that struck me
was this: a profound disillusion
ment with the United Nations and
a tendency to make it the scape
goat of our own uncertainty. Few
soldiers in Korea spend much time
debating the shortcomings of the
United Nations. But I don't recall
any blaming it for the present
plight of the world.
No Buying Panic
There has been a deep hardening
of purpose here in the last six
months. It stands out amid all the
half-serious joking about food
shortages and black markets.
"I've got plenty to eat put away
in my freezer," said one father.
"But I've got two boys of draft
age, and I can't hide them in mv
cellar. And if Ihe country needs
them I wouldn't want to stand in
the way."
"They are already beginning to
put things under the counter 1 n
some stores," said the taxi driver
who drove me home. "But I'll give
people credit for one thing. There
hasn't been a buying panic this
time, and I don't think there will
be. People are acting more like
people ought to."
I thought that was the best trib
ute that could be paid to our
country, as it readies its vast
power against whatever trials the
next few months or years may
bring. And it's a wonderful feeling
to come back to a land that is still
free and the home of the brave.
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o
9 O
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