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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (March 14, 1951)
0 O 0 10 The Newi-Revlew, Roseburg, Committee Named To Probe PORTLAND (iD A five-man committee has been named to look into an accusation that the formula on which Oregon milk production costs are based is not valid. " Oregon state college prepares the formula. An editorial (in the Ore ftonian) attacked it and said the people have no confidence in it. Dr. A. L. Strand, president of Oregon State college, asked for an investigation which the State Board of Higher Education authorized- Edgar W. Smiin, Doara presi dent, named the committee and charged it with determining: SLABW00D In 12-16 and 24 in. lengths OLD GROWTH FIR DOUBLE LOADS WESTERN BATTERY SEPARATOR DIAL 3-5148 ROSEBURG 241 North Jackson V N0RCR0SS dflflA ' , Look for TONY feb ) and his Flower Cart fSff I N0RCR0SS GREETING CARDS COTTAGE CHEESE LOADED Miff FRUIT J WONDERFUL FOR LENT! What a mouth-watering com 'binationl Luscious bits of pears, peaches, cherries, pineapple and Borden's creamy Cottage Cheese. I 0 Ore Wd March 14. 1?51 Milk Production Costs 1. Whether the accusations have any basis in fact; 2. Whether the formula lhov any evidence of bias; and 3. Whether the formula contains any inaccuracies. Named to the committee were Eugene Allen, Portland, editor of the AH- Labor Press and mem ber of the Portland school board; Edward L. Clark, Portland, presi dent of Multnomah college; David Robinson, Portland attorney; Dr. R. E. Kleinsorge, Silverlon, mem ber of the State Board of Higher Education; and Henry F. Cabell, Portland, also member of the State board. Oregon 4-H'er Slated To Visit Foreign Farm CORVALLIS m An Ore gon 4-H club member will be sent to a foreign country this June to be a working guest on a farm in Great Britain, Europe, Asia or Australia. A foreign 4H club member will , be brought to Oregon under the : plan worked out by the Interna tional Earm Youth exchange. The program has been in effect for four years but this is the first time Oregon has participated in it. PHARMACY Dial 3-3415 IV cottagVTheese V 1 I IX m m BX Get Borden's Cottage Cheese Fruit Salad from your Rrocer. To serve, just dip it out of the carton and watch the family dig inl "Borden's COTTAGE CHEESE FRUIT SALAD IF IT'S BORDENS, IT'S COT TO BE OOODI a part of . . . the refreshing part. ' ' X 7 j lomiD undii AutHoiity or tmi coc-coi cokuny iy COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF ROSEBURG Slightest Thing Con Set Off Blast, x So Don't Mention Auto Seat Covers By ARTHUR EDSON (For HAL BOYLE) WASHINGTON (AP) Sometimes it takes only the slightest 'thino; to set off an explosion or start a chain re action. You know, the match to the powder keg-, the push of the button or whatever that puts the uranium pile in action. Jn my case, it was seat covers. Automobile seat covers. This sad story begins a year ago, with the old 1941 car. It was in need of a number of things, new piston rings, new tires, a new windshield. "At least," said my wife, "we should put on seat covers So off we went to town. By one of those marvelous coincidences that shows up only around cunning women, we parked next to a sec ond hand car lot. "Oh, look," said my wife feigning surprise, "station wagon. Just what we need for the four kids." Without bothering to recount the painful details, we'll just say I went to town to buy seat covers and drove home in a station wagon. It made a hit with the kids, too, with one minor exception. Judith, who is five, was given a ride by herself, in the back seat. "Mow do you like it?" 1 asked. "I'm lonely," she said. Overdressed truck Still the station wagon which is merely a fancy name for an over dressed truck was all right. I especially like the leather seats, easy to clean of footmarks, melted crayons and bubblegum. Then I began to worry. The station wagon had wood sides. Wouldn't it rot in this damp cli mate? Didn't we need a garage? "We certainly do," said my wife. "Let's get a bouse with a nice garage." So we started to hunt. Finding a four bedroom house in Wash ington, at a price we could afford, proved about as easy as finding a capitalist in the Kremlin. The houses we've seen! We looked at one house which had a perfectly charming spring in the basement. Se.ing Things We saw another whose former owner must have had insomnia. I am guessing this from what ap peared to be hoof marks on the floor. I figured he was the only insomnia sufferer in history who ever counted real live sheep. CO Ice-cold Coke is any pause To bo retreshed , I v ii i .. .a & mm i , - - . We have seen houses with enough room but no yard, enough yard but no room, and with no room and no yard. I don't know how it happened, but somewhere along the line we decided we really didn't need a garage, which was the point of the search in the first place. We still haven't found what wo want, but we've learned a few things. If the ad says "Will take twin beds," we now know that this is true, if you stand the beds on end. Should Be Boy Scout "thit where it's peaceful and quiet" means that you'll have to hire an Indian nuide to find your way back to Washington. "Excellent financing" means ex actly that: Excellent financing for the finance company. And if the ad says, "Prewar built," we now know enough to ask. "which war?" Well, we were coming back from a particularly fruitless bouse hunt ing trip the other day. The weather matched our moods, gloomy and cold. Finally Mrs. E. broke the silence by saying: "You know, these leather seats get awfully cold. I wonder if we don't need seat covers." Since then I haven't been the same. Jumpy, irritable, with a ten dency to whimper. As I said in the beginning, some times it takes only the slightest thing. Convict's Bluff Fails To Convince NEW YORK (TP) A Sing Sing parolee was shot and killed Friday night after he threatened to shoot two policemen with a real lookin? toy revolver. The ex-convict, Louis Antonaccl, of Brooklyn, was cornered on the 1.1th floor 'of an apartment build ing after he held up a Manhattan delicatessen and liquor store with the toy gun. 1'atrnlmcn Charles Parnell and John Mahoney ordered him to put up his hands. Instead, Antonacci raised his gun and snared: "I'm just out of Sing Sing and I'll kill you." Mahoney fired three shots and Parnell shot twice. Antonacci fell dead. Marriage Registration Cards Now Obtainable SALEM (.1) Marriage regis tration cards now are being issued hy the county clerks and State Board of Health, and Governor and Mrs. Douglas McKay got the first one. Dr. Harold M. Erickson, state health officer, said they are the first such cards issued anywhere in the world. Any person who was married In Oregon can get such a card for $1. He should apply to his county clerk or the State Board of Health. Erickson said the cards would he particularly useful to persons who travel a jot, like members of the armed forces and their wives. The cards are sealed in plastic, so should last forever. They are the same size as the birth registration cards, which Oregon has been issuing since 1946. Two Kidnapper Suspects Back Behind Bars WICHITA FALLS, Tex. IIP) Norman Davenport, one of two jail breaking Texas toughs charged with kidnapping, volun tarily surrendered today. II i s brother, Chester, already was be hind bars. Offers had been searching in both Texas and Oklahoma for the 23 year-old Norman, who broke jail with Chester in Pryor, Okla., last Tuesday. Chester, 26, was found hiding in the closet of a sister's home here Sunday. He surrendered meekly. Milk Act Repeal Bill Sent Back; Cost Study Set SALEM UP) Sen. Thomas R. Mahoney's milk bill, to refer to the people the questior of whether to repeal the stale milk control law, was sent back to the senate agriculture committee for consid eration along with all the other milk bills. Mahoney bad promised that If the Senate passed his bill to legal ize sale of colored oleomargarine, then he would withdraw his milk bill. The Senate passed his oleo bill, 21 to 7, so he asked the Senate to kill his bill. But Sen. Hichard L. Neuberger, Portland, objected, and then Ma honey changed his mind, moving to re-refer the bill to committee. Neuberger told the Senate that "one issue shouldn't be traded fur anoiher." Mahoney said he believes his bill "beclouds the milk issue" and that it wouldn't have a chance of passing the House. PORTLAND ;F The State Board of Higher Education has au thorized appointment of five member committee to investigate the milk-cost figures compiled by Oregon State college, and used to determine the retail price of milk. The committee of two board members and three other persons will be named by Edgar W. Smith, board president, to determine whether published "accusations are founded or otherwise." The board also authorized em ployment of technical assistance in the investigation at a cost not to exceed $1000. Jtim ook i :t liim Mmiim If. . Look af her smila on Eatrar morn) Th bunny has brought her loveliest accessories for her Spring wardrobe . . . the most enchanting perfume ... ' the most eciting silk scarfs. Note: Wise bunnies shop at Miijer's, We know what a lady likes to look U.S. Can Defeat Russians In War, "Ike" Declares WASHINGTON (JP Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower has told senators that 12 American divi sion with sufficient air and sea support could hold the Breton peninsula of France against any Russian attack. In confidential testimony given to senate committees Feb. 1, the North Atlntic pact commander expressed confidence that "our 150.000,000 enlightened people can still whip 190,000.000 backward peo ple" in Russia if war comes. Asserting that the men in the Kremlin "like their jobs,' 'Eisen hower said that if the Soviet lead ers declare war now "they are really fools." "They cannot win on the global picture instantly and quickly by a complete knockout," he said. "Therefore we face a long, bit ter struggle of attrition against the United Slates. This 150,000, 000 people when they are united under such an attack is still the most powerful thing on this earth under the almighty himself." The five-star general told mem bers of the senate foreign rela tions and armed services commit tees that the decision on whether to use the atomic bomb would have to be made on the basis of whether its military value out weighs the moral disadvantages. "If I thought the net was on my side," he said, "I would use it instantly." FARM HOME PROGRAM The monthly program of t h e WCTU Children's Farm home will be presented over KRNR at 3:45 p. m. Thursday. This will include glimpses of the Easter programs for the children and of their ac tivities of this season. Fr.qu.nt Fr.. BELTONE CLINICS Are H.ld t th. Umpqutt Hot.l Writ, for N.ir Dal. HEARING AID BATTERIES SUIU. Anrwhcri Kr Any ftUk Writ. S. C. MITCHELL II W- Broadway, Ciifeno, Or. (Member J. N Tuft Anerlatee f Parlland HelUno Heart nr Aida) High twist custom fit proportioned nylons by Phoenix in cloucktroller ond Sun tone colors. 1.50 up Hots with the forward tilt of Spring , bedecked with flowers ond veiling. Deli cately tinted straws in close fitting or sailor styles. 2.95 up Belts to odd Spring cheer to any costume choose from the distinctive variety of leather, plastic, or fabric 1.00 up 'tOfi' fill Introducing this Spring's newest perfume Gold Satin the latest sensation by Angelique, Available in solid ond liquid cologne also. 2.50 up Plus Tax what the at on Easter Morn. 0 Springfield Residents Protest "Loathsome Stench" SALEM m Fifty pring ield residents have pefiliiujed Governor Douglas McKay to do something aboout the air pollution caused by local industrial plants. "We are choked with the nause ating gasses from the slacks and gag at the stench arising from the Living Pay Hikes Granted Teachers In Klamath KLAMATH FAI.IJ5 P Teach ers of the Klamath Falls and Kla math county school systems will get $425 cost of living pay increase for the 1951-52 school year, pro viding the boosts are okayed at spring budget elections. The school boards of both sys tems have approved the increase. Janitorial personnel in both dis tricts are to get increases of up to $.10 a month. Present salary scales will be kept into effect, settling each teacher's base pay according to education and experience, and the cost of living boost will be added for one year. In city districts the increase will go to about 180 teachers, and in the county system to ahjiut 200. WOOD FOR SALE 16" Core Wood $8.00 per load Split Log Ends not to exceed 16" 8.00 per load Unsplit Log Endi 4.00 per load Extra charge for any load more than six miles from the plant. The Martin Brothers Box Co. Oakland, Oregon j! Scarfs a$ colorful ond as fresh as the bright Spring days ahead. ..Pure silk ond chiffon crepe in a wide as sortment of sizes ond shapes. 59c up 1 Flowers to dress Spring's hot or odd this Spring's suit. that are perfect in ond coloring. 65c Umbrellas for the showers to come, brown, green. 4,95 Gloves by Hansen in exciting new styles ond fabrics. 1.25 up Purses for every occasion and mood in our widest se lection of styles and colors. Choose from the leothers, plasties, straw, and fabric. 2.95 up Blouses with the light oiry texture of Spring. Your choice of nylon, royon, and cotton sheers. Wide range of colors, styles and sizes. 5.95 up bunny brought , pollution dumped into the McKen- zie river" they said. Governor McKay said he would give tne pennon lo tne senate pun lic health committee, which is con sidering legislation to end the sioke problem. ( "Why is it necessary for the cit izens of Oregon to put up for one day with this outrageous intrusion of our personal life?" they asked. "Why must we have this stench forced upon us lo turn mealtimes into disgusting and loathesome ex periences and nights into night mares of sleeplessness?" The governor asked the legisla ture to allow the state sanitary au thority to combat the air pollution problem. His advisory committee on the subject introduced a bill in the legislature, but it is opposed by industrial interests. Phone 2211 and 2212 up last chorm to Flowers detailing up April navy, VDRIVE CAREFULLY i0l I I m