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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (April 10, 1951)
O 3 CI O o o 35 !3G Efforts To Make Service Men Eat Fish Not Too Successful, Report By FRANK V. VAILLE , AP Special Washington Service WASHINGTON (AP) This may be quite a shock to Pacific Northwest fishermen and to a lesser detrree to thoe ftreuon-Wihineton housewives who pride them selves on trie tasty ff'h dinners they set before hubby. But, the irmy informed R e p. I Norblad (ROre) today, soldicri lire inclined to be unhappv if fish day comes around too often. The cently Ore son congressman re wrote the defense depart PACKING , An expert packer saves you money by prevenfing breakage. Roseburg TMnsfer G & Storage Dial 3-5311 AGENTS tOV. O) -I IONO OISTAHCI MOVIN 01 ICONOMV-lft Ul HANOI! All filTAILI Graduate n Talcing over the L--1 the late Dr. Geo. L. Nicholas Soma Locotion on Gorden Vollty Rd, ocross from Brodley's LARGE AND SMALL ANIMALS Q Office Phone 3-632r V M SEE THIS GREAT NEW LmWQMY oWITII C0LD-CLEAK-T0 LgOK TO KELVINATOR FOR ALL PVke eltow le for lttrT la rur klVhM wttfe Vlvc-Teew fnXtlUtm ROSEBURG... 222 W. Pole Diet 3-4337 MYRTLE CREEK... Phone 1345 i mcnt suggesting that, inasmuch at 1 this is cheaper than meat, the I irmpH (ttrvicA clrniilH stn nn thir purchases of bottom fish in the in terests of economy. He got only partial solace from the reply he made public from Col. Sjmuel E. Mays, the Army depart ment's chief legislative liaison of ficer. Increase Nottd Mays wrote that the six-month period which ended Feb. 28, 1951, had seen a "substantial increase in the quantities of bottom fish pur cnased by the services. He listed monthly ' purchases at Seattle to taling 2.616.000 pounds, with a dol lar value of $1,123,000 during this Those purchases he added do PRIVATE FRANK MOFFETT, son not include canned fish items. j 0f Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Moffett, "Large quantities of tuna a n d 0f Broekway, Ore., ii now sta salmon are purchased from west ' .. j . .1 . r . ,, , , , i , . , 1 1 o n e d at the inti-iircritt coast sources, he explained, and . . . . N. T . . . it is expected that procurement of ehool at Port Bliss, Tex. Mof these items alone will amount to j fett was graduated from Rose over fifteen million dollars this burg Senior high school in 1950. year." but the colonel didn t hold out 1 . ,i, i.M ,,.,,-- ,1 though he said the economy of 'fish vs. meat "is well recognized." Dtpnds On Tu.t "The decisioiras to the frequency these items cat be included in the menu is governed for the most part by the individual tastes and de sires of the servicemen,' he ex plained. "Repeated efforts on the part of the militaryQfficials to increase the per capita consumption of fish in military menus has not been too successful. r "At each military installation a borrd consisting of a responsible unit officer, a (hfedical officer, a supply officer, and a troop repre sentative, is estabfahed for the i purpose of determining and rac Tio.nmending from the lists of food products obtainable those which j are most desired for ultimate in clusion in the menu. The recom- Veterinarian - Practice of Home Phone 3-5190 o SPJC Of CAP m fem win nut. Frwe e4 aiMMinVetMM rakH m m - w4 .0 v- j mi n.iwi'i aJ foa'i iliilfb TReWWTi atfl'lH He began his army training at r . 1 I I i rorr liwii, Train., w.i isior j o or Kan-; nd ' now compivnng m Training t Fyt Bliss. Fugitive Locks Friendly Bloodhounds In Church l'ORT WORTH, Tex. (.T An escapee from a Georgia prison camp explained that a pack of o erly friendly bloodhounds caused him to steal a car and come to Texas. Leroy Gi 21, is held in county jail hrfe under $1,000 bond after pleading guilty to transport ing a stolen car across state lines. aoude said the bloodhounds were posed to track him down after his escape from a work camp at ihomaston, Ga.. but they soon be I came so friendly he couldn't get rid of them. lie told FBI agents he finally g desperate, locked the dogs in a tie' serted church, and headed for Texas. mendations of those boards are fol lowed insofar as practicable. rtigh morale in the services, partic I i lflarlv U'hPrp ffWtrl ik rnnrpmwl I am of the opinion that this is the most practical and logical pro cedure, (end tends to satisfy the greatest Tiumber of individuals." As a clincher. Mays addetMiiat the increased purchase of fish in the past six months "was not oc casioned in individual consump tion, but rather as a result of the increase of personnel in the armed : lorces. . o Tl IE-FLOOR! With this great new 11 en. ft. Kelvinator, von nearly dntiblr TotirmM space, in the saruf flior apace as your old-Mle (Sru. ft. rrfriperator! And von get new womlerfiil fVhirea tliriHighnut ...hrnMjit to ynuoiit of Kelvin a tor's unmatched 37 years' experience. It'a the rrfrigrrator to buy . , . today! O Big 4Z4h. frr t.hrait "Hxlrm buMhrT pf In Smpr i.ritpr Drmwr! Roamy ilunditrmy' fc'xfr tmll baltl ipmtrt Hurfr,litr Control Hnffl for bitrr fitful -kr ping! Automatic Htiltrr l.htt MifatStV mreroryt Strmto-blu styling! Poimrtphrrm I old -linker 1 369 95 Onlv $6 81 pr k mflir minimum' dnwn t men I ! liberal frHe.m THAT'S NEW! plea. Itev4 wtetae TV Offers Good Field Of Profit To Camera Artists Television has opened a new fieVi of activity for the amateur Her husband and three other per cinematographer. reports Crover 5on, reported in critical con A ouijgs who is to present his, dj , ,heum, gener hospi. film, "Land I of the GoldeiwTwi-1 ul. Wmterhaven is just across light " at the junior high Vchool ; ,h, c,,l(ornj, lme auditorium rnday evening. Thf t-,li(ornll highway patrol loungs, wno couecieu nunareos of reels of motion pictures during his 20 years as a guide and re sort owner in central british ( o lumbia, reports he has sold tele vision rights on many of his films, although he still may present them in public shows in areas not served by television. Television." says Youngs, "of fers an excellent market for wild life pictures. The photographer who has patience and ability to get close-up. intimate pictures of birds Trouble selling his films profitably, providing they are well done." Youngs reports he spent many hours getting close-up pictures of salmon on their spawning beds, beaver at work, mountain goats in their native hahilat, tonelher with camera shots of black and grizzly bear, moose, grouse, cari bou, etc. Many of these pictures are to be shown on television broadcasts, having been purchased for that purpose. The new market, says Youngs, offers an excellent opportunity to the camera artist. New Milk Control Proposal Bobs Up In Legislature SALEM UP) The house food and dairy committee has recom mended defeat of a bill to remove state milk control at the retail and distributor level. The bill, sponsored by Portland's affiliated milk committee would retain milk control at theS oducer eel. The committee's action will giv the hot milk control issuse its first test before either branch of the leg islature. Kepi V. T. Jackson. Roseburg Democrat, supported the bill, but all the other committeemen were pagainst it At the same. time, the committee recommended passage of a senate hill to transfer milk control from Use state milk administrator to: the state board of agriculture. The committee also indicated u) woiuU introduce a bill lo charee; olettmargarine manufacturers 2jQ J",r ,or sell,n ,heir Product in v" The purpose of this bill is to pav expenses of enforcing the new col- . iv, . rt ...u.u u- were discriminated againstDn the ored oleomargarine law, which the . , . " enV,grrUrevtrr,rnaturTn7: 1 " .nkltee, from.-rv,n?..'eo..,nd ,ellm ,ne,rfversal or. that pomt alone wai)to customer it' butter. O To Control Rainmakers Rep. -David Baiim, La Grande, introduced a Ml to net up a state I weather conirnl commission to reg ulate riomakers. I The commission, consisting of th state director of agriculture, state fitiineer and state forester. couldn't wojrk without a commit sion licenseO Person:, who mjsht be hurt by I rainmaking venture would have the right of public hearing before the commission. Baum said it tookhim three months to get the hill drafted, be cause no similar bill ever has been passed by any stale. r The first draft and "iti'ting copy" of I.inr-oiu's Gettysburg Ad dress are in tbe Library M Con- great in n aldington. KJ a CHICAGO 1 1 . a real industrial and railroad center i . . Mcnnd laryeaf city in the United State. ioao or tut rot iindui tians poiTAnoN.a. inSEi I P '! ( : s i ! : r-v, II i ; ' i ! i ft ! I ! I I, ' it my i : n . ". -1-4 4 r?. W k University Professor's Wift Killecj In Crash VUMA.rii. (.P) The wife of a t'niversity of Arizona profe: sor tiled Monday of injuries sul fered in a head-on auto crash at identified the dead woman as Mary C. Barnes, M, of Tuc Ariz. Her husband. Dr. Charles A. BarntT, teaches at the uruver driving the aily there, lie was car. The couple's six-months-old son, George, was among the injured. In the other car were Mrs. Ira Whiting, 35, and her daughter, Ar lene, 13, of Yuma. The highway patrol sahl the im pact of the crash was so great it took rescuers three hours to ex ' . . - - . , -- LOCGl MeQIC HOS ' CftC? Coll 111 arann Finhtinfl , lxorc,n nl"""y WITH THE FIRST MARINE DI VISION IN KOREA Navy hos pitalman 2-e Ray E. Hammersley o( Riddle, a Purple Heart veteran of World War 11, narrowly es caped death in Korean fighting re cently. His unit had reached the top of a hill at dusk and was getting ready to dig in for the night when the Chinese opened fire on the out fit. "I started to look for cover when 1 felt a tug at my side." he said, "I figured 1 had been hit. When I finally got up enough nerve to check my side, I found that my canteen had been shot away. Thai's about as close as I want to come to getting it," Hammersley said. Hammersley is the son of Mr. and Mrs. E. M, Hamm&slcy of Riddle. I Doomed Negroes Granted Retrial By U.S. High Court WASHINGTON- (.P The(ji prczai' court Monday unanltfuusiy struck down the conviction of two Florida Negroes sentenced Jo die fur tee rape of a(iahite (fuM. Tw justms protested that the ,.t-' An .n...i . (. tr thta ..v. ploited toy'the limit by the press." JusUCv Jackson wrote that the " . '".U1 "T,..1 stress the trivial and ignore th important. He wrote: aSufcd as to make fair trial in the locality impossible, the judicial process must be protected by re moving the trial to a forum beyond its probable influence." The court s action means that Shepard and waiter Ir- vin will have to he tried aain in a different court for the rape on Julv 16, 1K49, of Norma Pad gett, then 17i- The jtirl was attacked near Groveland, Fla. STANLEY HOME PRODUCT J (ttt.l Bvliv.ri.. IS Mn JAMES L ROBERTS 214 Curt Straet, Rotaburf PHONE 139-Y by 3 union O PACtFIC O You will tnjoy fatf, comfort ahlt. worry-r travel hy dependable ClnionPacifiC. I.uturioui PtfUman Kfiiirmiv dafioni . . . tmingtt . . . Bleep aa coach teal . . (lirimia mealt. .t fmrrt titntmt o Thru flat Trains Dally StcJtlOtei "City f 9wia& "PORTLAND ROU" "IDAHOAN" Ltl mi hrlp plan your trip 201 ArJ.I Otfices 21 l.lt 10th. MN Evl.f, Orf.n rk.fi lua.fi. 1-141 Dir intfAmiMtai St Sjeufit... Sf WHtOM reiM Boy Governor; 1$ Selected ForY" Youth Legislature Aw x.i ) IL s As the result of the four pre legislative conferences in each part of the state, the Oregon YMCA youth legislature announces John Tonack of Portland's Benson high Sk'hoc! as hoy governor. The fourth annual session will be held in the Salem capitnl April 27-28. Senate and house bills have been preparen Dy wi ni-i ann in- Tne x.ry machinei , Van De Hi-Y clubs over the stale and are GrH grneralori ..ha! lived up ,0 now being put into the official billthe most optimistic expectations," ... Clerk of the house will he Norene j Alln of Roseburg Trr-H.-Y. Sen- j 5talled Th, tw0 umts wi be al)le a tors from Rosebur high school t0 handle M pa,jenls a dsy for will include Lois Patterson and i rea,ments and for research. George Bleile, while representa- Tne super.Voltage work Is di lives will include uois Mckinney, r(.cled by Dr. Hugh F. Hare, ra Darliene .Kallister, Joan Page, dlolo(jist at lhe Leahv clinio and and t rank West. Dr. John G. Trump, director of the Tonack. the boy governor, has hi(,h.V0U(e research laboratory at b."Ln ,?,cl;r,"rJ ,I"L "'sokch"plaln Massachusetts Institute of T e c h of his Walter Goss Hi-Y chapter at , wh- th. x.raT m,cnin. Benson. Currently student body i president at Benson, he has held many other offices and has had a multiciplicity of activities in his school. Whiskey-thinking Sow's Exhibitor Faces Charge FOR. LAUDERDALE. Fla. (.' Die "pig in the parlor' art put on by a whiskey-drinking sow in a restaurant near Dania may be hilariuitbut it certainly isn't healthy, miarrNnspectors ruled. lhe pig, Suzeftt, performs in a restaurant operated by Gina Riva. Whejt urged, Surette sits on he hind Wj on the restaurant floar) and drinks scotch and soda or ; bfef from a lttle. j a;tnnary in.specior nay Almeida said that Miss Riva will be ar- raignaft) in criminal court for a( violation oi saniuiifon laws 5 o. o Tt ))o a o 0 o V g o o O O O MORE THAN TIMBER O o O ... makes this great itata primary products but theratr furniture, women's fashions, winti, cloth, ihot, cannery products, soaps end many, many more manufacturing procenei compote the wealth of this state. Oregon can and do.i inufaotiir manr f the foJt w :,eat "4q the article! we use everyday. Art you aware of this fact? , Almost ill of -the canned goodJhat you find tvwry rim. jvy un fvyr mopping in noi.Dur, you are conirrDUTing yo lhre in making this li great O O O oo o April 9 to 14 is the week that we honor Oregon Products. When jiu do your shopping this week end every week look for end insist on Ornejon Pro ducts. When you do this, fii ere adding your bit to making this a greater state In which to live. Remember ... What Oregon, IIS THE 3 Tuei April 10, The Newt Review, Foseburg, Ore. 3 O February Work Stoppages Twice Those Year Ago WASHINGTO.9 (!Pl There states. About 2.1.000 soft coal min were 400 new work stoppages in ers in West Virginia and 10,000 , February, twice the number for; lumber and sawmill vorkers in the same month of 1930, the Bureau j Oregon aifl Washington were idle of I.aA'r Stattrjics reported. for brief pia-iods. Theargest rebruary strike if-1 Th total Buir., or work,,,., rn. fecied ibout 70.000 workers and 160 ga-jed in new stoppages rose from wootfn and worsted mills in New kc.ouo in January to 220 000 in England and middle Atlantic i February. I The work aton&ages caused X-Ray Machine Treating Tumors With Success CAMBRIDGE, Mass. UP) A 2.000.000-volt X-ray machine, com bined with a slow merry-go-round, is sucQsfully treating many inac cessible tumors, the American Cancer society announced. The machine beams potent X rays into regions deep within the body. The patient sits on a turn table, revolving slowly so that the rays can strike from all sides. Two hundred patients have been treated in the last 18 months. They had a wide variety of tumors, bolh benign and malignant or cancer ous. Most of them now have n o signs of disease, the society said. the soeietv said. A second two-mil- j lion volt machine is now being in- j Th. recnlli r mo.t nmmiuml they said. The treatment is still in an early stage, and it is customary not to consider cases cured until five years after treatment, they stressed. f lOftuMotTumti, o O o G In which wa live. Nrfber Is fust ent of our hunqVtdi of others. For example, cheese, on our shelves (re canned hart stat TO O G O OO o o Makes, Makes Oregon ON EVERY ITEM YOUR HOMl-OWNID AND OPERATED SUPER MARKET SourviSph.t the City UenW FREE PARKING rl.'OO.OOO man-days of idleness in iKebruary, Qmpared with 1.20A0O0 in January. The figure wa"far short of the 8.500.000 man-days of idleness recorded in Februarv 19.SO. QWhen the coal and Chrysler strikes Vwere in progress. With strikes carried over from January, the total number of stop pages in progress in February was 600, W'th an estimated 300,000 workers involved. Home Builders Lbr. Co. HAVE A FULL LINE OF BUILDING SUFPLIES k PABCO PAINT FINISHED LUMBER WEATHER STRIPPING CERTAIN-TEED INSULATION k ROOFING MATERIALS EAVES TROUGHS k OAK FLOORING Home Builders Lbr. Co. 1 Block North of Signal Light at Gorden ValVf y Junction On Hwy. 99 North . PHONE 3-6129 . . o in Oregon. J o CffiDOtO THAT COUNTS' O