The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, May 17, 1951, Page 11, Image 11

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    Sutherlin Sun
Has New Editor
i
Emery Robert Huntoon, above,
has assumed part ownership and
is the new editor of the Sutherlin
Sun, weekly publication at Suther
lin. Associated with Huntoon in the
business, which, was purchased ef
fective May 1, is Edger i. Mur
nen, Sutherlin lumberman, who
will be an inactive partner. The
newspaper was purchased from
Paul E. Wilson. .
Huntoon comes to Sutherlin from
from Fontana, Calif., where he
had charge of advertising and the
composing room of a newspaper
there.
The new owners have formed the
Sutherlin Publishing Oregon, Ltd.
Huntoon (aid he is looking for a
new press and hopes to enlarge
Ithe size of the paper to a standard
eight columns.
Beginning his newspaper career
.with the Lansing, Mich., Capital
'News, Huntoon then worked for the
Lansing State Journal, after the
two papers consolidated. He wa
then foreman of the press room
of the Bay City, Mich., newspaper,
belore entering tne navy tor iv.
years. Returning from the service
he took charge of the composing
rnom for the Holt Record. Holt
Mich., then came west to Arizona
with the Southern Arizona News
;papers. Inc. He operated and man
aced the Benson, Ariz., paper for
this company a month then pur
chased the plant. He aold out last
fall, went to El Paso, and then
to Fontana.
Huntoon is married and has three
daughters.
Pledget Terminate Rebating In Optical Industry
CHICAGO o- W Pledget by rebates to physicians who find pa
some 3,300 eye doctgfs and by four tients to them for eyeglasses. Alo
optical companies not to give or named defendants were 75 indi
accept rebates on glasses nave I virtual oculists, plus some 3.3u0
ended a five-year civil anti-trust others named as glass defendants
suit. , in various states. -
Federal Judge Writer J. La Buy i
accepted the pledges and aigned Inter-Planetary Travel
i" .c.n3 3.,T,.g.orh-!Via Rocket Said Possible
blow to the rebating practice in
the optical industry."
Two other consent judgments,
involving optical, manufacturing
firms in Minneapolis and Colum
bus, 0., will be entered in federal
courts in those cities, the govern
ment said.
The Justice department's anti
Offer Of Castle In Alps Attracts Flood Qf Replies
NEW YORK UPl- A General
Electric scientist says a rocket
ship that could reach other planets
is within the realm of possibility.
Anthony J. Nerad, assistant man
ager of the GE research labor
atory's chemical division, laid
Saturday night that hvdroeen pas
probably would propel the shin
trust division began the civil suit . on t fantastic journey,
five years ago to atamp out what! He cautioned, however, that "
the government said was a prac-1 great effort over a long period
tice by the six defendant optical! of time" will be required before
manufacturing firms of giving one makes its maiden voyage.
. PASADENA, Calif. (!P The I
demand for castles in the Austrian!
Xlpa is tremendous.
I From all over the United States. I
by telephone, telegrams and air I
mail, have come responses to an'
offer last week from Count Paul
Almeida to trade us of hit an
cestral castle for a good used car.
The Count and his family want
to come to the United States this
summer to visit a friend, Dr. Rob
ert K. Yeaton, english professor
at Pasadena City college.
Dr. Yeaton reported he waa busy
answering a flood of inquiries
about the Count's proposal.
Yeaton said i Detroit millionaire
apologized for not being able to
fly here immediately to discuss
the matter. A hollywood producer
wanted to send different couples to
occupy the castle every two weeks
as a radio show prize.
A telegram aigned Dan Piatt,
"The krazy auto kina" of Elin.
beth. N. J., asked Dr. Yeaton to
phone personally. A colonel's wife
in Washington, D. C, telephoned
that ahe had just returned from
Europe and didn't want to go back,
but ahe'd be slid to loan the Count
and his wife a car without cost
Count Almeida cooked up the
exchange plan because Austria's
financial restrictions will not per
mit him to take enough money
out of the country to finance a
visit here. ,
For a good used car he would
tour the country in it then sell it
to pay bis fare home be of
fered the castle, complete with
servants, food, several lodges,
bathhouse, lake and fishing and
hunting rights. The ancestral es
tate is on Moon lake on the main
road between Vienna alls' Silzs-
burg.
Dr. Yeaton, who told newspa
pers about the count's offer, said
he baa forwarded aeveral of the
responses to Austria and is await
ing a reply.
He aaid response waa so over
whelming he is thinking of writing
other castle owners in the Count's
neighborhood to ask if they might
be interested in similar deals.
"reception set
Roseburg members of the Grand
Court, Order of the Amaranth are
expected at a reception Saturday,
May 19 at 8 p.m. in the Sunny
side Masonic temple, Portland.
The event is being held in honor
of recently installed grand court
officers. It is open to all Amaranth
mtmKrs, their familiea and
friends.
Thun.. Moy 17. HS1 The Nowo-Rovlow, RoMburg. Ore. 1 1
J. C. Hess Given Office
In Poultry Cooperative
PORTLAND - (.W Lawrence
Luy, Medford, will continue as
president of the Pacific Co opera
tive Poultry Producers.
He waa re-elected hero at the
co-op's, annual meeting.
Other officers: Ewald Ek, West
Linn, vice-president; J. C. Hess,
Roseburg, second vice-president;
Fred Peterson, Junction City, secretary-treasurer.
Lewis Bertien, Eugene, is a new
member of the board of directors.
Those re-elected were D. L. St
John, Grvais; Howard F. Hughes,
Hillsboro; and Hess, Peterson and
Luy.
Harry Rohe, co-op general man
ager, and a member of the poultry
advisory committee of the Office
of Price Stabilization, said that
ceiling prices on eggs and poultry
are a definite possibility in the
near future.
Egg prices are 99 to 100 percent
of parity, he said. Ceilings can be
Imposed . when prices reach 100
percent, ,
XPERT BOMB TOSS I
V. S. 49TH FIGHTER-BOMBER
WING, Korea P Lt. Roscoa
E. Anderson, Norco, La., uses 1,.
000-pound bombs tire ame way a
small boy uses the flat rocks he
skips across water.
The other day he skip-bombef
a North Korean railway tunnel
with a train inside.
His wingman, Lt Glen Dean,
Ponca City, Okla., said he aaw
both of Anderson's bombs enter
the tunnel and "there waa a ter
rific explosion inside." .
Price Tumbles
Taken By Rubber,
Wool And Tin
By SAM DAWSON
NEW ORK i.-rt Three of
the world's high-flying commodi
ties rubber, tin" and wool have
taken a price tumble.
But all are still well above their
pre-korean levels. And economic
stabilizer Johnston, asked by a sen
ator what he planned to do "to
stop the gouging of the United
States by the people we are help
ing," says we may have to "get
a little tough."
Uncle Sam got much of the
blame for sending the prices of
these imported commodities sky
rocketing by his announced stock
piling policy: "We must out-buy
the Reds.'.' Given the green light by
that, rubber planters in Malaya, tin
miners in the Far East, wool grow
ers in Australia fattened on tin
world buying spree that followed.
Then Uncle Sam announced that
his stockpiling orogram was "ar
enough completed that he didn't
need to pay ridiculous prices.
Stockpiling halted. With one of the
chief buying props pulled out from
under them, tin, wool and rubber
prices began to fall.
Wool Cited As Example
Wool of the popular grade sold
in Boston at $1.78 a pound before
Korea. Realization that larger mil
itary forces would need large quan
tities of woolen uniforms coupled
.with a United States plan to stock
pile raw wool snt ffc price M a
'peak In March of $3 80 a pound, a
jump of 116 percent. Maiv.i 14 the
Uuiled States announced its raw
wool stockpiling plan "will be sus
' pended until further notice." I n
Bo.lon the wool is now nominally
quoted at $3.10, down 18 percent
from the peak, and lower than
the ceiling price of $3.35 announced
by the government.
' All three commodities are still
well above their pre-Korea levels:
tin up 81 percent, .wool up 76 per
cent, and rubber up 131 percent.
Wool is still in the strongest price
situation of the three. It was on an
uphill price road before Korea, be
cause world demand for fine ap
parel grades exceeds world pro
duction. Military demands since
Korea, coupled with the desire of
several nations to lay in stockpiles
against the threat of war, sent
the price to record peaks.
Weakness in recent weeks has
been attributed to several things:
the United States decided not to
stockpile raw wool; man-made
fibers made important inroads into
the clothing market: woolen mills
stupped buying while waiting on
price controls; and retail sales of
suits at the new high prices be
gan to slump. There's a little less
demand for wool than there was,
and a larger supply of substitutes
But the trade thinks there'll still
be a shortage tr' f?U and
no great price slump, unless inter
national price controls are drafted.
W. Washington Plywood
Workers Get Wage Hike
SEATTLE IJPl An agreement
for an 8-cent hourly pay increase
for 3.000 western Washington ply
wood and door workers was an
nounced here.
The agreement is between the
Puget Sound district council. Lum
ber and Sawmill Workers' union
(AFL) and the employers. Michael
T. Costello. the union's district sec
retary, said the agreement is the
same rrsche.1 a week aio for about
15.000 fir lumber industry workers.
The wage boost must be ap-
E roved by the Wage Stabilization
oard. A 7'vcent increase gran'et
the workers earlier this year still
is before the board.
STORE HOURS
Weekdays, 9 to 8 Sundays, 9 to 7
GROCERY SPECIALS
Friday, Saturday, Sunday N ,
MEAT and PRODUCE
Friday and Saturday
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.
ABSOLUTELY NO SALES
TO DEALERS.
MAKE MAY TIME MEALS K
A FIESTA OF FUN Can Kc" Case$6.25
WITH PRICES LIKE THESE Jir
nw rvn rrrm rrvn SALAD DRESSING
IT CAN BE DONE - Quart Jar 47c
5 WAFTS Cheese Food 7gc MSfa M(Bldl
SPiVl ByHorme' 1201 Tin j3C FRUITS AND VEGETABLES
lflf(Scir,Il R chocolate chips i n t TOMATOES 19s
IT1 Is 2) u LLiLs) 0ipck,9e Uiv CELERY .-.!-'. u
TEA GARDEN ' 5X2 i jp SQUASH I"'hW u. 19'
DR,ps -Isigi JUICE ORANGES ..... 69e
table syrup GOLDEN SWEET CORN 3-23'
T "oiedits alt.raal.ly with Bilk, W
sPoundiin &QC pPHBffi GREEN PEPPERS -29'
r v wil wid paper. Bake t a
oderelecw (3S0T.) one hour.
MEATS
OF HIGH QUALITY AND FINE SELECTION
By Popular Request We Again Bring You
TURKEY FRYERS BiS L,
Well Meated Tender, Young Birds
59c
Sugar Cured
SKINNED HAMS
Tenderized
lb. 57
PORK CHOPS
PORK ROAST
SAUSAGE
Pound
Loin
Pound
Country Stylo
Pound
59'
49'
49'
Eostem
SLICED BACON . 49
WIENERS 7-- 49'
OYSTERS F,.h Pontic, Pt. 65
Royal Anno Chocolate Covorod
Cherries1 1 Pound Box
BRACH'S
SCOTT TISSUE
SWIFT'S PEANUT "UTTER 1J0
LIBBY'S P,NEAPPLE T,DBI,ToLT, 2
CAKE FLOUR
FLAV-R-PAC FR0ZE PEA,S,
39'
10'
Softasilk or Swansdown
PEANUTS
SATISFACTION
Chocolate Covered Creams
1 Lb. Box 39c
29'
25'
37'
29'
35'
Blackeyed Peas
2 Lbs. 37c
Ounce Package
iolred In The Shells
Fishar'o 10 Ounce Package
G