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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 3, 1951)
SSgSJSKSSSgSr WfpjW W f ft u.iai i j , -w- I I M7S. -. f I Answer Man . . HE depends on his Ouija board to tell him what's going to happen next. , But he won't be ready, if Fire strikes, you can bet on that! Take our insurance advice and be set for anything the future holds. ROY 0. YOUNG Dial 3-3044 205 West Cass Street Roseburg JiUletk To keep you dainty -. A Fresh Lif Bra Every Day! Hot, muggy summer days call for extra care to protect your daintiness. And that means extra Life Bras . . . so you can enjoy the clean, cool luxury of a fresh one every day! Designed from live models to fit your exact figure proportions, Life Bras hold their fault less shape through countless they're tailored the exclusive Formfit way to give you a high, young with real separation. So inexpensive, too. Come get your extra Life Bras for extra summer daintiness now! Life Bra Illustrated In A'jfon$2.50 ,v .1... 17 l I ffVi u . I I It.?' r , : 1 Mosquitoes By Millions Pester Florida Areas TAMPA, Fla. UP) Mill quotoes are so bad hereabouts you can kill them "by the millions" without making much of a dent in the swarms, a health officer said. "This is the worst I've seen in my six years in Florida, and old timers tell us it is the worst crop of mosquitoes in 25 years," said washings. An and natura &'Us "fcC . LJ "Thai f "-ST. A'H, ft 'jr- l lift I . Vf X Foundations Dept. Second Floor Henry B. Crowell, sanitary engi neer with the Hillsborough county health department. Motorized spraying units have operating nightly without stop ping the mosquitoes. Abnormal rains have given the mosquitoes more bleeding places than usual, Crowell explained. He added that the scourge is preva lent throughout this west coast area and is also bad in several other sections of the state. PROPERTY CHANGES HANDS One of the scenic spots of the North Umpqua region has been told and it's new owners plan to develop it eventually into a retort. Two Roseburg businessmen, Ed Nolte, manager of Montgomery Ward store here, and Dr. A. E. Dalros, chiropractor, announced the purchase this week of the former state salmon hatchery located at the confluence of Rock creek and the North Umpqua river. The property has been owned by Lee McCarn since the hatchery was closed in 1 945, and the new hatchery established further upstream on Rock creek. McCarn plans to move to Gold Hill. The eight-acre tract ex tends 900-feet along Rock creek, which makes a bend to the east along the rear of the property. On the grounds are the old hatchery building, a five-room house, garage and other struc tures. The new owners said development of the property would be slow and nothing is contemplated until, next spring. However, space will be provided at the rear of the property for house trailer parking this summer. Tentative plans call for partial clear ing of a knoll to the right of the property and extending to the rear for construction of cottages. The upper left picture is a front view of the old hatchery. Lower left, owners Nolte, on eft, and Dr. Dalros, on right, are News-Review Citv Editor Lerov view of the hatchery grounds, and creek, bordering the property. New Riches Being Found In Vast Area Of Colorado DENVER (AP) Colorado, born of the gold rush which put "Pike's Peak or Bust" into American, lore, is dreaming of new riches from the ground as it reaches its 75th anniversary as a state. This time the raw materials are oil shale whole moun tains of it and coal which underlies vast sections. Colo radoans hope to turn these resources into synthetic petro leum. Experiments on both processes are well advanced. Youthful Gov. Dan Thornton, a 40-year-old Texas-born Republican who won fame as astockman, foresees the time these "energy producing resources" will mean industrialization of large areas of the state. But even as these dreams begin to take shape, Colorado is busy expanding in other directions, no tably manufacturing and agricul ture. It is too busy, in fact, to take much note of its diamond an niversary of statehood. There have been lots of changes in the centennial state and the out look of its citizens since Aug. 1, 1876, when it was admitted to the union. Indian fights and blazing six guns on the open range have faded i into the shady past, there s only i one small Indian reservation in the ! state, although persons of Indian j ancestry are scattered through al ' most every community. Most of those ranges are fenced. Even the demand for "ha r d j money" has slackened off. Now you can get bills in change instead of "cartwheel" silver dollars, j Stock Raiting Top Industry : Livestock ranching has become ' the state's largest single industry ' but the animals are blooded types. I Farming has expanded from a few scattered acres around mining I Mai.'.ll.T'llj-ll'Hndlzrci J IT'S MODERN... REVOLUTIONARY! o No mart pniivt vfihalthy pumping and digging vp of ctipoofi,iplic l0nkt,Mpog pli,groM tropt and clogged linoi. Htrt't lh aioit rtlioblo end toU.t laatHod ttquofr, diiMlvo and loponify (rtaio, lludgt, hoif, (torn ono other ergon U tolidi. Tfcti modem chemitol gwaronli qvid and civnt rtiwltt In II f ttovn. NO SHUTDOWN 1 pool Of lank nocoiuiry whlli chtmitol ii working. i, 10, 15, 25, SO, end 100 II. CONTAINERS WEST COAST BUILDING SUPPLY CO. Jay Clark Mill and Mother O : 'iff interviewed on their plans by Inmarf. Upper right is a rear lower right, scene along Rock IKictures by faul JenKin camps until it is the second larg est industry, and it has featured the American debut of the sugar beet. Farming has brought the rise of irrigation, which in turn has brought huge dams that also cre ate electricity. Water is a zealous ly-guarded commodity. Manufacturing has passed metal mining as a source of income. The steel plant of the Colorado Fuel and Iron Corp. at Pueblo is Colo rado's largest single employer. Prospectors still hunt through the western part of the state but mainly they are after uranium, vi tal ingredient of atomic bombs Low grade uranium ores long have Deen mined in tnc state. There are so many federal of fices in Denver that residents re fer to the city as the nation's second capital." A new atomic energy nlant Is being built, and so is a new fed eral bureau of standards labora tory. Highways Slash Mountains High speed highways cut the towering mountains which once formed a barrier between east and west. The tourist business, which started on the heels of the pio neers, has expanded from I three- Bill Neighbors Dial 3-6614 OODfinTC "ChEftflCAlLYl torUULi) CLEANED 1 CaJ5- month season for heat-weary mid westerners into a year-round in dustry. Major air force and army In stallations have replaced the scat tered frontier forts and the state's population has increased ten-fold to 1,325,089 in 1950, with 112,856 of the folks living in-Dcnver alone. The state is heading toward a two billion dollar total income for its citizens. Pioneer days are recalled fondly, but briefly, at dozens o f annual rodeos. Many of these local celebrations are paying particular note to the state's 75th birthday but no unified statewide show has been planned since the legislature cold-shouldered a $250,000 request for the purpose. There will be a birthday ball Aug. 1 at Pueblo and the postoffice department will put a commemo rate stamp on sale at tiny, mountain-locked Minturn. The state fair will open with a Colorado histori cal pageant Aug. 19-20. , Even Coast Area Hit By Record Hot Weather The extremely long period of dry weather has been experienced at the coast as well as inland. The Reedsport meteorologist report shows only .30 of an inch of rain fall since May 25, an unprece dented record. By way of contrast, the Reeds port post of the American Legion has sponsored five Fourth of July picnics, and collected rain insur ance on three of the five events. I I I INTRODUCTORY NU i I il Coupon Good Until August I, mm 1951 I IT'S THEf!rt?ON EVERY ITEM I Prlday, August 3, 1951 Tlit Nwt-Rvltw, RoMburg, Or. 3 'swataiE:ML - j i.. i in. I ni,ln,i imlih ml n - jar i,; J Oregon-Bound Fishing Boat, Two Aboard, Lost CRESCENT CITY, Calif. UP) The coast guard has listed as "presumed lost" a 40-foot fishing boat with two men aboard which left here last Thursday for Port Orford, Ore. The "Carol" became separated from the five other vessels accom panying it during foul weather, the coast guard said. The other boats put into Hunter's island near Brookings, Ore. for..: SERVICE... EXPERIENCE... CO-OPERATION . . . Investigate the services offered by your "Home owrwd, Home'operated" bank. Money left on deposit with us remains In DOUGLAS COUNTY. All facilities available for your Individual needs. 'Douglas County State Bank M.mtxr F.df al Daposlt Insurance Corp. ' f ' - ilAELLO YELLOW with the purchase of 1 pound of Nu Mello Yellow Margarine at the regular price and this coupon. MARKET South Stephens at the City Limits FREE m " WANTED . 3 LOG TRUCKS T haul upper Little River to Glide. STARTING MONDAY Miller & Strong Phont Eugtna 5-2542 or 4-2810, tvoningi ' THAT COUNTS PARKING OFFER