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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 4, 1951)
o o SECOND SECTION Established 1873 ROSEIURG. ORECON THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 19S1 234-51 French economic and cultural in terests are accorded special priv ileges. Frenchmen are guaranteed YOUR NEWSPAPER LIGHTS THE WAY TO FREEDOM the right to be tried before at least a mixed French-Indochinese court. W'l" 1 11 "" 1111 1 ' o o NATIONAL NEWSPAPER WEEK was observed with program put on by the Roseburg Elks lodge in the elks temple luesday night. The observance also included the annual father and son banquet, Honored guests, in addition to the sons, were top picture, Fuller Johnson, News-Review; Del Mc Kay, KRXL; Charles T. Duncan, University of Oreqon, speaker, and Mayor Albert G. Fleqel, mas ter of ceremonies. Lower picture, Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Hiatt, KRNR, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin L. Knapp and Mr. and Mrs. Loroy Inman, News-Review, f Picture by Paul Jenkins) t - - I,, -i ,, J"si -l-M r mS nil EBEEZEBS 1951 HOTPOINT "BONUS SPACI" MODELS THAT GIVE YOU THE BIGGEST ECONOMY " iN I Invest in lasting Hotpoint quality and dependable, trouble-free operation for what you'd spend on an ordinary freezer 0 Choose the size that means biggest food savings for your family. Four models each designed to keep frozen foods fresh and appetizing for months. You can depend on Hotpoint's famous Thriftmaster Unit, backed by the 5-Year Projection Plan. Choose now. Hotpoint Food Freezer prices start at $349.95 h J CU. FT. Holpoinl Hor.i 108 VmL' ".. freeiei up lo 130 Ibi. In FTJ ' Z4 how. I ITWI CU. FT. Hotpoint frcczM I I L4I P o 73 Ibi. In day. Hold! I M I JJi Ibi. lor monthil fill CU. FT. knpi 319 Ibi. of II I II food) iptcial compartment for II I U pockoging mattrioli. (J CU. FT. Hotpoint taker littlo V ol ipoco, yet freeiei and itoroi fl MO Ibi. of food. LOO NORTH JACKSON TO HOTPOINT FOR THE DIAL 2-2606 riNESI - I6 K 5 I I m Free u urm m n . umi EOPLE FREE PRESS OP Helping to poir Hit first Fm Prill poit.r hi Ortgon art Cynthia and Ctrla Purcill of Grtiham; Quitting below art, left to light: Tony F. Petition, loard of Dirtcton, Oregon N.wtpoper. Publisher! Attociatiofl; Carl C, Webb, Manager, ONPA, and Tom I. Parcel), Editor-Publisher, Grtshom Onttook. This outdoor poster display in the far West reminds the public that individual freedom can b preserved by a free press. Newspapers furnish unbiased information without fear or favor so people moy exercise free ohoica intelligently. An outdoor advertising company hat con tributed 400 posters and space for a 60-day period in Washington, Oregon, Cali fornia and Ariiona to assist rha newspapers m observing National Newspaper Week, October 1 to S. Rifle Shipment Arrives' For Army In Indo-China By SEYMOUR TOPPING SAIGON, Indochina (AP) The first major ship ment of American arms to the Vietnamese anti-Communist army arrived in Indochina Monday. The arrival of the thou sands of American army-type garand rifles coincided with the grant to the Vietnamese state by France of the right to control its own ticasury. The treasury was the last major internal service in this rev lt-torn land remaining in French hands. The rifle shipment was landed from the American merchantman "Earlham Victory" and is intended to equip four newly-formed divi sions of the Vietnamese national army for operations against the Communist-led Vietminh forces. The same ship carried more than 100 army trucks and munitions for f rench forces fighting side by side with the Vietnamese. The French here have received previous ship ments ot American military sup plies. The rifles were turned over to Vietnamese authorities in a formal ceremony by Col. Joseph B. Wells, actine chief of the U. S. military aid advisory group for Indochina, Will Give Punch The Vietnamese national army operates under the command of French General Jean De Lattre De Tassigny. He is depending upon its rapid increase to give nis 160, 000-man French Garrison more of fensive punch. The treasury transfer was made tnis afternoon in another formal ceremony. France beean turning over the Internal administration to the Viet namese after this country and her sister Indochinese states of Cam bodia and Laos were granted lim ited independence within the French union in February, 1950. In most cases, parallel French services were created in the office of the French high commissioner to represent French interests. Several administrative functions have yet to be turned over to the Vietnamese. Among these are the bank of issue for currency, which is in process of transfer, and the government economic monoplies. Under the terms of independence granted to Vietnam, defense, Atomic Weapons Won't Avert War, AEC Head Says WASHINGTON W T h e chairman of the Atomic Energy commission has nut a "flat no" to theories that an immediate big scale switch to atomic weapons might avert another war and halve 1952 military costs. But AEC Chairman Gordon Dean did say the United States now has tactical atomic weapons, and made a cautious disclosure that new atomic weapons are being produced. Dean testified behind the closed doors of a house appropriations subcommittee. The testimony was later made available to a reporter. Dean was asked by Rep. Thomas (D-Tex) about recent statements that an extra six or ten billion dollars given to the AEC now might avert a war and save up to half of the 1952 military budget. Thomas did not say whom he was quoting. But the answer, Dean replied, is a "flat no." He said the extra money could not be translated immediately into more atomic weapons because o f the time factor involved in produc ing them. Thomas then asked Dean if he knew of any new supplies of raw materials by which atomic bombs could be produced by the thou sands. "I hate to go Into figures," Dean answered. "I would rather not talk of numbers." Thomas then wanted to know about a prediction made in a sen ate speech Sept. 18 by Senator McMahon (D-Conn) that if, as Mc M a lion urged, the United Stato "mass produced" atomic weapons the cost of an atomic bomb would "become less than the cost of a single tank." McMahen's "Iffy" Theory McMahon called for all-out atomic weapons production, say ing that if $6,000,000,000 a year were spent on atomic energy ln- AWAITS NEW NOSE Eight-year-old James Pafrov, of St. Louiv lost the right lido off his nosa when a dog ha was helping out of a home excavation snapped him.. Plastic surgeons have promised to rebuild his note almost as good as it was before. To brighten Jimmy's wait for it, tha Kiwanis club of Overland, a suburb of St. Louis, gave him a new bicycle. From left: Albert Baldwin, club president; Ted Forgus, former club president; Jimmy and John Hogan, also a former club president. (AP WIREPHOTO) "Important savings" would re sult next year, McMahon said. . While the cost of an atomic bomb probably can be and is be- tntf hrnllt'ht rlnutn Dnnn vAnlia1 tn Thomas, it would eventually b e closer to tne cost of "a few tanks" instead of the cost of a single tank. He said he meant the big. expen sive tanks. McMahon also told the Senate that by "cutting back on the costly weapons of yesterday and forging ahead with the far cheaper atomic weapons of today and tomorrow I believe we can , . . make our country invincible in full-scale war and exempt from the cold war threat of bankruptcy." McMahon did not say how long he thought it would take to achieve such atomic security, and he said Russia is hard at work on atomic weapons, giving them top priority. Before the house committee, AEC Chairman Dean cautioned against any feeling that the field stead of the $800,000,000 spent last of atomic energy and United States fiscal year savings at some future advances as of today are an assur time he did not specify would reach , ance of security. 30 to 40 billion dollars a year. I "I do not think that there Is any quick and easy method of procur ing total security," Dean said. Thieves Crash Through Glass To Elude Police ; COUER D'ALENE, Idaho UPI Police traded pistol shots early Monday with two burglars who ran through a drugstore, crashed through the plate glass front door and got away. Officers Jack Monahan and D. P. Philiips found the intruders when called to investigate disturbance. As Monahan slipped in an open door, one of the men started shoot ing. He fired back in the dark. The burglars then fled right through the glass door and down an alley. Earlier, an attempt to break open a safe at a grocery store was thwarted by the explosion of a gas bomb inside the safe. Police Chief Arnold Engen said an at tempt was made to use nitro-glyc-erin to blow off the door. Ha later ordered the store closed when it was found the safe was "fully loaded" with the explosive. All MOtllS MAKtS" AND TRUCKS DOYLE'S SALES and SERVICE LOCATED RIGHT AT HIGHWAY 99 AND GARDEN VALLEY RD. 1950 1947 1948 1941 1948 1948 1947 1946 1946 1946 $1195 $1695 n $995 $1095 ... $395 $1095 $1195 $1095 $ 995 .. $795 1946 Plymouth, 4 Dr. $795 1940 Chevrolet, 2 Dr. $295 1948 Srudebaker Champion 2-Dr, Packard 4 Dr. Sdn. Pontiac 4-Dr. Scda Jeep ... Mercury 4-Dr. Sdn. .. Frazer, 4-Dr. Sedan OLDSMOBIU SEDANETTE .... DODGE 4-Dr. Sdn. FORD 4-Dr. Sdn. FORD 2-Dr. Sdn. .. Oldfmobile Sedaneftt $ 995 WE ALSO HAVE MANY FINE CHEAPER CARS PRICED FROM $75 to $200 Liberal Trade-In Any Make or Model BANK TERMS DOYLE'S SALES and SERVICE Highwoyc69 at Garden Valley Road Junction Dial 3-4148 Invitation To " " A Real Western Breakfast Robust Western appetites all demand it . . . and once you've tasted Lumberjack's "Old time maple flavor", so rich and mellow, you'll agree it's the best you've ever tasted! Lumberjack's distinctive quality, created by the skillful blending of choicest ingredi ents, has made it the largest selling table syrup in the Northwest!. Thrifty shoppers like its economy, too. Lumberjack is a pre mium product that sells for surprisingly little! Trj Lumberjack Toiay Your Grtcer Hat lit NALLEY'S LUMBERJACK SYRUP 5 8 &s A golfenbrOwn stack of Sperry Pancakes ... so' doggone light tney practically float oB your plate... so lip-snuckin" good with the flavo of rich, country-churned, sour cream tullertmli ...ih Wouldn't you like to hie yourself out to the kitchen right now and whip up a 'Steaming stack or two of Sptrrj Pancakes? Takes only J minutes from packace to plate! The Sperry Mil contains rich, country-churned, tour cream buttermilk for flavor and , , (Oi 5peCial b,cniof wneat pMtty flour for light, light texture... U already blcndcdTto for you. AU you do is add liquid ... stif ... and bake. Siear PANCAKE AND WAFFLE MIX "Span" atomd mde-ntrk of Grand Mrtb. lac