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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 18, 1951)
&wreitz Y AND HIS Of Club And Radio Acclaim MARLINE THE NORTHWEST'S SWEETHEART of SONG THURSDAY, OCT. 18 I ELKS Terrace Ballroom TICKETS 3.00 PER COIIPF NOW ON SALE AT OFFICE ELKS & GUESTS ONLY IF YOU ENJOY HOME - GROWN talent, and you've never heard l.yle's and Bob's BRIGHT ER SIDE, this is to let you know that five days a week, at 6:30 p.m., they can be heard offering brightness to the world. Lyle of fers amusing tidbits of news from the KRNR newsroom, and Bob composes happy music while sit ting at the keyboard. ADVENTURE COMES IN A SMALL PACKAGE FOR TARZAN at 8:00 this evening. It's an ad venture seeking young English lad who gets more excitement than he counted on when he ran away from home to Africa. Once on the dark continent his adventure-hun gry appetite leads him into a dan gerous situation from which only Tarzan can save him. You'll en joy the radio creation of the Ed gar Rice.Burroughs character at 8 tonight. OTHER ADVENTURES AND I MYSERIES can be heard each I weekday evening at 10:30. You'll hear the best of the dramas uk John Steele, Two Thousand Pit', Hidden Truth and Mysterious Traveler at 10:30 each evening. On Monday nights at 10:30, KRNR offers War Front; Home Front, Where you get your money's worth every time! ' ...for the best selection in town... come in and see our COATS at $ 34.95 OTHER COATS FROM $14.95 TO $49.95 Coots of 100 all wool fabrics.' Gabardines Fleeces, Suedes, Broadcloths, Sharkskins, Checks and Tweeds. Choice f flared, belted or fitted models. Wanted colors. Sizes 6 to 20 and half sizes. FASHIONABLE THROUGHOUT THE NATION! SELF-COLORED FRAME PERFECT QUALITY 15 DENIER 51 GAUGE FALL SHADES NYLONS 1.19 PAIR 3 Pri. for $3.30 0 121 NORTH JACKSON STREET where reporters in the United States question war correspond ents who cover the Korean war. NITE WATCH, starring the Hot Canary and the Cold Cat, hits the air-lanes each week-day night at 11:00. The best in popular music, plus a West Brothers Jewelry store gift given away for the correct answer to the "clues for you" con test. The "clues for you" contest is held each Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. . . but Nite Watch is heard each evening. JACK KIRKWOOD says: "I should have been a football player; when I was born, my father said, 'This is the end.' " NEWS ITEM: Our program di rector received a letter from AMERICAN FOLK PUBLICA TIONS. INC. this morning. They informed us they plan to run a story on Joe Massey in the forth coming issue of COUNTRY SONG ROUNDUP. This issue will go on sale about November 16. Congra tulations, Joe! Joe Massey has a new program time Tuesday. He will be heard at 9:30 p.m. Tues day and Thursday; 6:00 p.m. Sat urday. Camas Valley By JEAN YODER The Ladies Aid netted over $100 on their chicken dinner given Thursday evening. Present at the dinner were the Rev. and Mrs. H. Erne Taylor of Gardiner, for mer missionaries in Rhodesia, Af rica. They displayed a table of Af rican curios and discussed them. Proceeds of the dinner will go to the Camas Valley church. At the regular Grange meet ing held Wednesday, the Grange voted to pay tor sound proofing the school stage. It was also voted to send a token of appreciation to retiring State Grange Deputy Wil liam Howes. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Moore were appointed to represent the Camas Valley Grange at a meeting of Grange insurance rep resentatives at the Umpqua hotel Tuesday, Oct. 16. Mr. Moore was also appointed to represent t h e Camas Valley Grange at the or ganizational meeting for the Doug las county centennial celebration. At the next meeting, Nov. 13, offi cers will be elected ad nomina tions will be received from the floor. Visiting with the William Cun ninghams are Mrs. Louise Golden from Minneapolis, Minn., and Mrs. Mary Luke, of Hillsboro. Ore. They arrived last Friday and will stay lor an indefinite time. All Camas Valley teachers at tended the Douglas County Teacher institute held in Roseburg Oct. 11 and 12. Superintendent Marlen Yoder attended the ad ministrator sconference in Salem, Oct. 15 a nd 16. Tops in the "Buck for a Buck" contest at present is Miles Stand ley, who brought in a buck weigh ing 146V4 pounds. He topped the nearest contender ,Oran Standlcy, by two pounds. Mrs. Hayden Taylor has had her right hand injured in the wringer of a washing machie. She was taken to Commuity hospital Fri day night, but returned home the same night. Mrs. Wiiliam Cunningham re ports that a radiator ornament was stolen from their car while they were atteding Grange last Wednesday evening. If the orna ment is returned, no questions will be asked. RADIO PROGRAMS '. KRNR. 1490 kc. 1240 Ice. KRXL I REMAINING HOURS TODAY to rultoa L4WM Jr-MM Niniuwij-MM 4:30 P. T. A. 44V Sm MyM MBS 5:00 Challenge of the Yukon MBS 5:30 Sky King MBS 9:5. Tex Fletcher MBS :0ft Gabriel 11 natter MBS . II World S porta 30 Brighter Side 9. 45 tarn Ha MM 6:55 Bill . Henry MBS TOO Steely time Tale 7:15 Chuckwagon Jamboree 7:30 Melody Time 8:00 Tarzan MBS 8:30 Reporters Roundup MBS 8:00 Glenn Hardy MBS 9:15 Fulton Lewia Jr 9:30 Joe Masiey & Guitar 9:45 Pigskin Predictions 9:55 Five Minute Final MBS 10.00 I Love a MyiteryMUS 10:15 Meet the Band I 10:30 Mysterious Traveler MBS u:uu mie waicn 11:25 News Wliecap 11:30 Sign Oil FRIDAY. OCTOBER It, 1951 6:00 Coffee Club Capers 6:30 Farm Fair Sc News 6:45 Way or life 7:00 Hemingway MBS 7:15 Breakfast Gang MBS 4,1 buns or Pioneers 8 00 Cecil Brown MBS 8:15 News MBS 8:30 Bible Institute Hour MBS 9:00 Over lh C-ffee Cup 9:15 Tin Pan Alley 9:30 Man About Town 9:45 Trading Post 10:00 Glenn Hardy MBS 10:15 Tello-Test MBS 10:30 Second Spring 10:45 Hypo Highlites 11:00 Ladies Fair MBS 11:25 News MBS 11:30 Queen for a Day MBS 12:00World News 12:15 Modern Mood Music 1 2:45 Local News 12:55 Market Reports 1:00 Jack K 1 rk wood M B S 1:30 Bob Poole ShowMBS 1:45 Here's to Veterans 2:00 Relay Quiz 2:30 Music You Want 3:00 Poor Bob's Almanac 3:40 Happy Felton MBS 3:45 United Nations MBS 4:00 Fulton Lewis Jr MBS 4:15 Hemingway MBS 4:30 School Show 4:45 Sain Hayes MBS 5:00 Bobby Benson MBS 5:30 Clyde Beatty MBS 5:45 Sam Hayes MBS 5:55 Tex Fletcher MRS (1:00 Gabriel Heatter MBS 6:15 World of Sport 6:30 Brighter Side 6:45 Sam Hayes MBS 6:55 Bill Henry MBS . 7:00 Sleepytime Tales 7:13 Lionel Bnrrymor 7:30 Cisco Kid MBS 8:00 Magazine Theatre MBS 8:30 YMCA 8:45 Mutual Newsreel 9:00 Glenn Hardy MBS 9:15 HI Neighbor 9:43 Personality Time 9:55 Five Minute Final MBS 10:001 Love a Mystery 10:15 Music You Want 10:302000 Plus MBS 11:00 Nite Watch 11:25 News Nitecap 11:30 Sign Off Bomb-Shelter Surveys ! For Civil Defense Begun ! WASHINGTON -U& The Fed eral Civil Defense administration is sending experts to 70 heavilv-oou- ulated cities throughout the nation to help make bomb-shelter sur veys. Five technicians will visit the cities to give advice to local civil defense authorities on measure ment of the shelter facilities of existing buildings, and of the mod ifications needed to make them suitable. They also will make recommen dations as to construction of group- type shelters where proper shelter facilities are lacking. The cities to be visited were not named. FCDA officials nave estimated that 62,000.000 persons live in crit ical target areas, and that half of them are in congested commer cial or industrial zones during the daytime working hours. They esti mated also that there are adequate shelters in these work zones for only 2,000,000 persons. i Rhode Island entered the Un ion in 1790. I KCMA1N1NO HOURS TODAY Tims 4:15 Blue Barron 4:30 Once Upon 4:43 Sleepy joe 5:00 Mel lomen 5:15 Time lor Musle fl-OO Sports Spotlight 6:15 Lamplighters 6:30 Modern News 6:45 John W. Vandertook LBS 7;00 Hollywood Serenaders 7:30 Smokey and Hit Mountaineers 8:00 Alan Jones Show 8:30 News 8:35 Musio 8:40 Loggers Weather Bulletin 8:45 The Old Scotchman LBS 9:00 Tony Russo 9:15 John T. Flynn LBS 9:30 To Be Announced 9:45 Music from the ShaHmar 10:00 Melody Hour 10:30 Jim McCulla News LBS 10:45 Midnight Flyer , 11:30 Sign Off FRIDAY. OCTOBER II, ml 6:00 Sign On 6:01 News Headlines 6:05 Dawnbusters 6:45 First Edition News LBS 7:00 Alarm Clock Club 7:30 Cal Tinney Is On LBS 7:45 Ranger's Quartet LBS 8:00 Morning News 8:15 Joe Sodja Trio 8:30 Tops In Pops 9:00 Modern Home 9:15 Say It With Musk 9:30 World Wide News 9:45 Top 0' The Morning 10:00 Movie town U. S, A. LBS 10:30 Date With Del 11:00 Hot off the record 11:30 Strike Out The Band LBS 12:00 Variety Time 12:15 Roving Reporter 12:30 Mid Day News 12:45 Market Reports 12:50 U Never Know 1:00 As You Like It 1:30 Alexanders Ragtime Revue LBS 2;0O Melody Matinee 2:30 Liberty Jamboree LBS 2.45 Skitch Henderson 3:00 Afternoon Carousel 3:30 Open House 4:30 Once Upon A Tim 4:45 Sleepy Joe 5:00 Ace Of Space LBS 5;15 Rhythm Rendezvous 5:30 Time For Music 6:00 Spotlite on Sports 6:15 The Lamplighters 6:30 Modern News 6:45 John W. Vandercook LBS 7:00 Moods In Music 7:30 Here Comes The Band 7:40 Loggers Weather Bulletin 7:45 Rsbg. vs. Cottage Grove Football 10:00 Modern Melody Hour 10:30 News 10:35 Midnight Flyer 11:30 Sign Off mm I y i i i v Hi Hi mm Local Sailor Spends Leave With Parents o SN LeRqy Cherryholmes, son of Mrs. Dorothy Cherryholmes, 421 S. Pine street, has left for San Di li KO to repaort at the naval base, following a 30-day leave In Rose burg at his home. He arrived in Korea, Aug. 28, 1950, and re mained there until Sept. 18, 1951, when he returned here on leave. He was on th ship.e USS Eldor ada AGCLL, which assistd with the landings at Imjon, Korea, and with the evacuation of Chinese. He was slightly wounded while in Korea. MacArthur Blasts Administration; Heavily Applauded MIAMI, Fla. (m Gen. Douglas MacArthur bitterly ac cused the Truman administration Wednesday of plunging the nation toward socialism and economic disaster. And he called for all-out use of military force to end the "unnecessary slaughter" of Amer icans in Korea. The five-star general told thou- Thur. Oct. IS, 1951 Tha Nwi-Rview, ReMbMrg, 0r. 5 sands of cheering American Le gionnaires "you cannot profitably negotiatQ with Communists" and he all but proposed an end to the truce talks in orea. He declared force is the only persuasion the Reds can understand and the best way to end the war. Mac Arthur's address was a slashing attack on the adminis tration's domestic, foreign and military polices perhaps the hardest-hiding since he was ousted from his Far-Eastern commands by President Truman. He was greeted with roaring cheers when he began his speech in the auditorium where more than 15,000 people had gathered. And he often was interrupted by applause. MacArthur's 45-minute speech was interrupted 49 times by out bursts of cheering. The heaviest applause broke when the General mentioned using greater military force to the Korean war. MacArthur proposed a 15-point program for the Legion to support in correcting weaknesses as the general saw them including an "atomic program with a full com mitment to the use as needed of the atomic weapon." ACCUSED OF LARCENY William Alexander Young, 53-year-old mechanic from Stockton, Calif., was released on $50 bail on a larceny of personal property charge, the sheriff's office re ported, He was arrested by Drain police. California entered the Union in 1850. Errol Flynn Files Suit As Result Of Encounter NASSAU, Bahamas fffl A fight in a Nassau bar last March cost screen actor Errol Flynn $224.- 000 he alleges in a suit filed here yesterday. ine statement of claim filed with the Bahamas supreme court said Duncan McMartin, wealthy Can-! adian gold mine owner, struck the ! movie actor in a bar at the Wind-: sor hotel on March 5. j Flynn was recuperatin" from a spinal injury at the time he state- i ment added, and the "vicious hlow on the head" aggravated the old injury. . Actor Edward Arnold Weds For Third Time SOUTHPORT. Conn. - m Ac tor Edward Arnold, who imper-1 sunaies American presidents on the radio, plans to take his new bride io Washington for a visit with President Truman. Arnold, 61, was married here Sunday to the former Mrs. Cloe P. McCain, 43, of Detroit. It was the third wedding for Ar nold, the second for his wife. Arnold said they would make their permanent home at his ranch near East Highland, Calif. BAD CONDUCT CHARGED Glays Watson, 30, a Roseburg I housewife, was arrested Sunday ; duct charge, and was committed to the county jail, aocoring to Judge A. J. Geddcs. Bail was set at $50. NOW SHOWING - Ends Saturday Glorious as the Great Guy It Glorifies! mm -AiLrAM E RIC AN BURT LANCASTER Charles Bickford Steve Cochran Phyllis Thaxter MEmMm SUNDAY 3 DAYS feSV dLX te-O in WONDERLAND fp45w '.'J) ThcillctnoonMuilMlHbnderflliii TOMORROW GLENN FORD "Redhead and the ii Cowboy PLUS Johnny Weissmuller 'Tarzan Amazons' TONIGHT: "3 LITTLE WORDS" "Chinatown at Midnight" Starts Sunday MLOOK IATTIU MURDIR MMI JOE JAMES wllh KIRKWOOD, Jr. t lES GLEASON ' lh NUWMfV EX. i i4 Rk -i4 T Color AND Charles LAUGHTON i . tfm Fianchot m, is 'VIHtll A ana in CITY Of PARIS siW!;.Ril ANSCO COLOR) NOW PLAYING "Kentucky" AND "Thunderhead" You saw it in national ads...' We have the Best Carpet Buy in Town! 'Nationally advertised in magazines and on thjBigdpx Television Theatre. e w U Chansonette You can thank Bigelow's specially developed carpet rayon for this down-, to-earth price. Blended with the purest virgin wool, this combination is truly a marvel of modern weaving. Fabulous beauty and richness of color distinguish CHANSONETTE. But see it for ' yourself. See how CHANSONETTE can make your dreams of high carpet fashion come true in spile of today's high prices! by Bigelow 0 Jtwtli mm Q O No, your eyes did NOT deceive you . . . it's only o 0 I v (9? "Fine Furniture For More Than 25 Yeaft." a sq. yd 321 North Jackson Dial 3-5415 o 0