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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 17, 1951)
Safer Cough Relief When new drugs or old (til to Hop your cough or cbesl cold don't delay. Crcomulsion contains only sate help ful, proven ingredient and do nar cotics to disturb nature's process. It toe right to the seat of the trouble to aid nature soothe and heal raw, ten der, inflamed bronchial membranes. Guaranteed to please you or druggist refunds money. Creomulsion has stood the test of many millions of users. CREOMULSION Mliml CmsSs, Cat CMt, Acuta Imckltis Local News III At Mercy Hospital Earl Assleck, Roseburg, has been re ported critically ill in Mercy hos pital. Spending Holidays With Parents Rod Newland, son of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Newland of Rose burg, is expected home Tuesday from Ore son State college to spend Parker's EVER-GREEN A Christmas Tree Preservative that keeps the tree free end fresh, Keeps needles en the tree, Fire Reiiitent. POTTED PLANTS HOLLY CHRISTMAS GIFT SUGGESTIONS ROSEBURG GARDEN SHOP 110 West Oak Phone 1-4001 Denn-Gerretsen Co. offers a Complete Fuel Service 01 I Clean Burning Shell Burner Oils I FOA-5X to give more heat from lets fuel O Mill Wood O Sawdust O Pres-To-Logs O Briquets O Utah Coal Planer Ends FOR FUEL SERVICE CALL 2)euuG 402 West Oak St.7W.2-263 L a M. the Christmas holidays with his parents and sister, Marcia. Spends Day In Eugene Ken Metiler, Roseburg, spent Friday in Eugene on business. He re turned Saturday afternoon. Home From University Chuck Plummer, Roseburg, is home for the weekend from the University of Oregon where he it a fresh man this year. Undergoes Appendectomy Clayre Carter, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. E. W. Carter, Roseburg, underwent an appendectomy at Community hospital last week. Clayre returned to her home in Hu-Crest Friday. Attending Seminar Dr. Bruce Tuck, optometrist in Roseburg, is attending a post-graduate seminar on visual problems at the North west Oplometric congress in Port land. He will be back in his office Dec. 20. Sr-TC ,'3V.t - ' ir-M Trees Falling By Thousands For Yule Trade WASHINGTON I The crisp sound of thousands of axes biting : through fir trees is ringing in the cold, clear air of America's (oresi2s I these days. j The medley Is loud because the snow-slogging woodchoppers have ononly one more week in which to cut the Christmas trees and send them to homes throughout the na tion. 1 Not counting trees obtained by John Q. Public himself, Santa Claus each year looks over about 28.000,000 gayly-decorated t r a e a which have been provided com mercially for his annual trek to the United States. About 9,000.000 are imported, mostly from Canada, and Ameri can forests yield about 19.000,000. An area in northwestern Montana and northeastern Idaho is the 'Christmas tree capital. About 3,000, 1 000 green, fragrant Douglas-firs are cut annually in the deep snow of SAFE DRIVER REWARDED Wayne R. Batton, left, Consoli dated Freightways truck driver is shown accepting an award for safe driving from C. Thring, Freightways' representative. Batton was rewarded ot a dinner given by the company in the Rose hotel Saturday night. (Picture by Paul Jenkins) Medford Fliers Disperse Fog MEDFORD .T Fog turned to snow, and then the sun broke through again Saturday as two Medford fliers continued their ex periments in trying to disperse log. , The two, Harvey Brandau and Eugene Kooser, seeded the fog over the Medford airport Friday with their own chemical formula. A huge hole opened in the fog within an hour. The widened the seeded area, spreading dry ice and their spe cial formula over Medford as well as the airport. A half-hour after they went aloft, a brief heavy snowfall started at both places. After another IVi hours visibility had increased from half-mile to two miles. The sun disappeared after 10 minutes, but the fog ob viously was thinner. The fliers now have Interested a group of downtown merchants in the possibility of a winter-long fog dispersal program. The mer chants believe it 'ould encourage shoppers to come downtown. The fliers assert they can keep the area free of fog 90 percent of the time. The fliers insist the fog-thinning Friday and Saturday was no co incidence. They claim full eredit. Both pointed out that the weather Mow., Doc 17. 1951 The Nows-Revlew, Rasebufo, Ore. 9 forecast was for unrelieved fog. The two earlier conducted slm!. lar fog dispetsal experiments for United Air lines at Portland. The airline company has not disclosed its findings. SEE Eddie Kohlhagen FOR INSULATION SAVI ON WINTER FUEL COOLER IN THE SUMMER Phone 3-3510 P.O. BOX 7 KIDS! WIN A $25.00 DEFENSE BOND Guess the number of pennies in the vase en display in the window of the Roseburg Realty and Insurance Co., Umpqua Hotel Lobby. Win a $25 Defense Bond. Duplicate guesses will receive a five dollar gift in cash. Make your guess and register it at the office of Roseburg Realty Co. Parents may register a guess for their children. It'i fun! It's FREE! Nothing to buy! Just moke your guess. Winner will be announced Dec. 24. 'ALL CHILDREN AGED 10 OR YOUNGER ELIGIBLE ROSEBURG HOTEL UMPQUA LOBBY REALTY AND INSURANCE CO. DIAL 3-6226 Save 17.00 52 Piece Community Silverplate Regular 6.79 Folding Doll Buggy 5.79 Reg. 59c Tree Light Set With Import Bulbs 47' 59 Bayer Aspirin 100's 43c 1" Certified Vitamin B-12 79' 54 Alka Seltzer 37 63c Colaate Tooth Paste 45' 29' Kleenex 300's YOUR CHOICE R C"750 Morning Stop CororioHe ?,.-- Evening Stor 7450 J Stirvioe for cV 52-pc let complete with handsome rernish proof chest.. Includes 16 teaspoons, 8 hollow handle dinner Inivei, I dinner forks, 8 salad forks, 8 oval toup spoons, 2 serving table spoons. I butter knife and I sugar spoon. the rugged mountains near the Can adian border and Glacier park. About one-fourth of the trees cut in the Montana-Iaho area are taken from federal forests, the rest from state and private lands. Nationally, the federal forest service reports, about 87 percent of the Christmas trees come from private lands. Many farmers are finding that wild-grown trees provide good busi ness. Sale of wild trees in Mon tana alone adds about $1,000,000 annually to the farm income. Farmers also own about two third of the 100,000 acres of Christ mas tree plantations In the nation. Nearly half the acreage is in Penn sylvania. Cutting of trees on federal land is permitted in areas where the forest service believes the stand should be thinned for the benefit of the forest. The cutting is regulated by rangers. The government charges only 10 to IS cents for a three-to-six-foot Douglas-fir, but it gets as much at SI a foot for California's Shasta firs. The Shasta firs, called "silvertips" because their dense and short needles have white tips sell to the public for as much as $30 to $40 each. water line 20 feet away, the ditch filled rapidly and the walls began to crumble. Awen braced his back against some temporary planking on one side, and jammed a knee and his hands against the other side. . "Get out," he yelled to his part ners. As the George brothers scram bled for the surface, the cave-in caught Awen. His body was dug from planking and shale an hour later. f MKT 011 T OF THF AVFMI Onct again our GOOD Fruit Cakes art ready for you. This year wo baked them in beautiful gift tins. They come in one, two and three - pound sizes. P.S. If you want a Fruit Cake just for yourself, we have them without the tins, too. DON'T FORGTT OUR CHRISTMAS COOKIES Some of the oldest checks In the United States are now in the Chase National . Bank collection They were signed by a Dutch merchant and were dated March, and Sep-: tcmber, 1664 1 CLEO'S BAKERY t 314 N. JACKSON PHONE 3-3171 A' 23' 1 00 Toni Refill 67' 2 00 Tintair Hair Tint 1 73 89' Prell Shampoo 69' 98' Schick Iniector Razor 53' Williams Shave (ream 77' 39' REGULAR 1.95 Spray Sno $1.69 IT SPARKLES IT SHINES IT GLISTENS Harmless . . . easy and safe to use, indoors and out doors. Just spray it on trees and windows. 26!590 Shavemaster Electric Shaver nf Now0n,y 21" Toke Advantage of this Fred Meyer price reduction one1 get clour, smoother shoves with Shavemaster, the finest noma h electric roiors Open Every Evening Till 9 P.M. Ditch Worker Gives Life To Save 2 Companions , CLEVELAND (.It A man gave his life to save his two partners when 11 foot ditch caved in here. George N. Awen, 58, was the hero. Rudr George, 29, got out of the ditch unscathed. His brother Mi nor, 34, suffered back injuries and was taken to a hospital. The men had been partners for 10 years. They were laying a sewer line along a new street. Two feet wide and 11 feet ddep, the ditch was 25 feet long.' As a steam shovel bit into a Eliin!fle SHOP at MILLER'S MAIL at MILLER'S U.S. POSTAL SUBSTATION NOW LOCATED IN mi in 11 it it jrat g J. AW hJ L'fp'2f jF('t '' w' postage onlyl -A.-X . X. v.VsV . StHA-J'l !f Si tf v MAM k ... ii rnrn t . ; mti. -.m w-vn w jnvik Decern- m t, wr WITH THI Wf IfV (MUkllLiklK rWHeo yotJ rinse (he dishes th ttarbftgc it foot" Bones, fruit pits, pirings . . . even paper napkins are puWcriied and flushed down the drain. It's safe, odorless, do ((.proof and so eair to operate. Easiest to demonstration in mm ii &e AST TUMI CsgS 139" fflNi tnsTAiiu jjht MMMm Downstairs Store No welting, no standing in line, no going out of your way Mail those greeting cards and packages tt U. S. Postal Substation Miller's Downstairs Storel For your convenience you may now have your purchases gift wrapped for mailing and mailed tt Miller's we charge for Open Evenings from 7 fo day thru Friday, starting ber 17. On Saturdays, open from ?:30 A.M. to 9: P.M. for your shopping convenience. Where All Douglas County Says "Merry Christmas" Fred Meyer rot tmiinr turns m 112 NORTH JACKSON