The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, July 21, 1952, Image 12

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    12 Th Nfwi-RtvUw, Roseburg, Ore. Mon., July 21, 1952
Local
News
; ; 1 1
Raturns From Tolsdo Mrs.
Leo Kimball nd two children, Car
ol and Tommy, returned to their
Bnseburg home Friday evening,
following a week' vacation at
Toledo, Ore., where Mr. Kimball
In encaged as painting contractor
for the Douglas Housing Projects.
Mr. Kimball has been there for
the past two weeks, and plans to
remain until the completion of the
project on Nov. 1. .
Tele-fun
by Warren Goodrich
I Undergo! Appendectomy
Fred T. Richardson of Sutherlin
is at Mercy Hospital where he
underwent an appendectomy the
latter part of last week. Mr, Rich
. ardson is employed by the Inter
atate Tractor Company.
Hero From Portland Recent
visitors at the James Buttler home
in Winston were Frank Kolkow of
Portland, uncle of Mrs. Buttler,
and Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Soarcs
and Albert Lowes, Mrs. Soares'
brother. They were on their way
to Puyallup, Wash., to visit their
grandfather.
Returns From Vacatilon Mrs.
0. C. Lanqlield has returned to
her Roseburg home following a va
cation trip to San Francisco and
several places in California. In
San Francisco, she visited with a
brother-in-law and sister, Mr. aiil
Mrs. K. ShoenwetUr; in San Jose
with another brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Mile
kam and in Oakland, Calif., with
her mother-in-law, Mrs. Amy Lang
field, and sister-in-law, Mrs. W. R
Weller. Mr. Langfield took his
wife and Mrs. Ethel Sojka, a teach
er at Rose School, to San Francis
co. Mrs. Sojka accompanied Mrs.
Langfield for about ten day be
fore returning to Roseburg with
the Langfields' son, Melvin.
"The party line It still butyl
Old teventeen-year locust
utt returned home and It
catching up on all the goi
tlpl". ..When you're a con
siderate telephone user, every
body gets better telephone
service! . . . Pacific Telephone.
DOG WARNS OF FIRE
CENTRALIA. 111. W A South
ern Illinois couple wouldn't part
now with a dog they once tried
to give away and couldn t.
The Louis Troys in Pinckney
ville credit Fritzie, a 3-year-old
with Spitz and other ancestry, with
saving their grocery store and
perhaps their lives. A night fire
broke out in a mechanical cooler
near Fritzie'a sleeping spot. He
went to Iheir bed and they said
Fritzie barked until they got up
and investigated. Neighbors help
ed carry the fire safely outside.
FOX GOOD PROVIDER
FERGUS FALLS, Minn. I - A
sly mother fox was a good pro
vider for her five young. Here's
what diggers found in her den: the
remains of five mallard ducks, one
small pig, thre jack rabbits, one
weasel, one muskrat, one wood
chirk and several pheasants.
always so fresh so delicious
mumllL Stovvi
CANDIES
i
t
Don't invoit in a convertible . . . try
a box of RUSSEll STOVER
ASSORTED CHOCOLATES to win
the girl (and her Mother) I Few can
resist their fresher ... liner goodneiil
25
7. ' '. , v-
n
f
' v 'J
"YOU'RE BIGGER, I'M OLDER," brags two-year-old Lonnie
Davis to hit half-grown great dane puppy, ten months old. "And
I know better than you about getting cleaned up." Lonnie is try
ing to talk tht pup into having his chin wiped before entering a
Chicago Small-Fry Puppy Show. .
Seasonal Labor Need Adequate
For the first time in several
years, not one of the 28 local of
fices of the State Unemployment
Compensation Commission is re
porting a shortage of harvest
workers for mid-July.
Although a slight lull usually
prevails between peak demands
for early berries and later bcan-hop-fruit
calls for seasonal farm
labor, this is the first time when
all weekly reports to the employ
ment service agreed on an "ade
quate" aupply of help.
In about ten days, however,
when the Willamette valley bean
harvest gets well under way, the
situation is expected to chanue.
Most offices in the Eugene-Portland
area expect enough pickers
for the early crop starting in some
sections late this week, but thous
ands more will be needed during
Red Germany To Rtgitttr
All Bitweart 16 and 65
BERLIN f Soviet-controllet
East Germany Saturday ordeied
registration of all' persons be
tween 16 and 6$ to find out how
many can be put into a new Red
German Army without crippling in
dustry.
By listing the seven and one
half million East Germans in em
ployable age groups, the Commu
nist authorities expect to discover
where they can best get along with
fewer workers. These areas will
be given quotas of "volunteers" for
a "defense army." The goal Is a
force of 375,000.
The registration plan was re
garded in Western German quart
ers as admission that an earlier
call for volunteers has failed.
N.Y. Cers 2nd '
Supercarrier Job
WASHINGTON ( The Navy
announced Saturday the second
giant, 60,000-ton carrier of the For-
August and early September.
Hops and late fruits beginning
next month will add to demands,
and a full-scale shortage may de
velop before many weeks. Picking
of the short cherry crop and oth
er early fruits is about completed,
while pea harvest in the Pendle-ton-Freewater
district will be fin
ished in the next few days. Ade
quate labor is on hand for Eastern
Oregon grain.
Claims of insured workers are
running about a thousand-aweek
above the same period last year,
hut are fewer than usual in July
the Commission reported. New
claimants since the start of the
benefit year last month reached
12.204 against 10,320 for the same
period of 1951.
Traffic Volume
Setting Record
Traffic volume on Oregon high
ways increased during June a
vacationists hit the roads in whit
appeared to be, record-breaking
numbers, the state traffic safety
division reported Friday.
Heaviest daily traffic in the
state, according to tabulations by
the state highway department,
was on 99E near Woodburn where
the volume increased 7.2 per cei:t
over June of last year. Average
number of vehicles checked at
the Woodburn counting station was
nearly 10,000 per day.
Heavy motor vehicle volume al
so was recorded on highways 26,
18 and 30.
Largest increase was reported
on highway 101, the coast route,
where average daily traffic in
creased 11.2 per cent over June of
last year.
While travel was hitting new
highs, traffic deaths jumped to 40
in June, the worst monthly deatn
record for the year to date.
Safety officials note that increas
ed Oregon traffic during summer
months nearly always means
deaths to more than 100 people
in street and highway smash-ups.
Rluefin tuna fish grow to weigh
1.000 pounds or more.
reslal class
New York Naval Shipyard
Brooklyn.
At the same time, it said the
hull of the second nuclear powereJ
submarine will be constructed .it
the Groton, Conn., plant of the
electric boat division, General Dy
namics Corp.
The cost of the second carrier
is estimated at S2O9.700.0OO, $8,300.
ooo less than the estimated cost
of the Forrestal,
The Navy said that this lesser
cost was possible because most of
the design work and experience
which has rone into the Forrestal
ran be used on the second ship.
The second carrier is yet un
named, being designated only as
the C.V.B.-60.
In announcing the award of tha
contract for the second atomic
powered submarine, the Navy said
it will be of the same general de
sign as the Nautilus, which is being
built by the same company.
However the nuclear powered
plant of the second submarine will
be of a different design, using an
intermediate neutron energy react
or and a liquid metal coolant. The
Nautilus will be-' powered by a
thermal reactor.
African Parrot Trained
To Ask Higher Wages
LONDON litl Sir Miles Thom
as, chairman of the British Over
seas Airways Corp., asked a pilot
to buy a parrot for him in Africa.
The pilot did, and gave the bird
will be built at the'a little coaching, so that on
arrival in London it could say:
"More pay for air crews."
YES!
We're Still Here,
Just Rebuilding!
Same fine workmanship
at usual at:
Johnwell Auto
Upholstery
735 S. Stephens
Please Use Entrance in Alley
En N0W!!L
Dally9 to
EUGENE, IT"
PORTLAND I
and Points I
7 North
! B l i oilier f l . Yi
fay eg;
.dr. V.M HOVHYItiU B
Call: lewis 3
Travil Aesney LT""1"
1
or Wmt Cout Atrlinu, t-aut
Pacific States Show
Biggest Building Gain
NEW YORK Building per-'
mits issued in 215 cities in June
totaled $386,247,265, compared with i
$408,633,113 in May and $385,041.
042 in June, 1951, Dun It Bradstreet
reported.
The Pacific Coast states had the
largest gain over 1951 in June, per
mits issued in that region rising
37.7 per cent above volume in the
year-ago month.
If- :
S5
Its r"TT1 W
It is estimated that Insects each
year destroy enough U.S. wheat in
storage to nil the wheat neeus ut
16 million people.
22
From Pete Burnett's
19S2 OeSote Sedan
1951 Oldsmobil '98'
, Holiday Coupe
ROSEBURG
AUTO SALES
447 S. Stephens
Gveili tpeak well of you and each
other.. .when you serve RUSSEll
STOVER HOME-FASHIONED FA
VORITES. Ttmpting pecan rolls,
fudgsi, butterbont. A variety la
pleoit everyone. . . , .
1 3
1
Everyone wgoi lor"
RUSSEll STOVER PECAN
DELIGHTS. ..the 'perfect tails
combination' of freth pecans, loll
butler-cream coromel and smooth
milk chocolate.
854
10
1 II. ss
L
$odeburg. Julian
inaai
t v n w u u u j u a u uuu juzn u
11 II V
3i ' ;I m I
I
H - -"X 1
.r r jit j-vjh . v y i ap i
'j'fr
Just What Is
FROST-FREE
REFRIGERATION?
There's still only one completely automatic re
frigerator ... only Westinghouse 'FROST-FREE'
has the magic button that COUNTS door open
ings to measure your actual defrosting needs!
Mare important, only 'FROST-FREE' gives you all
three benefits.
(1) Automatic defrosting exactly when and only
when needed. No timers to set, nothing to do!
(2) Automatic disposal of the frost water no
pans to empty, no floors to mop, no mess to clean. '
(3) Defrosting so fast that even ice cream and
froxen fruits stay troxen.
To get the best, look for the button , . . only the
completely automatic Westinghouse 'FROST
FREE' has it.
NO HAMMERS TO SWING
o NO ROPES TO PULL
o JUST OPEN THE DOOR OF THIS
"Westinghouse
REFRIGERATOR
Ring the Bell and win a prixe. There are no hammers to swing, no buttons to
push, no ropes to pull, just open the door on the Westinghouse 'FROST-FREE'
Refrigerator that is on display in tha bell ringer corner. Every 60th person
that opens the door will hear a bell ring. If you are the person that opens
the door that rings tha bell, you may have your choice of these table electric
appliances ... a toaster, coffee maker or electric hand iron. You don't have
to buy anything to open the door of the WESTINGHOUSE 'FROST-FREE' RE
FRIGERATOR. Just come in, register and then open the door. The whole
purpose for this "Ring the Bell" display is to acquaint you with the automatic
defrosting mechanism of the Westinghouse Refrigerators. After the door hos
been opened 59 times and then on the 60th opening, the automatic defrost
ing process starts. Every 60th opening starts the automatic defrosting for
you. Come in tomorrow and open the door. You moy be a "Bell Rin.qer." This
offer ends Saturday, July 26.
Ring the Bell and Choose Free A Gift
of A Toaster, Coffee Maker or Iron
X2
y tXCDV WieiTAD
TO OUR STORE
THIS WEEK
RECEIVES A GIFT
131 NORTH JACKSON
DIAL 3-5521
A
241 North Jackson
Dial 3-3415