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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1952)
Tl Mew-Reyiew, RoMbwrg, Or.Sar., Dee'. 13, 1952 OUNTRY CLUB WOMEN I 0 HOLD CHRISTMAS ARTY NEXT THURSDAY Women of the Hoseburg Country lub met Thursday at a noon tncheon at the. clubhouse and Dinpleted plans for the annual hristmas party and brunch to be n event of next Thursday at 10:30 .m. at the clubhouse. Those at mdlng are asked to bring a $1 ift to exchange and a $1 gift for - patient at the County Home. Res rvations are to be made by call ig Mrs. Moore at 3-7541 or Mrs. iefarth at 3-5687. ': Contract 'bridge was enjoyed uring the afternoon with prizes oing to Mrs. Bistak, first; Mrs. lughes, second, and Mrs. Bridges, bird. Enjoying the day were: Mrs. : . J. Bean, president; Mrs. R. E. mith, Mrs. E. it. Harvey, Mrs. 'rank Bistak, Mrs. R. W. Sedell, i Irs. L. Sarginson, Mrs. R. D. ! iridges, Mrs. James Hughes, Mrs. J I. E. Knight, Mrs. S. M. Moore, " firs. A. J. Murray, Mrs. C. D. drs. G. N. Siefarth, Mrs. M. L. fallmark, Mrs. H. C. Stearns, Mrs W F Amiot, Mrs Robert ..eehlider, Mrs Emily Judd and Urs Walter Brydges. rWELVE AND WON CLUB MEETS RECENTLY AT MURDOCK HOME The Twelve 'and Won Club met it the home of Mrs. Glen Mur iock Tuesday for a delicious des-ert-luncheon. Christmas candles and a poin etta plant decorated the buffet. Plans were made for the annual Christmas party and it was decid ed that it would be a potluck luncheon. There will also be an exchange of gifts made at this time. A delicious birthday cake was cut by Mrs. Fred Hargis. Birth day gifts were presented to her and also to Mrs. H. 0. Myers. guessing game contest was won by Miss Bernardino Princen. High for the afternoon was won by Mrs. William Peifer and second high by Mrs. N. E. Richardson. ' Covers were placed for Mrs. Fred Hargis, Mrs. N. E. Richard son, Mrs. Thella Webber, Mrs. William Peifer, Miss Bernardino Mnoan nnrt thA hnnte!!l- Mrs. Glen Murdock. Local News Visit In California Mr. and Mrs. Andy Hempenius are in Cal ifornia viting relatives for part of tie Christmas holiday. Undergoes Surgery Miss San dv Williamson. 1243 Chatham Street, Roseburg, has undergone an appendectomy at Community Hospital. in FiiMM Mr. and Mrs Norman Hess of Roseburg spent 1 1 1 iiloiiintf tne wceaeiiu iu .u(scuc, at the borne of. Mr. ana urs. a. j, Foy. Ill Miss Lois Patterson, daugh. nt ut anH Mrs P.. f!. Patter- VI 1UU . , .An h han lit nt homp for the last several days. She is a senior in JtoseDurg mgn otuuui. Visit In San Diego Mr. and Mrs C. A. Esselstrom and sons, Steven and Craig, 1600 Brown t-. . .. Uuino far Snn fJieo tSUCCti flic is'"B - . I to visit friends and relatives for a month. u i ..wa Tinnald B. nvniw w. - - - - - Campbell is home on leave from a tour of duty in orea. nc wu uc married this weekend and lien they leave for Norfolk, Va., where be W1U De siauoneu. cttu Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Pearson and Mr. and Mrs. Melvin HiUlips ot ttoseourg are on a business trip to Seattle. Mr Pearson has the Nash Agency and Mr. Phillips is employed there. Mrs. Phillips is employed at Miller's Beauty oaion. Undergoes Surgery Lou Bo- gard, Douglas County 4-H Club leader, underwent an appendect omy Thursday at Douglas Com munity Hospital. - -r. c..H.n Mr. and Mrs. John William Robertson of Rose burg left Friday for Eugene to spend the weeuena visiting men son, John Marvin, who is attend ing University of Oregon. They HnnnmnanliH hv thpir rimiah- wwo oi.i.wiHiiaiv - t ter, Miss Camille, who will spend the weekend as tne guesi oi n Virginia Spousta, formerly of this city. 'Wanna7 Gift for Dad? J Get Him Jkealre Jicbel (J3oob ON SALE AT' BOXOFFICE EVENINGS GOOD ANYTIME INDIAN OR STAR THEATRE - i Mail Orders Promptly Filled Send Checks or Money Orders To P. O. Box 311, Roseburg. Price 1.00 5.00 10.00 I - i 1 Able To Be Out Mrs. George Quine is able to be out again, after being ill tor several days at her home. Ill B. C. Elliott, manager of the Roseburg J. C. Penney Com Danv stout.' has been ill at his home in Laurelwood for the last few days. Arrives Here Today Mrs. Emily Wright of Vancouver, B.C., arrived in Roseburg today to make her home with her son and daugh ter-in-law, air. and Mrs. 5. V. Wright. - Dinner Guests Thnanksgiving dinner guests at tne nome of Mr, and Mrs. Paul Blaskey of Rose burg were their three children and their families, Mr. and Mrs. Gay- lora Lucas ana tne latter's moth er, Zona Lynn; Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Lucas and Carmon and Larry Cooper of Elgarose and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hafer of Garden Valley. Home From Trip Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Jones and daugh tees, Ruthan and Linda, return ed last week from a two weeks' trip and visit with relatives in Kansas, Nebraska and Idaho. They visited with Mr. Jones' par ents, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Kirk, at Beatrice. Nebr.: with his grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Moore and Mr. Kirk's brother and moth er at Seneca, Kan. and with his brother, W. L.- Jones, and family at Wichita, Kan. They also visited with Mr. Jones' sister-in-law, Mrs. R. P. Jones, at Topeka, Kan. Her husband was enroute home from the service but failed to ar rive in time for the visit. Thev stopped at the home of other rela tives, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Conrad, at Sabetha, Kan. and with Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Jones at Payette, Ida. Farm Price Prop Will Be Needed Benson States NEW YORK m Ezra Taft Ben son. President-plppf Ftcunhn... ..., choice for secretary of agriculture, says he supposes some farm price SIlDDnrt will ho nncassnnr u1im 4U ....vum mien me present law providing for 90 per cent of parity expires two years hence. Asked fit FifHlhnUir'D tianrln...... tcrs here. Thursday whether he favors thp nrpennf npia .... "uH, Benson said: 'Well. It's On the stntllln hL-o for another two years." RenSnn. n Knit T.nlra Pit,, Mni dent, said he hopes the Eisenhower administration can improve on the present program, and added: "I suppose we need some sup port, but at what level I'm not pre pared to say, whether at 90 per cent or 75 per cent." Parity i.q thn nrlA thnt farm duce should command to give the farmer a fair price for what he sens in relation to prices he must pay for the things he buys. Elsnnhnupi hac iaM un rn,.n present laws that guarantee price supports lor oasic crops, through itsn, m u per cent ot parity. Benson said .he agreed with the message from EicpnhAurot i-.-..! Tuesday at the convention of the American Farm Bureau Federa tion at Seattle. In the message the rresiuem-eiect urged farmers to analvza thpir nmhlnm. u Ba (n k prepared to offer possible solutions mien uib price support law expires at the end of 1954. I Jowelts I iraunnm.nii,!.!,,!,, ,,, ,, ., , . j -.i Tn." ii-hwkim mv- 'i,i'".'i;"'i"jimjui;nJ'M -' .rjj.'-f.'-'Lr BETTER ENGINE PERFORMANCE, styling changes and additional color and trim com binations characterize Mercury for 1 953, now on display at Lockwood Motors. A new exhaust system and new oir cleaner have been adopted to improve the engine "breath ing." A full-length side moulding and new chrome wind-splits are exterior styling changes, as is the front and rear ornamentation. All models have a one-piece backlite. A two-position door check mechanism with an extra door stop for easier, more .convenient door operation is a new innovation. Mercury for 1 953 ' offers 13 colors and 26 two tone combinations. Clendale Events Told; Grangers Visit Riversdale By MRS. G. B. FOX Six members of the Azalea Grange attended Pomona Grange Saturday, Nov. 29, at Riversdaie r.psnda Unll nnir RncaKnpd Thorn was election of officers, and threeJ ?auSht Thurston in the act of open Azalea persons were chosen for office: James Croft as ovjr3?ci. Grace Croft as secretary, and Mina Johnson as lecturer, x'lic members making the trip were Hazel McPherran, Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Diltz, Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Johnson and Grace Croft. Instal lation of officers was held last Sunday afternoon at Riversdale Grange. Child Hurt Robbie Lee Hays, 2, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raben Hays, oi Glendale fell down stairs recently and broke her collar-bone. She is getting along fine. Mrs. Comstock of Mcdford was a week-end visitor at the nome oi her daughter, Mrs. J. M. Young of Glendale. Medford visitors Saturday in cluded the Ruasoner girls, Mrs. Olger Scthcr, Juanita Sleinman, Mrs. Olen Steinmean, and Pauline Bartle, all of Glendale. Mrs. E. B. Collar is moving and will be occupying her new home, near the junction of tne Windy Creek and Glendale Roads, this week-end. John McDonald's son, Johnny Jr., who has been serving in Ko rea, arrived in Seattle Nov. 31, and reached Glendale on Thurs day, Dec. 5. He will have about a month s furlough with the family, leaving for service again on Dec. 31. Visit Here Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Blaser and two children from Raymond, Wash., and Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Blaser from Myrtle Creek were visitors in the Ralph Blaser homo Saturday. The same group, includ ing Alice, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Blaser, spent ThanKs Kivins nt the C'nrles Blaser home in- Myrtle Creek. Mr. and Mrs. cdward binith and three children were Thanksnivs.iv, guests in the Floyd Ames home. The Assembly of God Church held its monthly business meeting Friday evening at the church, will) Charles Stackhouse. supcrinten dant, in charge. Plans for the Christmas program comprised the chief business of the evening. Safecrackers, 9 And 10, Interrupted By Police PORTLAND iJPI-A pair of tough talking safecrackers were sur prised Thursday.""night at work in a Portland sporting goods store. They told police they decided to "peel" the safe with a hammer and screwdriver in what started out to be a simple burglary. They entered the store through Dallas Postal Clerk Caught In Theft Act DALLAS, Ore. Wl Allen R. Thurston, 30, Dallas postal clerk, was jailed here Thursday night, ac cused of opening letters contain ing contributions for tuberculosis Christmas seals. Deputy Sheriff Tony Neufeldt said he and Postmaster Carl Black ing the letters. He is charged with tampering with the U. b. mails. Neufeldt said he and Black watched Thurston through a win dow and saw him take letters into a rest room. They followed him and founds 12 of the 14 letters had been opened, the sheriff's deputy said. . An investigation has been under way since early this year after complaints were received thai some contributions to the March of Dimes sent through the mail were not delivered, Neufeldt said. Thurston has worked for the Postoffice for two years. True Freedom Needed In U. Dulles States Sef DENVER Ufi Laying a base for future foreign policy, a lead ing spokesman for President-elect Eisenhower claims a crusade to make freedom work at home is es sential to break the spell of com munism abroad. John Foster Dulles said last night something has "gone wrong" with American life. The incoming secretary of state called for a spiritual revival. He warned that "when ennobling purpose goes out of freedom, it is easily displaced by false faiths, such as commu nism." Dulles' speech, his first since being named by Eisenhower, was recorded and played to both the National Council of Churches of Christ in the U. S. A.., and to a nation-wide radio audience. "Nothing has been more disas trous to the cause of freedom than our growing assumption that noth ing happens unless government docs it,' Dulles declared. "The need today is to rekindle faith in freedom, and to make it contagious, by a fresh demonstra tion of what to do with freedom." Dulles said. an 18-inch-square window while an accomplice waited outside, they said. Dick Neviile, an employe of the store, returned unexpectedly i list before midnight, and hearing the noise, called police. The yeggs gave their ages as 9 and' 10 whereupon police turned them over to juvenile authorities. Their accomplice, identified as a 3-year-old too big to get through the window, was still at large. 1 CHRISTMAS 5 FECIALS f f Ju.it in time for Christmos giving. Play Santa Clous by select ing wearing apparel from new holiday merchandise, LOWELL'S two day special it good on the entire selection of girls and ladies blouses '. , MONDAY and TUESDAY ONLY BLOUSES GIRLS Sixes 3 to 14 Orfi it Nylons Cottons Rayons LADIES Sizes 32 to 44 Orlons Nylons Cottons Rayons SELECT FROM OUR ENTIRE STOCK I ti . ( i ml I E'txi i - I I flS'J J i i UCED ' O H Wrl"ftomPltllonuthn. i Wm I ERMAD0R See Tuesdays News-Review For Another 2 Day Special K Only the B.lt in Range makes "S-"--i'' ic pouiDie to dMign. plan and i'svTy build a kitchen that incorpo-Pv . ram all your idtat of modern (), ), - 1 functional arrangement. Oven j and cooking top are aepwiie jj, ;- ' siamics! iirei uniu...can he in stalled at any height and loca uon. Working areas and storage space foe food and equipment located adjacent to the two units provide maximum step-saving convenience. BUY NOW PAY IN 1953 Vrilt fornmpUn mlormttlon. . GET MORE WITH THERMAD0R utet conveniiht ovca CCVUTC THEINOSm CtOCK tonnoiito MIUKIIlt OVEN UGHI IMOKtlESS SMOllER cooiimb satricE -1 imrt mo BEET Will COOKE. HI SUHUCE tNITt WC Kin TUT F0 t!T CtEAMW Rnlk limit. XJ -J- -1 ELECTRIC RANGE Ike Keeps Clear Of Controversy Over M'Arthur HONOLULU tm - President elect Eisenhower, relaxing in bright Hawaiian sunshine from his Korean tour and policy-shaping talks, was steering clear today of any light between President Tru man and Gen. Mac Arthur over a peace plan for Korea. Two close associates predicted Eisenhower would shun public con troversy with tiie President. Tru man Thursday called the Eisen hower mission to Korea a "piece of political demagoguery" and said it was MacArthur's duty as a sol dier to report to the President if he has any plan for peace in Ko rea. "Ike is not going to get into any quarrel with Truman," one of Eisenhower's close friends said. "He's going to see Gen. Sac Arthur, as he said he would, to get MacArthur's views on the best way to bring peace to the Far East. He is not going to become involved in any fight over it." "Ike will stand on the sidelines in the Truman-MaeArthutf affair," anothet' associate said. ''Truman has said -some harsh things about Ike but it's my guess that he (Eisenhower) won't make a reply." APPROPRIATE TV TARZANA, ' Calif. M Police arrested John Paul Amescua, 22, Thursday night, because, they said, he fired two shots when' his wife wouldn't let him watch a movie on television. Mrs. Amescua wasn't hit. The movie: "He couldn't take It." Odds Declared Against Merger Of AFL And CIO WASHINGTON W The new President of the AFL says the odds against a, merger of his union and the CIO are about eight to five, even though former bitterness, be tween the two groups has about "faded away over the years." George Meany also told a Nation al Press Club luncheon Thursday he believes: The Elsenhower administration will be fair to organized labor; tfin T-tft.UarHov law must he amended; wage-price controls must continue, aunougn ne saiu ne la "extremely dissatisfied" with the present controls situation.. , The deepest known spot In the ocean is more than a mile further below the surface of the ocean than the top of Mt. Everest is above it. Whatever you do, wherever you go, you'll enjoy it more with radio SUNDAY LISTEN TO .". . ii:3o am New York Philharmonic Symphony George Szell guest conductor in preservation of Beethpven'i Over ture to "Prometheus" and Sshubert's "Unfinished" Symphony No. 8 in B. minor. Erira Morini soloist in JJrahms Violin Concerto in D major. 1:00 PM THE HOLLYWOOD STORY Movietand News, Interviews with the Stars 3:30 pm HOLLYWOOD BARN DANCE Starring Jimmy Wakely 4:30 PM AOS yN' ANDY New Laughs Each Week . , ' 5;00 pm EDGAR BERGEN & CHARLIE MCCARTHY If McCarthy Is wooden, his comedy Isn't 5:30 pm NEWSROOM SUNDAY DESK Around the World with CBS . 7:30 PM THE WHISTLER , Ranked a Favorite West Coast Show 8:00 PM OUR MISS BROOKS Eve Arden as the nation's most delightful schoolmarm 8:3o pm PHILIP MORRIS PLAYHOUSE Leading actors co-star with College Drama contestants JACK BENNY 9:30 PM With Rodio's Most Listened To Comedian The biggest and best ore all on KRNR: DIAL 1490 THE CBS RA3I0 NETWORK something COTY . AS ' fit:. ' .-rtVW by Ink PERFUME BEll ...under the tree or tucked in her Xmas "stocking", this prettily packaged Perfume Purser sounds a fragrant note. PERFUME SWAN ...delightful gilt with a pin-money price tag. Perfume Purser tucked between the gold-bright wings of a grocoful swan. 'Choose her fovorife fragrance LOtlSAN . I'AIHANT . EMEKAUDE . "fAIIS" FULLERTON . REXALL DRUG . 127 N. Jockson . Dial 3-741 5 136 North Jackson Dial 3-5521 Gtmi x Cowshed w Cw. kmii