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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1953)
10 Th Newt-Review, Roseburg, Ort. Wed. Oct. 21, 1953 : ORGANIZER HERI .Violet Hyde, Albany, organizer for the Degree ol Honor, will be present at the carnation party of the association announced for Thursday at 8 p.m. at the home of Fern Hobday, MO Cobb St. Ul cers have requested all members to be present. Bertha Shrum will be hostess. STEARNS & LITTLE MORTUARY Mr. & ' Mrs. Vernon Little Managing Owners Our service Is for all and meets every need. Any distance, any time. .' : Phone 2711 or 2713 , OAKLAND, . ' OREGON Curtin Store Is Installing Meat Case By GENE MEACHAM Mr. and Mrs. John Stieers are installing a new meat case in the Curtin store. It will enable them to handle frozen foods and is plan ned as an addition for their cus tomers' convenience. Recuperating Mrs. Andrew Redifer was ex pected home from the hospital Sunday. She Is reported getting aiung very wen since ner recent operation. Tom Allison, who has ben in the Cottage Grove Hospital for the past two weeks, is reported as not doing so well. He will go to Portland for further treatment. He hasn't been able to swallow as there seems to be some obstruc tion In his throat. The Home Extension club will have their regular meeting Oct. 28. Basic tools is their subject, working with sten shelves. Yoncalla resident learned of the death of Mrs. Isabelle Cline. who has been a resident of this com munity for many years, living on ner nome rancn on the Old Terri torial Road. Funeral services were held Monday morning at the Cath olic Church. BUSINESS APPROVED The Roseburg City Council Mon day night approved the application for a new business from Hulburt's Plumbing, 632 Winchster St. -e.lt T. MAlTf FtPMBIK" tM ff .;' I HNW HOl AMOTION 551 71 , -i I ' - -" CI 'SUV REALTY CO. naturnxv, GENTLEMEN, THERE'S no question about wuo IB THE BEST PLUMBING CONTRACTOR FOKTHI& IIWUKIWJI PROJECT. NOW, LETS TAKE A FEW PAYS TO EXAMINE THE BIDS ON THE REST OP THE SPECIFICATIONS" WeSelll W install! WcS.rvicol W Guarantee! Remember! Always Call This MASTER PLUMBER ICIER - CR00CII PLUMBING COMPANY 2 JO No. Stephens Phone 3-5377 Injured Glide Player Released From Hospital By MRS. ARTHUR SELBY Jerry Ward, son of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Ward of Toketec Falls, suffered head concussion last Wednesday at Glide High School football practice. Me was taken to Douglas Community hos- nilal - - : - r .. - . i i : i.l . His lamer, irocn uihiu.-iici mi California-Oregon Power Co., was notified through Copco's shortr wiv radio at Dlxonvitle sun-sia- linn mil the Darents drove down at once, staying at the home of Mrs. miaa Kocxweu. jerry was released to his parents on rnday, Hunters Successful Mr. and Mrs.'C. C. Stiffler and Keith Ireland returned last week after five days Minting i Steven Mountain in Eastern Oregon. They brought back three mule deer. Friends of the Stifflers in thp nnrtv were Mr. and Mrs. Mil lard Cornelius -from Springfield and Del Arlington, music director at Arlington High School, and each got a deer. Cornelius, 7J years of age, tri umnhpd over the younger mem bers of the party, as he .shot the largest buck which dressed out 245 pounds. C. C. Stiffler also killed a 40 pound bobcat, but was unable to collect a- bounty as Crook County maintains a govern ment traDC-er. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Malone moved their trailer house from MoHfnrd to the North Umpaua Trailer Court to place their two sons in Glide School. Malone is an mnlove of Californla-Oreeon Pow er at Toketee Falls and will spend the weekends with his family. Other new residents of the North Umpqua Trailer Court are Mr. and Mrs. Berner Shelton, who moved their trailer house ' from Sutherlin. Sheltin is an employe of Roseburg Lumber Co., operat ing on Little Kiver Road. , - Delivers Ferns Emil Palm drove to Eugene Friday with a load of cut moun tain ferns for the florists. He then went on to Fort Klamath to join the Dumont duck hunting party. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Zitek moved to Oakland Saturday. The Zileks had been operating the grill at the Royal Coachman. Mr. and Mrs. John Allen from New York state are new tenants at the North Umpqua Cabins. Al len has taken employment at the Douglas County Lumber Co. Mr.- and Mrs, Paul James and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Gilkison have moved their trailer houses from Sendelbach's Trailer Court at Idle- yld Park to the Lincoln Kennaday property near Glide. The three families have been - longtime friends and wanted to be close neighbors. The three men are em ployed by the Young Logging Co Kennaday has not opened a trail er court as rumored. Mrs. Johnny DeGroot has made extensive improvements in her apartment at Johnny's Tavern and Bud Van Beber has Just complet ed modern decorating. Blight Faces Many Cities Of America Because Areas Were Allowed To Run Down Bv SAM DAWSON NEW YORK OB A blight threatens many American cit ies today. It is the blitrht of areas being allowed to run down rather than being renewed and repaired as was nor mal practice in former years, Merchants are feeling the loss of sales as their middle-income cus tomers take to the flourishing su burbs Real estate values and in come slip as worn-out areas spread around tne badly congested cen- Yugoslavs Stand By Action Threat In Trieste Mess tral core of many of our cities. Municipal government costs rise faster than tax revenues. The future of our cities" will be up for debate at the convention of the National Assn. of Real Estate Boards next month in Los Angeles. - Many city fathers find that deter ioration seems to gain speed at the same time that their metro politan areas are mushrooming.. Slum clearance and public hous ing projects have helped, but they haven't halted the tendency in re cent years to let property run down. And the middle-income fam ilies which once lived just beyond the business districts have largely been ignored in postwar city con struction. Blight Reasons Glvtn The Twentieth Century Fund, a nonprofit foundation for scientific research and public education, put Miles L. Colean, a city planning consultant, to work on the prob lem. The fund today publishes his report, -Renewing our uines. pointing out many reasons why cities are oeing ongnted. Traffic congestion is growing steadily worse and strangely enough driving people farther away irom tne ousiness district. Rings of suburbs around most cities drain resources without re- Newsmen "Jacks Of All Trades" During Strike SEATTLE 'm A newspaper- ducing the load on downtown services. The postwar housing snonage lea fn lax enforcement of bousing reg ulations on the theory that a alum dwelling was better than none. Strict enforcement, Colean says, is needed now to end the profita- hilitv nt slums. He also cites the low rate of re turn on money invested in new construction in recent years as having turned away needed cap ital. Shifting some of the local tax load off real estate could help the investor, he adds. ROK Leader Says U. S. Committed To Her Aid PHILADELPHIA Wl - If peace talks are unsuccessful, the South North Korea" and the United States and her allies are com mitted to "march into battle" with ligacy and dissipation." She said there is no community property and she asked no ali tha ROKs. South Korean U. N. Representative Ben C. Limb said last night. ' Col. Limb, appearing on a na tionally televised panel ihow, told ( a group oi college siuueuis uic Republic of Korea has a firm com mitment from the United States forces in such an eventuality. By ALEX SINGLETON BELGRADE, Yugoslavia Wl Yugoslavs were puzzled Monday over the latest Big Three pro nouncement on the explosive Trieste dispute; but their leaders stood fast in their threat to march in if Italian troops move into Zone A. fnere still was no official com ment on the West's invitation to; Yugoslavia and Italy to meet with i the United States, Britain and France to discuss the burning . Trieste question. j Yugoslavia's chief U.N. delegate i Leo Mates said Sunday in Wash-! ingion he thought his governmnt might be inclined to accept. But President Tito and other speakers already have declared they feel sucu a meeting wuuiu oe 01 no use. if Britain and the United States held in advance to their decision j to pun uui tu uiie a ui irieste and turn itover to Italian admin istration. (The Belgrade radio, heard In London,- broadcast a declaration by a political commentator for Yugoslavia's official news agency Tanjug that the Yugoslavs would refuse the invitation if the handing to Western-occupied Zone A to Italy were a foregone conclusion.) No Outbreak Occurs Tito himself demanded In formal notes Oct. 12 to Britain and the United States that the two coun ries take no action on Trieste un til they had discussed the matter with Yugoslavia and Italy. The communique issued by U.S. Foreign Secretary Eden ana French Foreign Minister Bidault at the end of their three-day con ference in London plunged Bel grade into puzzled, anxious sus pense. But the angry demonstrations that some had expected to follow nv nnfavorsDl aecisiwu uj The communique issued Dy u.a.ij'j - t , k -i Secretary of State Dulles, British Big Jtee ddt takeace. LISTINGS WANTED ACTION! HOMES FARMS -BUSINESS OR INCOME PROPERTY TIMBER TRADES. Anything pertaining fo Real Estate. G. I. Loant our Specialty For Confidential and Courteous Service See or call . Douglas County Realty 436 S. Stephens St. Evenings and Holidays Phone 3-4020 Phone 3-8744 As different f ram ordinary heaters nsTZismnnnnnin! S!fllr's xchitlv patented THREE IK ONE HEATMAKER ! hal that's 4 TIMES HOTTER over your floors! Rutin's antra, patented inner hitter, buttl tisht in Uu hurt of Um hottwt in, captum Um Tapc' llii-tlamt hut tint's 4 Tvm Hot. Mr thn 5fefa'.rtnlm hot Siulw pourl this bonus hot nor your loon thraiihgut jmur bow sens jot up to SO la nidi . MOST ORDINARY HIATUS JyfMl HI UT CKS. Kb..pH,."l..yi IWA VM I MinlfSA M "d "'""Si tt hot. ' ttJ-lT:;""?:li'!fi 5 v ) No Mstkjrfjies or rerOfers QtULZ I man. the book 9avs. shnnlri hnvn a broad acquaintance with many walks of life. ;v You can'take their word fnr 11 the Seattle Times newsmen got It j uui iug me ro-uay sirixe closure 01 the city's afternoon newspaper. The Tjmes resumed publication Monday after being closed about 12 weeks by an American News paper Guild (CfO) strike over the amnunt of wage increases and an other two weeks during negotia tions between the management and mechanical unions. As they put out the first edition since July 15, the newsmen told of jobs ranging from picking beans and pitching hay to raking rocks on school grounds and oprating jack hammers on construction jobs. ) But longshoring is what many will, remember longest longshor ing and bananas, "Anybody can handle salmon and beer," commented 53-year-old Joseph P. Smith in retrospect. "The bane of the profession is bananas." About 30 of the Times news and circulation employes worked on the waterfront from two to five days a week when the banana boats were In biH thavfnnnH tha lOn.nminrl ! banana stems were no soft pick-! ings for office softies. But there were compensation. "They let us keep bananas that broke off the stems," said one re porter. "We tottered home at night with our pocKeis siunea witn them." One of the amateur longshore men received a mailed pamphlet from an anonymous donor "1,001 Ways to Prepare Bananas." i Want to MOVE a "CAT" Heavy Hauling Our Specialty We Are Prepared To Haul Your Donkeys Paii son TRUCKLINE, INC. Phone Roseburg 3-4555 Day or Night Myrtle Creek, Ore. Phone 132x6 or Doyle Carte, Sr. 1643 Evenings YOUR IN ROSEBURG JG02f& DEALER M IS LOCATED AT 444 NORTH STEPHENS ST. CARTER TIRE CO. DIAL 3-7366 nurtiMnu wAitiL is some- i thing you don't buy every year. Its . installation is an event. A sign of your progress. So when you decide to install a Water system. Do Right. Come to Water System Headquarters. Let us help you figure the right pump of the right capacity and the right way to install it. You can save yourself plenty of money by being careful, by getting all the facts. As representatives of Goulds Pumps, Inc. the oldest and the largest manufacturers in the world, we are prepared to give you real service, low prices and the right system for your needs. Come in and talk thing over. Com In .W Thin Oyer BUY WHERE YOU SHARE IN THE SAVINCS W. Wash, at S.P. Troeki Roseburg, Oregon DIAL 3-5022 FREE PARKING AT THE FARM BUREAU 3-Sheli Utility Table : V .... iii4i-r Sturdy Built of Steel to Hold Kitchen Appliances Extra Durable Finish 15x20 in. Shelves - Smooth Rubber Casters $J95 Solidly built for heavy duty kitchen workl 3 reinforced shelves have raised edges to prevent spills. Caster mounted legs mean table can double as a tea cart. Baked enamel finish is chip proof, scratch proof and stain proof. Choice of white, red or yellow. 51 Priced at $10.69 $7.88 Modern armless occasional chair. Available in Red & Chartruese plastic covert with Blonde fin ished legs. No tag springs. Styl ed to fit your needs, can be used nicely in either bedroom or liv ing room. Shop now, take advan tage of a real bargain. A Real Savings! w t P i ai 9 x 12 Linoleum Rug 3 Patterns Available in three pat terns. However, stock it limited to be sure to shop early and get your choice of colors. Outstanding Value RAG RUGS Gay nwllicolor pamnrn of these little antra rugs brighten halls, landings, rooms. Yo can buy sv eralatlhispricer 18x40" 33' iAiWAYS BETTER BUYS Stephens & Cass Phone 3-4522