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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1954)
4 Tfi NWi-Rvlw, Roieburg, Ore. Thur. Jan 21, 1954 Two Washington Women Killed In California MADERA, Calif, U) Deputy Coroner Vernon Worden at Chow. chilli Tuday identified two wom en killed in in automobile acci dent near here Monday as Mrs. Evelyn Ada Bpps, about 32, and Mrs. Brrulv Griffith iJlackmon. about 27, both formerly of Brem- FLOOR COVERING LINOLEUM KENTILE PLASTIC TILE RUBBER TILE CORK TILE LINOTILE CERAMIC TILE OAK FLOORING Whatever type wanted, we have It. . COEN " SUPPLY CO. Floed and Mill Termi to Suit Presidential Job Of 'Killing' Type, Ike s Aide Says erton. Wash. He listed Mm. Epps address as Rt. 2, Bremerton, and Mrs. Black- SOUTH ORANGE. N.J. W mon's as C-0 Staff Sgt. Jamesl Bernard M. Shanlev. smecial coun. Blackmon, McOhord Air Force! sel to President Eisenhower, Mon Base. i day painted a word picture of Worden added that Mrs. Epps' j the "killing responsibility" of the mother, Mrs. John Stasil, of Mon- President's job. roe, Ore., told him her daughter' "He it aroused at all hours of was en route to San Diego, I the night and bothered at all hours Worden said identification of the ?.f !!!ea.y witS e?siJ after cri5 women was established through IS'nZVP&JZ 1 . We contact with Mrs. Stasil and Mrs. Houston Calley of Salem, Ore., a sister of Mrs. Blackmon. Richard Tuttle, 18, of Harris burg, Ore., a Marine Corps enlist ed man riding with the women, was shaken up in the orash. He told officers he was a hitchhiker picked up near Redding. Military Air Transport Plane Crashes In Utah HILL AIR FORCE BASE, Utah m a 4,a Auxins fjii it,. u:i: tar7Air Transport Service crashed I lU jf" lc '".u"'!: .ttiddU East." Shanlev told Seton Hall University students in a pre pared address. "The President's main com plaint is that we don't give him enough time to think, as he puts it," Shanley aaid. "Finally we had to set aside a half an hour in the morning and the same time in the afternoon, in order, to give the President the time he requires. "Just imagine the President with the problems he has on his mind having to beg for an hour's time in all during the day to think. i r is terrific schedule goes on un- on land near the eastern edge of great Salt Lake Tuesday but only one man of the 10 aboard was hurt and his injuries were reported slight. Lt. W. N. Orr, Hill Air Force Base public information officer, said the craft was based at Geiger Field, Wash., and was en route there from Topeka, Kan. It was coming in for a refueling stop at Hill AFB when engine trouble apparently developed, Orr said, and the plane was unable to maintain altitude. It hit a power line and smashed into a farm field. . Roseburg Freshman Class Cookie and Candy Sale Saturday, January 23rd At Our Store All Proceeds Go To The MARCH OF DIMES day without a crisis. No one will ever die of monotony." He said about 100 papers re quire the President's signature each day. "There is a constant flow of visitors, meetings with congress men, meetings with staff mem bers, swearing-in coreminies, bill signing ceremonies, decorating heroes, meetings with associations md groups of every description. Then luncheons with staff mom bers, potentates, ambassadors, advisors and congressmen," he said. Evenings, he added, "are often taken up with formal dinners, and many nifthls arc spent on the writing of speeches." Demand For Seedlings i Depletes Nursery Stock SALEM (Al The Oregon forest j nursery has only a few species of ! forest seedlings left, the State For estry Department said this week Great demand for .Douglas firs, noble firs, Scodch pine and Chinese elm has depleted stocks of those varieties. The nursery produces seven mil- lion seeaiings a year. Most 01 inem are given to farmers. Species still available are Port Orford eedar, pondcrosa pine, lqdgepole pine, Chinese arborvitie, cascara, Russian polive and Rus sian mulberry. The department said there again would be enough seedlings by next fall, and the production is being expanded to nine million seedlings a muolly. CONVENTION SET TILLAMOOK OP) The 1954 Oregon Elks convention will be held in Tillamook. That decision was reached at a Bend meeting, Al Fisher, exalted ruler of the lodge here, reported Tuesday. Ss gpiWWWfWWI ANNIVERSARY 1 """1 MATTRESS 0 ?V (fHUn I w"in J ,orl Your Chan" lo fjrt a genuine ITflTi Willi 11 llOtl I 59-50 1""lily Srnly Inner.pnng Mlirn lor 7 tTff lffllfall U JIVW I l'" LESSI Scnly ,. discontinuing ihe JtiV l5JISBl I TVIi I ,,c'1'','P'1l"n on ihnie luxurioui Anniversary LWffllWMKnMl ffllllill I M'"eMea...andYOU get tins terrific savings Vglllia tUliUiUj W)liJ L ol ONE-THIRDl At a modesl $39.95, you LA .1iiO rjrW bedroom n your nomp (;, n ( . UifcTIy,ll go like v. ,ld.i! Come in ' iEASY TERMS O 321 N. Jackson - - 0 DIAL 3-5415 TWO LUCKY AUTOISTS escaped serious injury when a log landed squarely across the top of the car of Richard Hays, Glendale. Hays and a companion had stopped for traffic on the Mount Ruben Road when the log slid from the uphill side of the road, crushing the car. (Photo by G. B. Fox). Multnomah Co. Mentally III To Go To Pendleton SALEM OH Multnomah County mentally ill patients will be sent to the Eastern Oregon State Hospital at Pendleton for the time being, because the Oregon State Hospital at Salem is overcrowded with the largest number of patients in its history. The State Biyrd of Control, which made the announcement, said the state hospital's population is 3,225. It added, however, that the number is expected to drop in the next few months. The hospital's population gener ally is higher at this time of the year. Dr. C. E. Bates, superintendent I of the state hospital, said his in i stitution admitted 2,595 patients in 1953, compared with a normal fig ure of 2,400. The Pendleton institution is con sidered to have a capacity of 1,500 patients. Its population is a little below that figure now. A new $1,500,000 wing will be Eastern Oregon Dam Gets Support LA GRANDE OB A proposal for a flood control and irrigation dam on Catherine Creek in Union County received much sup:ort here Monday at a public hearing called by the Upper Columbia Riv er Basin Commission. It was one of two main proposals advanced as ways to solve recur rent springtime floods from the Grande Ronde River and its prin cipal tributary, Catherine Creek. The other proposal was to widen the Grande Ronde River gorge by blasting near Elgin, thus increas ing the amount of water tne river could carry off at flood time. Farmers objected that this might lower the water level in the Grande Ronde Valley, where a water short age regularly occurs in late sum mer. They favored a dam on Cath arine Creek to cut the spring run off and to hold water for late- Kiimmpi- release. . . I The commission, created by the Oregon Legislature to study water problems of Eastern Oregon, wdl hold meetings the next three weeks at Baker, Vale, Burns, Redmond, John Day and Pendleton. built at the state hospital here, but it won't be finished until well into 1955. Symptoms of Distress Arising from STOMACH ULCERS due to EXCESS ACI D QUICK RELIEF OR NO COST Over l.ve million netai"; " "JS Trkatmkmt have been ' JrwJ ,nd Ou.d.n.1 Ulctr. due In ifMM Poor DUnllon. Sour or gVVSil Goln.ts. H..rtburrt, "SjafS?; ,lc. due lo txcta Acid. Ail 'or ' Meieof " which (ully r inlnos Uus remarli- able bom treiinjetu troett , H. C. CHURCH 4 SON DRUGS ! FULLERTON REXALL DRUG TROWBRIDGE R. MAFIT, M. D. 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