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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (March 18, 1954)
6 Tlit News-Rovitw, Reiaburg, Or. Thur. Mar. 18, 1954 nosmatT. tnL wmvX HI Sow $$t7 ' ,EL0W SO1-' "aWVI j Temperatures durln. March are due (o averare above icaional I normals over northeastern quarter of the nation and In the far 1 southwest. Elsewhere below normal temperatures are Indicated. tm i m i ii "v HIAVY I MODEKATt fill I?' t mi mi& o 'k i - - MM ' fk j isSSslBS!MMBlBBBVVaVBVlBBBBlBBBVCBBflHMMft X - MRVHiSMML.hkHB-H-MBB Free 'Pamphlet Service Proves To Be Popular . Durinr March, precipitation la expected to exceed normal over northern half of the nation east of the Continental Divide and California. Gulf states and northwest will have subnormal amounts. MYRTLE CREEK ANNUAL STAFF The newly organized staff of the 1953-54 Myrtle Creek High School annual is shown making plans for o "biggsr ond better" publication. From left to right, the staff members ore: Sandra Hevlin, co-editor; Lorene Blankenship, assistant editor; Carol Boggs; Bob Sorter (standing), chairman of solicitors; Bob Alex ander, circulation manager' Betty Springstead; Jim Musick, sports editor; Ken Hadlay, editor; and Joann Williams, picture editor. Orders have been received for 225 annuals and advertising solicitation is virtually completed. (Warren Studio Picture). NEW YORK I The H-bomb U tested in the Pacific and i lit tle later a young supply clerk pays his check at Jersey Standard Oil Co.'s during room in Rockefeller Center here and picks out a pam- Shlet from a rack nearby. Before is lunch hour is over he has a general idea of what the H-bomb is about. He wont learn how to make one, but if he really yearns to play with fire there's another popular pamphlet on hand. Outdoor Cookery." The same scene could happen across the country it General Motors plants, or Du Pont, Alcoa, Western Electric, American Air lines, General Tire 4 Rubber This information-feeding of employes, in fact, is now in use in some form or other by about 1,500 cor porations. Several million workers take out an estimated four million booklets a month. General Motors has, been doing it for 4 W years, distribut ing 56 million copies of over 300 different booklets. "Who says the H-bomb is a mystery?" is popular right now. But1 the leaflets that employes pick up the most are those on sports, hobbies or the "do-its" like 'Cuil It VniiNnlr " The highest pickup Standard Oil I reports is for "Manhattan News", i put out as a special during New I York's newspaper strike. The all-time low in employes' I reading interest was the printed minutes of the stockholders' an nual meeting. , , With 8.400 employes eligible to use the dining room, the average weekly pickup of pamphlets is 1,672. In six months the company has provided 80,000 copies of tt different booklets for total cost of 13,380. The company gets them from the ( U.S. Department oi 3ncu:iuie and Defense,, New York State Underworld Questioned In Gangster Slaying. CHICAGO I " Police rounded ud underworld characters Tues day for questioning in the gang land style slaying of two ex-convicts, both identified by police as notorious hoodlums. Bodies of the two slain men, Paul (Needlenose) LaBriola, 37, and James S. Weinberg, 53, were found Monday night stuffed into a trunk of a 1954 gold colored sedan. The car was in a vacant lot on the city's northwest side. Police said the car was owned by the Cook County Licensed Bev erage Assn. and that both men had been associated witn tne or sanitation. LaBriola and Welngberg had both served prison terms and in he last 20 years had been picked up by police scores of times for investigation. Health Department, the U. S. Chamber of Commerce, National Safety Council, the American Pe troleum Institute, from speeches by oil company executive 'not too popular) and from a number of firms making a business of supplying leaflets for corporation racks. . One of these dispensers, the Good Reading Rack Service of New York, aays tne tree pampniei services grew out of manage ment s enons, largely nm me war, to educate workers on safety, economic principles and company problems. Demos Attempt To Counterattack Favoring Chavez WASHINGTON i The Domo-I(D-NM) picks up its main ammu- cratic counterattack intended ioinition today a one-man minority prevent unseating ol Sen. Chavez , report by Sen. Ilennings (D-Mo). tit. inn jt,a tt a a inc una tmv- 7 cys,. ROSEBURG, OREGON PHONE 3-5553 ly on party lines, five Republicans to four Democrats. Hennings files his minority report today. Now the issue goes to the Sen ate, where Democrats have a one- cralic member of an election in vestigation subcommittee which! vote edge. looked into the 1952 New Mexico Sen. Know! and of California, senatorial election and then . Senate Republican leader, said he brought out a resolution declaring plans to bring the issue up .for a vacancy exists in the Senate as, debate Monday and hopes to get a result of irregularities on such a vote Tuesday. a scale it was impossible to say who won the election. Over Hennings' opposition, the Evidence indicates that oigars full committee yesterday adopted v?re first made commercially the resolution. The vote was strict- about 1840. It! TREES WHITE BIRCH, FLOWERING TREES and SHADE TREES FRUIT TREES Also locally grown EVERGREEN SHRUBS M. LEHNE NURSERY 4 Miles Past Country Clu'j in Garden Valley Phone 3-3987 VstX Radio goet jjjJ wherever you go (iiftni ,i Saturday at 7:00 PM CBS Radio KRNR EL-sd-Lp L.VW Save $31 to $75 AN HONEST SAVING AT WARDS ' In. paiSf yft&- ' : . Hl , A.r- ---iiiiii I. ' I. 'j It Speaks a Universal Language ! 329.95 REFRIGERATOR 268.88 $10 down on terms Now completely automatic defrost ing at low sale price. No buttons to push no plugs to pull. Check these extra features, too butter keeper, twin food fresheners, 4 full door shelves, full-width freezer, 374.95 HOME FREEZER 1 5 CU. FT. CAPACITY 299.88 $10 down on terms Low priced regularly now sale-priced for big savings. 15 cu. ft. capacity freezers and stores 525 lbs. of froz en food Enables you to buy in money soving large quantities store in vit amin and f lovor-soving cold 2 wire baskets and 2 dividers moke it easy to keep foods stored properly. Pictured above is the most eloquent motor car ever to travel the world's highways. It's the great 1954 Cadillac and it speaks not only with great eloquence, hut in a language which is known and under stood wherever there are roads to travel . . . and people to behold. First of all, it speaks of its owner the minute its beautiful hood comes into view. "Here is a man," it says almost as plainly as the words arc written here "who has earned the right to sit at this wheel hy his industry and deportment and enterprise. Be he merchant or lawyer or businessman or doctor or farmer or financier the odds are great that he's a credit to his calling and to his fellow men. "Accept him accordingly and you'll likely be right in your judgment." And then, as it comes closer, it speaks its special message for 1954. Its beautiful silhouette graceful, free flowing and dynamic announces a whole new era in automotive design . . . "expect me to be copied for years to come!" And its smooth, silent, easy movement a true symphony in motion as it glides past and on and away says with clarity and eloquence that the world's standard for per formance has been raised again. And remember the wonderful "voice" of a 1954 Cadillac, with its significant message, comes as a oH.r to the man who sits at the wheel. It comes in aJJition to all the priceless fundamentals which make a Cadillac a Cadillac: unrivalled endurance and depend abilityincomparable comfort and han dling ease and unbelievable economy of upkeep and operation. Have you considered letting a Cadillac speak for you? Better investigate today. ROSEBURG MOTOR CO Rose and Washington Sts. Dial 3-6651