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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1954)
Doctor Thrives On Milk, Juice MJ.SATOON, Silk. UJiDr. D. .Perky' in years-after 24-day Demonstration diet of three quarts Mcdu?. "mCe " He alio took one iron tablet very five dayi. Dr. Gibion, head of the Univer sity of Saskatchewan'! dairy sci ence department, told hii students milk was an almost-perfect food. When they scoffed, he collected 25 cents from each one to finance the experiment and embarked on the diet March IS. His chief inconvenience, he found came in rearranging his feeding times. He digested the liquids so rapidly he got hungry every two hours. When the experiment ended his physician. Dr. Glen Kinsman, ex imined him and said Gibson's health was better than at any rime during the eight years he'i known him. 'Gibson gained three pounds. All urn juice aoaea up to inoui ,wu calories, more than a-plenty for a cueaiary woraer. Polio Vaccina Program To Ba Used On Monkeys OAKLAND. Calif. (A A Trans- ocean airlines plane left Monday for Savannah, Ga.. with 1,903 monkeys It is the last leg of a Sight from Manila. The monkeys will be delivered to the National Foundation for In fantile paralysis farm for use in the polio vaccine program. There were 1,900 monkeys when the plane left Manila, but the little rascals multiplied en route. FORCED VACATION Due to illness, our cleaning plant . will be dated for TWO WEEKS. Please call for your garments by April 17 Closed April 19 to May 3 SEE YOU AGAIN MAY 3 IMPERIAL CLEANERS Phone 3-5233 342 N. Jackson Sr. MOVING - STORAGE III SB set mmW v we lake For The Thmas You CARE For Dial 3-5311 For Rates end Particular! About Storage and ' Local or Nation Wida Moving ROSEBURG TRANSFER AND STORAGE CO. 321 Wait Oak St. Roicburg, Ore. - tz-foe 2rr "iSSL ( NtlA Ta?4)a)lifa THEY'LL GET AIR SUPPORT A squad leader witn an automatic rifle rushes forward as another French soldier takes cover during heat of battle at Dien Bien Phu ia Indo-China. French high command announced its forces had won a crucial round in this battle by repulsing a Communist siege army in savage five-day struggle. American plane reinforcements have arrived in Indo-China and will be thrown into the battle in record time. They win be flown by French pilots. Too Much Reliance On H-Bomb, Belief Of Two Senators By JACK BELL WASHINGTON lA-Sen. Russell (D-Ga) says it would be foolish for Congress to place too much dependence on the hydrogen bomb and unbalance the nation s mili tary strength by cutting funds for conventional weapons. Similar doubts about overstress ing the H-bomb were voiced by Sen. Anderson (D-NM) and AFL President George Meany. Russell, senior Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee I and a member of the Senate-House I Atomic Energy Committee, said in THIS OFFER CONTINUES INDEFINITELY MERRILL'S MERRILL'S MERRILL'S WE REDEEM OUR OWN HELLO FOLKS! YOU NAME IT . . . WE DO ITl Service Seat Covert Paint Jobs CASH SLIPS AT 10 Of Their Face Value In Any Merchandise We N Sell, Including Seat Cov ert Or Even A Paint Job! GARDEN VALLEY ROAD AT THE VETS ENTRANCE an interview he it "uneasy" about the. Eisenhower . administration's proposal to reduce the ground forces. Neither, he said, is he satisfied with the amount of funds Congress has been asked to make available for the Air Force. But he conceded that scattered Democratic protests against a pro posed slash of about five billion dollars in over-all military funds are not likely to be effective. He said President Eisenhower's prestige as a military man prob ably wilL defeat efforts to change budget figures. Eisenhower has told Congress that the "new look" military pro gram of major reliance on air pow er and new weapons justifies a re duction in defense outlays. He said that while Army divisions might be reduced, they would be more mobile, harder hitting and more dangerous to an enemy. RllSSian Trade I Tu"' Pr- 13 154 The Newt-Review, Reteburg, Ore. I Have We Told ; You About George? .We checked up on first names among APMI workers. George won. So, for simplicity, George automatically becomes the common first name of- every one of Associated' more than 900 employees . . . George heard us say, some months ago,, that new developments were shaping up, thus increasing his sense of Job Security. This is' our report to him: EUGENE: Texture One -Eleven is in production. Also Sea Swirl and Knotty Sea Swirl. This beautifrH decora- tive plywood, with its three dimensional effect, hat been enthusiastically received by architects, build ers, building materials dealers. WILLAMINA: Hardwood Faced Plywood it irt production. This interior-type solid core plywood, faced with Birch and Philippine Mahogany, is finding a ready mar ket in homes and in industry. ROSEBURG: Our busy sawmill now hat a daily production ca pacity of 140,000 board feet. In 1953, lumber ship ments were made to 39 states, plus export. Addi tional access roads, tapping millions of feet of virgin timber, are under construction. SOUTHERN OREGON; Large timber tracts have been acquired in the Rogue River watershed adjacent to Gold Beach. This area includes some of the finest virgin timber in the Pacific Northwest. Facilities are planned in which to remanufacture and load lumber and ve neer produced from our Curry County timber. To this end, a site purchased in the city of Coquille has . been leveled and prepared for future construction. All of this, plus large scale manufacture of Douglas fir plywood in .Eugene and Willamina, adds up to Job Security for George and his fellow workers at APMI. ASSOCIATED Plywood Mills, Inc. Genera Offices: Eugene, Oregon ftrwNl nils it EiftM ui WiIIimm; tanktr nil it Imferr I 4 i 4 t 1 s I ! j Ready As Soon As Peace Indicated WASHINGTON HI -Foreign Aid Chief Harold E. St use a reports the free world stands ready to trade with Russia it the Soviets shift their economy torard the paths ol peace." Testifying before the Senate For eign Relations Committee, Stasseo also said that 1953 was "the most successful year for U. S. foreign economic policy including East West trade since the. war." "We have attained a position of ecunumic sirengin in ine tree worm versus a position of econom ie difficulty in the Soviet world,' he said. Stassen was before the commit tee to report on the agreement he made with representatives of Brit ain and France in a London meet ing last month for a reconsidera tion of controls on Western trade with. Russia and her satellites. In a brief ooenim statement. Stassen said that West European shipments to the Soviet bloc are 31 per cent below the rate before World War II. Imports, he said. are down 22 per cent. Stassen said the London confer ence emphasized that there would be no relaxation on present eon' irois over gooas snipped to North Korea and Red China. The United States bans all American trade with these countsies, but some of the Allies Derm it trade in itemi considered not useful to war-mak ing potenual. "In eftect." SUssen added. "what we are saving is that if the Soviet, responding to consumer pressure within and the contrast ing rapia aavance 01 tne tree world, will turn its economic ap proach toward the paths of peace then this trade can be carried on." Visiting Woman Killed In Collision Near Bend BEND VI Mrs. Lucy Jane Craddook, 48. Twin Bridges, Mont, who was injured in an automobile collision near here Wednesday, aiea in a nospuai Monday. She wat a oasseneer in car driven bv her hiinhand Rrnnot T. i;raoxiocK, on a trip to visit friends in Eugene, ore. Craddock suffered only minor injuries. The collision occurred at a highway junction two miles north driver of the other car. was not hurt. ' , Nt T ta SHTS TOPS Dr. LiHun Gilbreth, 76, of Mowt ClaJr. N. J. (above), has been dubbed "Oka world's greatest engineer." Sbe was presented with the Washing ton Award in Chicago. Award it conferred upon an "engineer by fellow-engineers for accomplish ments which pre-eminently pro mote the happiness, comfort and well-being of humanity." Plowing King Namad At Lynden Festival LYNDEN, Wash. W) Cornelius Verduin, Lynden farmer with a whole flock of special prices to his credit, feigned Monday as the king of the 1954 International Plowing Match. Verduin took first place in ;h adult, division of the 13th annual match Saturday held under sunny skies and participated in by 21 contestants. In addition to winning the adult cup, Verduin received special prizes tor plowing tne Best crown, best finish and best at firmness and packing. Other division winners were Mrs. Lois Anderson of Lynden ia the ladle's plowing event and Dale Nordy ol Lynden, winner of a cup for being the youngest "plowman'' entered. Polio Immunity Experiment Said Very Satisfactory OHJCAuO VI Persistent evi dence of immunity against one of the three strains of polio virus for Keriods up to three yean or more as been produced in a small group of children with an oral preparation of the virus strain, three Pearl River, N. Y. research ers report. Dr. Hi'ary Koprowikl and two fellow Investigators of the Lederle Laboratories said the preparation was an experimental one first an nounced in 1952 but that the pres ent report was the first account of immunity studies with It beyond one month's observation. The preparation contain "liv ing" virus which the researchers indicated had been modified in strength by first being passed progressively through a number of hamsters.- , They said in the technical jour nal "Pediatrics" that the prepare- . tion is capable of stimulating "antibodies'' against the so-called type 2, or "Lansing" strain of : polio. The publication it the offi cial journal of tho American Acad emy of Pediatrics. Declaring it had been adminis tered to 14 children, they said without specifying, that "a num- ' ber" of the children showed a per sistence of the same level of anti- bodies "for three years and more" ' virus. "It Is reasonable to assume," they said, "that the immunity thus acquired may last beyond the . three years period investigated in this study." ' MOHR'S 1 WELL DRILLING Irrigation Weill Our Specfalty Phone 743 Myrtle Creek e Miles N. 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