4 Th Newt-Review, Roseburg,
. Published Dally hcaat Sunday by tha
News-Review Company, Inc.
laUrad H hciM fllM aaallar My 1. USB, mt IbM aaal afMca si
Baaabarg. Ortft-vs, aniar Mt af MunJk t, llt
CHARLES V. STANTON, fdltar and' Moti,tr
Mambar af tba Auadattd Prau, Oraaon Nawioapar Publlihatt
Association, tha Audi Burtau af Circulations
BiprHUI r VEST-HOLL1DAC CO. INC., mM l Maw tark, Ckleara,
S&n rranelaco, Loa Angalaa, Baaltla, Portland, Oaovar
SUBSCRIPTION KATES IB Orefon B Hall Par Yaw. $11.00; alx montoi, K M;
threa montha. 13.39. Outatda Oregon -By UaU Par Varf $13.00; aU monthj
$17.00; tAraa nootba, $3 40.
By Naw-Bvlw Curiae P Year, $13.00 Us advaooa). laai than on yaw,
par month, $1.39.
NEW LIFE FOR A LAKE
By Charles V. Stanton
Today, we hope, will be
fficta Douclas County's recreational resource. -
Scores of men started this
fish Doisoninir nroiect ever
aion technicians directed distribution of rotenone in the
waters of Diamond Lake.
Diamond Lake was once
famed recreation spots. This
tled hetween the ueaks of
and only a few miles from that grand spectacle, Crater
Lake, was once the world's largest rainbow trout egg-tak
ing station.
The lake abounded in food. Aquatic life teemed in
the small crevices of the lake floor and the thick beds of
underwater vegetation. Fat trout would not squeeze into
these mats of vegetation, or into the small crevices, to
destroy the lake's food sources. . Yet there was so much
food available that the trout grey? big and fat.. Trout
weighing around 30 pounds were not uncommon in the
"good ol' days."
The Game Commission maintained an egg-taking sta
tion from which they gathered millions of eggs each year
for their hatcheries without diminishing the lake's fish
population.
Trash Fish Introduced '
One of the'finest lures .for a big rainbow is a crippled
minnow. To- catch the "granddaddies" that inhabited Dia
mond Lake, anglers- from Klamath Falls started bringing
in pails of roach,, a species of minnow prevalent in the
Klamath lakes. ; ' '
Some of their. minnows wriggled free, from hooks and
managed to survive. Often fishermen, at the end of the
day's sport, emptied their bait cans into the lake.
' The roach family is exceedingly prolific. The spawn
ing rate is fantastic for such a small fish. Within a few
years Diamond Lake was teeming with trash minnows.
These small fish could work their way into the cre
vices and masses of vegetation the troutj could not reach.
Trout began going hungf. They could not compete with
millions of minnows. Tfte Game Commission spread poi
son in shallows in an effort to gain a measure of control.
But despite all- efforts the roach continued to multiply.
Instead off taking trout eggs from Diamond Lake, the
Game Commission had to plant fish. , ;
Federal Government Aids
A few years ago the federal government, through an
act of Congress, authorized distribution to the states of a
nhara of excise. tax money levied on -fisHintt tackle..; Con
gress has proposed at several
tax, and each time nag met a storm or protest irom sports
men, willing to be taxed to provide money for improved
fishing.
So with money from the Dfngcll-Johnson fund, plus
money set aside from the state game fund over a period
of years, the Game Commission is today reaching the cli
max of a project which is attracting the attention of sci
entists all over the country. . r ,
In accordance with, carefully engineered plans, the
lake's water level has been lowered approximately eight
feet, This also has reduced the water area. The lake
has been marked off into sections. Along the shallows,
boats towing sacks of poison will be operated by cooper
. ating .sportsmen. In the deeper water, specially designed
devices will be used; to distribute poison. " This poison, ob
tained by reducing a South American root to powder, par
alyzes the gills of fish. Thus the fish die from suffoca
tion. Edibility is not impaired.
Within a few weeks ,the effects of the poison will be
dissipated. The lake then should be barren of all fish life.
New food sources will be introduced and given time to
become established. Fish now being held in hatcheries
will be planted in the lake next spring. . It is expected
they will find improved environment and restore the lake
to its once high place as a leading recreational attraction.
Jal ioijie
BY SAUL PETT
For Hal Boyle
NEW YORK W) Charley Butterfield you know the
byline as "C. E. Butterfield" is retiring as radio-TV
editor of the Associated Press.
Around here, that's a little like
saying the RCA building is going
to bo lorn down for a parking lot.
Matter of fact, most of us were
happily convinced that Charley
would still be writing about radio
long after NBC became a faded
dividend memory in the minds of
David Sarnoff j descendants.
But Charicy says he's tired and
wants to go down to Florida and
raise chickens. I don't know why.
The kid doesn't deserve a rest.
We were just getting him broken
in.
After all, he has' only " been
writing iibout radio for moro than
30 years. He has been radio editor
for only 27 years. He has done his
column for only 22 years.
With' all that, the boy ts only 62.'
Ho started young, at 14, on his
family's kitchen table in Cham
paign,' III., Charley built an ama
teur wireless station in 1006.
"In 'those days," he recalled,
"there, were no commercial sta
tions. All I got was coded signals
from the government station. 1
couldn't understand the code but it
was fun for inc, anyway. H wasn't
for the Test of the neighborhood.
"You see, I used an electrolitic
rectifier to cut in on the house
current, which was A. C. Kvery
time I pressed down on the tele
graphic koy, it dimmed all the
lights In the neighborhood. You
should've heard the squawks." '
Story Caroor Btgun , ,
in 1918, he came up to Chicago
to do general bureau work for the
AP. Within a low years, he was
finding stories to write about radio
at a lime when many people still
couldn't spell the word. For ex-
Ort Tuet. Sept 21, 1954
a memorable day as it af-
morning the largest trash
attempted, as Game CommiS'
one of the Pacific Coast'i
gem of the Cascades, nes
Mt. Bailey and Mt. Ihielsen,
times to reduce the rate of
ample, he wrote about Chicago's
- snem nignis.
On those nights every station in
town closed up so radio owners
could begin whirling their dials to
see now many long distance sta
tions mcy couia pick up. On a
good, clear night you could get
Los Angeles.
Charley came to New York as
AP radio editor in 1927. This was
at a time when radio fans were
just switching from battery sets,
which frequently cpilled over and
burned a hole in the living room
rug, to receivers using house cur
rent. The big attractions Uicn were
the A 4 P Gypsies, the "Cliquot
Club Eskimos" (an orchestra),
Graham McNamcc, and the Rev
elers' Quartet, Of whom only Frank
Parker is still singing. Charlie also
tuned in on the first broadcast by a
couple of fellows known then as
"Sam and Henry," When the bova
left Chicago they had to leave the
name behind with the local radio
station. In New York they became
known as "Amos 'n Andy."
Plugs For Taltvision
In 1032. Charley made the front
pages with an exclusive story. It
was the first trans-atlanlic short
wave Interview on record. The
man on the other end in Vatican
City was Guglielmo Marconi.
Even in those days, Charley was
firing questions at the experts
about a fantastic bit of nonsense
known as television. In that inter
view, Marconi told Charley tele
vision's chancci wora "rapidly"
improving.
Charley was writing so long ago
-T- -. , , ; . ,-( - ... v ' - MKL. t, M t-.$Jf m -Er m
"(Sruce
WASHINGTON (NEA) Re
publicans who may have thought
they would get thousands of lush,
top government jobs in the switch
over from 20 years of Democratic
rule have been sorely disappoint
ed. Outside of postmasterships
and armed service promotions,
fewer than 3000 presidential ap
pointments have been submitted to
and. confirmed iy the Senate in
ttfe 83rd Congress. They were di
vided about equally, 1455 the first
session and 1464 the second.
This shows there was no great
housecleaning in the political
change of administration. Many
of these appointments were trans
fers of career employes ana some
were replacements lor tne nrst
round of Republican appointees
who resigned
On postmasterships, which are
now supposed to be nonpclmcal
lobs, only 75 nominations were
confirmed by tlM3 Senate first ses
sion. In the second session. Iter
re-examining all applic jus,
the number of postmasters con
firmed went up to 1777,
ATOMIC ENERGY Commission
doesn't yet have to worry about a
"i'h.D. Mnion a laoor organ
ization made up of doctors ut
philosophy. But labor relations, ex
perts in this field believe that it
might come some day. Some of
the graduate engineers are al
ready organized into a labor union
and it's only a step from tills to a
union of physicists and chemists.
They do have their professional
society now in the Federation of
Atomic Scientists. Tightened se
curity regulations and the with
drawal of clearance tor Dr. J.
Robert Oppenheimer have chang
ed the nature and purposes of this
organization, however, and it is
more and more placed in the posi
tion of batUing for the scientists'
rights."
A COUPLE OF stories which
have but recently leaked out ot
last summer's UN disarmament
conference in London show how
careful the anti-Communist ne
gotiators have to be in dealing
with the Russians.
The conference had no more than
opened when U. S. General Al
fred M. Gruenlher, supremo commander-
of the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization, came to
London to make a speech. In It
he said that it wouldn't be long
before the U. S. would have atom
ic weapons in quantity to back up
NATO forces.
The Russian delegate, Jacob
Malik, picked this up immediately
and used it as evidence that the
U. S. intended to wage atomic
bomb warfare. That almost wreck
ed the conference, and it took
some time to get the disarmament
about TV the headline writers
hadn't even had time to catch up
with the name ol tne new medium.
One head over a Butterfield story
was: "MCht-soeuiE bv radio.
Charley was not only willing
about the new gadget in the early
thirties: he even built his own tirst
TV set out of a kit of parts. His
lust receiver used a neon lamp
instead of a cathode ray tube.
Thus the picture was dark red and
light red . instead ol blacK and
white.
Tiny Pictura Productd
You didn't have to be a crass-
hopper to enjoy the first experi
mental programs that came over
Charley's set but it would have
helped, bven wiin a magnuier,
that set provided a picture only
one and a half Inches wide and
ono inch long. To see anything
he couldn't be any more than two
feet away.
In those days, about all there
was to watch was experimental
pictures transmitted by NBC.
Charley particularly remembers
one in which all that happened
was that a wooden figure of a ot
kept revolving around a turn
table. But he watched that postage
stamp screen and he watched and
reported on everything that came
with the bigger and better screens
developed since.
Now he says he's going to retire
In November, which just goes lo
show you how tough it Is to hold
on to help these days.
Return of the Prodicja!
$2ioteal'
train of thought back on he track.
AT ANOTHER disarmament ses
sion, Moorehead Patterson, the
U. S. representative, was presid
ing. He heard a commotion at the
window behind him and noticed
all the other delegates looking up.
It was a pigeon, trying to get in.
Open up the window," suggest
ed Mr. Patterson to break the
tension. Let the dove of peace
come in."
Malik picked up the idea. He's
been trying to get in for years,"
he observed, but the United
States always keeps him out."
After that, Mr. Patterson de
cided to keep his mouth shut and
not try any more cute remarks.
UNDERSECRETARY of Labor
Arthur Larson doesn't like the
name Workmen's Compensation,"
which has been given to the sys
tem for paying the equivalent of
an insurance benefit to people in
jured on the job. Mr. Larson wants
to call the svstem something like
Workmen's Restoration."
The word compensation' con
notes a sort of paying off, or buy
ing off of an injury," he told the
National Association of Compen
sation Attorneys in Boston re
cently. It seems to imply that
the system has discharged its func
tion when it has given the worker
or his family a certain amount of
money."
CANYONVILLE - (To The Ed
ilor) I wonder why you are so
interested in Guy Cordon's pic
lure that you have to use yonr
whole editorial section to tell the
people, that the Oregonian a few
years back, tried to make him
homelier than he really is? 1
think the voters are more interest
ed in what he does and has done,
than what he looks like. As for his
getting back to Washington, D.C.,
why not let Ike and the General
Motors tycoons worry about tha'7
and it looks like they are worry
ing a lot right now.
1 have read your paper for the
last twenty years and like it, but
such bunk as you had in the edi
torial of September 17 mane me a
little sick at my stomach, - id
Richard Neuberger's replv in the
same issue made you appear ratn
er silly. Why don't you realize lie
is a little too smart for you to
bandy words with and try and put
something worth reading in your
editorials. It might lust be possi
ble you arc on the wrong side of
the fence this lime and we might
see an independent paper in this
part of the state. Why not, for a
chance, an editorial on how Mr.
and .Mrs. Neubcrgcr were respons
ible for getting colored oleo In
Oregon and therebv helping the
little fellow? And last, but not
least, if you will show me if and
when the GOP's ever did anything
to help the working man, 1 will be
glad to go along with them.
"POP" GRBEN
Canyonville, Oregon
Insecticide Promoter
Faces Murder Trial
MAfXZ, Germany 1 Christa
Lehmann, the widow from Worms
who popularized an insecticide for
suicides, went on trial for murder
Monday before a German court
here.
Dressed In a simple green wool
en dress, the 31-year-old brunette
walked composedly into the court
room with two male guards and
a policewoman.
Christa hai confessed to killing
three people with the inseclicidc
E605. Wide publication of her story
was followed by a suicide wave
in which more than 50 West Ger
mans took the bug poison.
Buyers of E605 now must get
a special permit.
In The Day's News
(Continued from Page One)
VOTES it also SPENT TOO MUCH
MONEY IN ORDER TO GET
VOTES. .
The result was a DEFICIT that
added several billion dollars to the
nation s already staggcrine debt
Every household in the land will
have lo HELP PAY OFF that add
ed debt.,
Adlai Stevenson, talking to the
reporters in Indianapolis, unbur
dens nis system of this one:
"The country not only NEEDS
a Democratic congress, but we are
going to HAVE one."
Regarding rumors that tickets
to the $100-a-plate dinner he is go
ing to aaarcss in inaianapous to
nigni are going Begging, he re
marks: "I'm delighted that afie
20 months of the Republicans ANY
of us Democrats can afford to pay
?auu ir a uinner.
I'll have:;Ho say. this for vou
Adlai: When you talk lommyrot
(as all politicians must from time
to time) you managed to squeeze
a good laugh out of it.
Michigan's glamorous (and well
heeled) young governor G. Mennen
Williams known in his bailiwick
as "Soapy," because on one side
of the house he's related to the
Williams shaving soap outfit and
on the other side to the Mennen's
for Men people is also campaign
ing in Indiana. In a Democratic
pitch, in Indianapolis, he puts this
one over the plate:
"The cavalier way in which the
Republicans disregard the facts of
mounting unemployment in the
industrial centers and distress on
the farms is scandalous but I'm
sure there won't be. a depression
because we know the American
people are going to put Democrats
in office in November, and the
Democratic party knows how to
defeat depressions."
Answering one rrnet with an
other, Soapy, you scare me.
ine uemocrats put an end to one
depression in early 1940's bv going
to war in Europe and thev headd
off another one in the late 1940's
oy going to war in Korea.
wnere s uus war you re talking
about going to start?
Aw. shucks! Let's t.Ttrp if In
stride.
Back in the early days in Kan
sas, everybody was always talking
about the TERRIBLE damage the
grasshoppe' , were going to do,
and yet Kansas grew up into a
great stale.
Maybe we can weather the poli
ticians just as the Kansas farmers
always managed somehow to
weather the grasshoppers.
Ford Motor Co. Hikes
Dividend Payments
NEW YORK Cfl Ford Motor
Co. increased dividend payments
to its stockholders last year to
about $15 a share, a calculation
of figures in the annual report of
us largest stockholders. Ford
Foundation, disclosed Monday.
Ford had paid $10 per share in
1951 and 1952.
Ford foundation holds 3.089.908
shares, all of it non-voting. Its
annual report listed dividend in
come of $46,361,853. Nearly all of
mc rest ot tne 3.452,900 shares
outstanding, including all voting
stock, is owned by the Ford fam
ily. The foundation began publishing
its dividend income figures three
years ago, so there was no way
of comparing dividends with those
in previous years.
SOUND SLEEP
ST. LOUIS Wl Adolph H.
Bohnit, snoozing in a rear room at
his loan company, was awakened
by a vij irons pounding on the
door.
Sleepily, he admitted police who
arrested a man found hiding In
the bascmenl. The police toid
Bohnn that while he was sleepin;
a front window had been smashed,
the firm's burglar alarm
had sounded, and Ihe handle on
the company safe had been pound
ed off with a hammer and iron
bar.
Heaving Motion
Of Vessel Blamed
For Seasickness
By A. ROBERT SMITH
Nwi-Rvlaw Correspondent
WASHINGTON The navy is
trying to wipe out that most em
barrassing of seagoing maladies,
seasickness, and has notched an
other step toward success.
Navy doctors have singled out
one specific type of motion aboard
ship which they have linked with
that green feeling that comes to
many landlubbers who go to sea.
Now all the ship design en
gineers have to do is follow up by
building vesels that won't heave.
It's okeh for the shiD to continue
rolling, pitching, swaying, surging
or yawing just so long as it
doesn t heave.
Capt. Christopher C. Shaw of the
naval hospital at Oakland, Calif.,
reports that experiments carried
out on- voyages of U. S. trans
ports carrying soldiers with little
or no. previous sea experience
have disclosed six distinct kinds
of motions performed by a ship as
it dances along on the waves.
The innocent motions are rolling
from side to side, pitching up and
down, swaying, surging or a sud
den motion forward, yawing or
throwing the ship off course.
The guiltv motion is heaving.
which the doctors describe as "an
oscillatory motion much like that
of a cork bobbing on a wave."
awaying, surging ana yawing
seemed to have no connection
whatever with mal de mer, the
doctors found. Accelerated pitch
ing and rolling seemed to increase
the tendency among the dough
boys to head for the rail, but heav
ing was found to be the precipitat
ing lactor.
The navv is trvina hard to lick
the problem because in a six-year
period it counted up a quarter of
a million men admitted to sick
bays for seasickness, each one of
whom was laid up an average of
eight days.
22 More Persons
Will Be Added
To Fishery Check
WASHINGTON (fl Twenty-two
additional persons will be em
ployed in the 22 communities to
handle expanded commercial fish
cry statistics and market develop
ment work, officials of the Fish
and Wildlife Service report.
Secretary of the Interior McKay
last week announced allocation of
$1,800,000 for expenditure by June
30 to initiate a greatly expanded
research program expected to in
volve three million dollars a ye ir
for three years.
Officials told a reporter Saturday
that one person to handle collec
tion of the statistics will be added
at several places, including As
toria, Ore.
One additional person to handle
fishery education and market de
velopment activities, which include
promotion of fish and fish products
for school lunch programs, will be
aaaea ai Seattle.
Officials outlined. special projects
in the expanded fishery program,
including a $234,000 offshore inves
tigation of Albacore tuna in the
Pacific Ocean.
The study will try to establish
where the white-meated fish,vmost
precious of the tunas, spawn and
spend their early years. Only ma
ture fish usually are taken off
California, Washington and Oregon.
WCTU Head Assails
Beer's Alcohol Content
. LEXINGTON, Ky. Ul -Elizabeth
A. Smart, legislative director of
Ihe Woman's Christian Temperance
Union, Monday accused the brew
ing industry of fostering mislead
ing advertising.
She said Americans spurred on
Dy Drewers' advertising now con
sume more alcohol in beer than
they drink in so-called "hard
liquor."
Miss Smart told the 80th
anniversary convention of the
temperance union that facts refute
the myth promoted -by the beer
industry that beer is not
intoxicating.
She said one of the "unsocial
things that brewers' advertising
has done," is not mentioning the
alcoholic content in beer. As a
result," she said, we now have
a growing number of women beer
alcoholics."
"It is time we ended the brewer
created illusion that beer is not
an alcoholic beverage, since a bot
tle of 3.2 beer contains about as
much alcohol as a shot of whis
key," the legislative director said.
RADAR FOR WEATHER
RANTOUL, III. mA radar de
signed especially for weather oh
serwitions is being installed at
Chanute Air Base. It will permit
students and forecasters to scan
clouds within a 250-mile radius o(
the base.
Similar equipment is to be in
stalled throughout the United
States, Brig. Gen. Thomas S. Moor
man Jr., chief of the Air Force's
Air Weather Service, says.
Mrs. L. L Powtrf
Licensed Lady Furwral
Director
IL.i iwani'V' i ' itl
One-Time Isle Of American
Friendship Now No. 1 Critic
By WILTON WYNN
BEIRUT, Lebanon (1 Once an
island of American friendship in a
hostile Arab world, Saudi Arabia
is fast becoming this region s No.
1 critic of the United States.
In the past year, the Saudis have
expelled America's Point Four pro
gram, have publicly rejected
America's offer of military aid,
and have signed the famous "Ona
sis deal" discriminating against
imorii-nn tankers. And in Arab
League circles, the Saudis have
urged Arab states to follow a neu-.
tralist policy in the cold war. j
This is a far cry from the days :
when the late King Ibn saua duui
his country's foreign polity on the
basis of American friendship and
was willing to give Amerca bases
on any strip of his desert sands.
Among the reasons, qualified ob
servers here list the following as
important:
1 American indifference during
the Saudi dispute with Britain oyer J
dispute looked like a little thing to
outsiders, but it became the big
international issue to the Saudis.
They expected American diplomat
ic support and were embittered
when they failed to get it.
2. American military aid for
Iraq. The hashemite royal family
of Iraq and the house of Saud have
had a long family feud, dating
back to the 20s when Ibn Saud
drove the Hashemites out of the
Hejaz in Arabia. The Saudis con
sider aid to Iraq as aid to their
enemy. ;
3. America's attitude toward Pal
estine. This has made a particu
larly strong impression on Prince
Feisal, brother of King Saud and
foreign minister. Prince Feisal led
Arab delegations to the United-Nations
during the crucial days of
1946 and 1947, when the United
States backed the General Assem
bly decision to create the state of
Israel. It was the Arabs' most
crushing diplomatic defeat.
4. A group of anti-Western ad
visers around King Saud. This
group includes such Arab nation
alists as Rashid Ali -Gailani, an
Iraqi exile who led a pro-Axis re
bellion in Baghdad during World
War II. Rashid AH has devoted
his life to fighting foreign influence
in the Arab word. His influence
reportedly has grown sincethe
death of Ibn Saud. Another adviser
California Deer Season
Preceded By Gun Death
SACRAMENTO, Calif. UB The
California deer season, not yet
open, claimed its first victim yes
terday. The sheriff's office said Lyle E.
Ha islet. 34, Sacramento printer,
was killed by the accidental dis
charge of his rifle as he sighted it
in preparation for . the season
wheh opens Saturday. .
A WAY WITH WOMEN
LONG BEACH, Calif. 11 Mi
chael O'Malley, 6, told his . . girl
chum, "Come on. Let's go over
to our house and play."
"Can't. My mother-won't let me
cross the street." the little girl
said.
'Let me handle it," said Mike.
Women go for me."
He entered the house and re
turned in a few minutes. The little
girl's mother opened the door.
"Okay, you can go," she said. .
GOES WHERE
4-WHEEL-DRIVE
HOW with 53
VVC
DUAL-PURPOSE carries BOTH passengers and cargo. Made
to fight through mud, sand, ice or snow. Makes its own
roads. Can master 60 grades. Made by Kaiser -Willys, the
. world s largest makers
A YTJ fjer-Wyi So.i Cfensioa, WIltYS MOTORS, INC.
LUiiCOMI IN AND SEE THIS GREAT WILLYS STATION WAGON
RIVERSIDE MOTORS
1444 NORTH STEPHENS
RESPONSIBILITY
"Reverts To The Shoulder That Con Carry"
CL,J
ROSEBURG FUNERAL HOME
ftU?EU e PHONE 3-4455
Oak & Kane St. Roseburg, Orego
whose power is growing Is Jamal
Husseini, a Paletinian. Husseini
blames the United States for the
loss of his homeland to Israel, and
he is determined to keep the Ar
abs out of any pro-Americat bloc.
LAUREL LODGE NO. 13
A. F. t A. M.
Roteburg, G'tt-jon
STATED COMMUNICATION
WED., SEPT 158:00 P.M.
Viiiting Brothtra Walcoma
W. M. Walter Brydgei
Sec. Durward Oweni
Paid Advartlaemartt
Industry Accepts
Radiant Glassheat
When wintry winds hit central
New York State this year, Con
tinental Radiant Glassheat will
take over the heating job that coal
has had for more than 100 years
at Norwich Industrie.-, Inc., in Nor
wich, New York. The newly in
stalled heating system will cut the
company's heating bill by thou,
sands of dollars and give more
healthful, less troublesome heat
too. -
The building in' which Norwich
Industries has been making ham
mers since 1831 has been heated
by steam from two 150-hp. boilers,
W. E. Curran, Norwich president,
thought about replacing them with
an oil burner which would have
cost about S25.000. Then he found
that for less than a fourth of this
cost he could have a complete
Continental Radiant Glassheat sys
tem installed, which would be
maintenance free and many thou
sands of dollars cheaper to per
ate. Continental Radiant Glass Heat
ing is a truly radiant type of heat.
The heart of the panel is the glass
plate, onto the back of which has
been fused an aluminum grid
which becomes an integral part of
the glass. Therefore, the longer
the Glassheat operates, the more
permantly fused does the cle
ment become. . This is because
the element used . by Con
tinental Glassheat will last for
ever and will not deteriorate with
age. Most all elements of the other
types, such as Nichrome wire and
others, deteriorate with age
they oxidize and gradually lose
their efficiency.
You've probably been exposed
to radiant heating mai.y times
without recognizing it as Such. Can
you recall perspiring in your over
coat on a sunny but cold day?
That was solar radiant heating. If
you walked around the corner into
the shade, it was so cold that you
forgot all about shedding the coat.
Like Continental's glass panels
the sun's rays warmed you and
the other objects they struck.
Continental Radiant Glassheat
is the only fully automatic heat
ing system which has the Good
Housekeeping' Seal of Approval.
The panels have been tested and
approved by FHA, the Electrie
Testing Laboratories and many
leading electrical utility firms
throughout the country. Headquar
ters for Continental Glassheat in
the Roseburg area are located at
Lansing-Oliver, 847 South Steph
ens, Roseburg, Ph. 3-6002. (Adv.)
OTHERS CAN'T
all-steel body
STATION WAGON
MORE POWER
of 4-Wheel-Drive Vehicles.
DIAL 3-7434
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