The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, May 21, 1956, Image 14

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    14 The News-Review, Roseburg. Ore. Mon., May 21, 1956
Army Engineers Ask Bid On Smith River Dredging
The U. S. Army Corpi of Engi
neers, Portland district, has call
ed for bids on the dredging of
131,400 cubic yards from the chan
nel in Smith River.
The contract will be let June 12
in Portland, according to the Port
Umpqua Courier, Kccdsport.
Col. Jackson Graham, Portland
district engineer, said the job will
provide a six-foot channel 100 feet
wide from the mouth of Smith
River to the north fork, a dis
tance of 15.8 miles. It also will
provide a four-foot deep channel
75 feet wide from the north fork
to Sulphur Springs Landing, anoth
er five miles.
lllllliiS
Planning home improvameoci? Tell
your dealer of contractor you wane
to finance the project with
FHATititllom, frtmU.S.
Hfl DOtfl NTMENT II MONTHS Tfi PAT
If yauM it a "doa-Youmlf" job,
Mop in X any U. S. National branch
and tee how ily von can finance
your project
5
MM ROSEBURG BRANCH
OKCOON'I OWN ITATI.WIDI BANK
f ' , - .a.- ' ....... : ', " "- m
Make building easy with
galvanized steel sheets
Mow's the time to make tlioBC
much-needed repairs or start
those new farm buildings. For
now. once attain, you can build
with steel. For siding strength,
use U S S Corrugated Steel
Sheets. Because they're corru-.
gated and have a high grade, ,
galvanized coating they give
extra Btrengi.li to the building; :
without adding undue weight.1
For rooting appearance, yout
best choice is U. S S Storm
SeaL Sprinkle, downpour.
cloudburst, or gully-washer, '
btormbeal won t leak, gives
you years of protection. ..sure
protection... yet costs no more
than many types of ordinary
roofing. Both are easy to apply
and give a trim, finished ap
pearance to any building.
Come in now and get the facts
about these two low-cosl--W.
lasting productsa
ALL LENGTHS AVAILABLE
DOUGLAS SUPPLY CO.
Loggers' Supplies Sawmill Supplies Heavy Hardware
649 S. E. Rose Street Roscburg Phone OR 3-6638
Community News Items
Sot., Moy 19, 19S6 The News-Review, Roseburg. Ore. T
PATRONIZE NEWS-REVIEW ADVERTISERS
Te Santa Rosa C. V. Montgom
ery left Sunday for Santa Rosa,
Calif., where he will spend a week
attending to business matters.
Arrive tn Chicago Mr. and
Mrs. Fred G. Wcnger have arrived
in Chicago where they will attend
a reunion of the Wcnger family.
They expect to return to Roscburg
early in June.
To Tillamook Mra. Alice Goff,
Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Busenbark and
Mrs. Mayme Pickens left goday
for Tillamook where they will at
tend the Rebekah Assembly of Or
egon Grand Lodge.
Starts Vacation Mrs. Reuben
Benson started today on a week's
vacation from her work at Lowell's
Dress Shop. Mary Chapman will
take Mrs. Benson's place during
her absence.
From Fort Ord Pvt. Robert
Folev, who is stationed at Ford
Ord with the U. S. Army, spent the
weekend in Roscburg visiting his
mother. Mrs. Gladys Foley: his
brother. Gene, and his grandfather,
Charles Emery.
Go To Coast Mr. and Mrs.
William Smith and Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Schell spent a recent Sunday
at coastal points.
On Brief Trip Mr. and Mrs.
Horace Debernardi left today on a
business and pleasure trip to Boise,
Idaho, and Walla Wall, Wash. They
plan to be gone a week.
To Track Meet Harold Hoyt
and Cecil Sherwood attended the
slate track meet in CorVallis Sat
urday. While there, they visited
the latler's daughter, Janete Sher
wood, who is a student at OSC.
Pope Renounces
Artificial
Insemination
VATICAN CITY lf Pope Pius
XII said Saturday artificial insem
ination for human beings is moral
ly impermissible.
The 80-year-old head of the Ro
man Catholic Church addressed
nearly a thousand delegates to the
second World Congress on Fertil
ity and Slerlility. They came here
to hear the Pontiff before opening
a five-day congress in Naples
Monday.
The Pontiff made it clear that he
referred lb the so-called "test
tube" method of artificial insem
ination. This, he said, must be
rejected as "immoral and absolute
ly illicit." The Pope recalled he
gave a similar opinion in a radio
address on Sept. 29, 1949.
At that time, the Pope said: "In
sofar as artificial insemination is
concerned, not only must one be
extremely reserved, but it is a
duty to discard it outright. But
this, however, it is not meant
necessarily to prohibit the use of
certain artificial means that aim
cither at facilitating the conjugal
act or at enabling it to arrice at
the natural act that normally
completes its proper end."
Saturday the Pontiff said arti
ficial insemination surpassed the
"limits of right" acquired by vir
tue of the marriage contract. That
right, ho said, is one of exercis
ing fully natural sexual capacity
in the natural fulfillment of the
I matrimonial act.
The marriage contract, he said,
docs not confer the right to artm
cial insemination because such a
right is in no manner expressed in
the right of the natural conjugal
act.
Forest Service
To Experiment
In Cloud Seeding
By A. ROBERT SMITH
News-Review Correspondent
WASHINGTON The Forest
Service will soon start experiments
in cloud seeding to see if it can
reduce the number of forest fires
touched off by lightning.
Each year lightning starts more
than 6,000 fires in western forests,
according to Forest Service sur
veys. In the national forests of the
Pacific Coast states, lightning ac
counts for about 42 per cent of all
forest fires.
The foresters have determined to
attack the problem with the latest
scienlitjc equipment. They have
acquired a specially built mobile
radar unit which is now being haul
ed to Coconino National Forest in
Arizona, where the tests will be
conducted.
Radar will be employed to detect
approaching electric storms, track
their courses and analyze them for
later study. Some of the clouds in
the storms will be seeded with
chemicals and others will not
and radar will assist in comparing
the results of the seeding by com
paring what happens to each storm
cloud.
Cloud seeding will be on an ex
ploratory basis only. Silver iodide
will be used, being projected from
a ground generator into ascending
air currents or from an airplane.
The chemical crystals foster for
mation of ice crystals, which in
turn is expected to affect the light
ning potential of storm clouds.
Motion picture cameras mounted
on fire lookout towers will record
the life cycle of lightning storms.
While experiments have been
underway for the past three years
on lightning-caused fires, this is
the first time the Forest Service
has used radar in forest fire con
trol. The unit was installed on a
truck trailer adapted for this spe
cial purpose by the U.S. Weather
Bureau.
House Now Considering;
Increased Mail Rata
WASHINGTON tfl Tentative
agreement on a 1-ccnt increase in
letter and airmail rates comes up
for formal approval Tuesday be
fore the House Post Office Commit
tee.
Meeting behind closed doors this
week, the committee reportedly
accepted rale increased to 4 cents
an ounce for first class or letter
mail and 7 cents an ounce for ai
mail. President Eisenhower has
asked such increases to help cut
down the postal deficit.
Other changes would boost rates
on second-class mail, newspapers
and magazines, by an average 75
per cent over the next five years,
and those on third-class mail, most
ly advertising matter. 30 Der cent
The administration had asked 30
per cent boosts on both.
RECEIVES CERTIFICATB
Ernest J. Peel of Roscburg Is
among iu.i apprentices receiving
certificates of jnurncymanship
from the Oregon Slate Apprentice
ship Committee upon completion of
their trade-training. Peel attains
journeyman rank as a sheet metal
worker. The trade requires four
years of on-the-job training which
Peel received at the Tozer Sheet
Metal Plant in Roscburg under
standards set in accordance with
the slate s apprenticeship plan.
, BY ORDER OF
GENERAL SERVICES
ADMINISTRATION
SURPLUS INDUSTRIAL,
AGRICULTURAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES
IN AND ADJACENT TO ROSEBURG, OREGON
1 ' M- MOm UMPQUA. ROSIUtftO, OMGOM
eowwMO, ooteoM, portion of vitirani administration hosmtm (parch n
SM!mmuTu?in!!,T,V 16 W"M" Uw cHy ,imi' Proixrtv l"-"! on bank, of th.
wSvntui or.L .n'T" "P imixrlv. which ha, ,k.,1, we tot
mint Mini, or recreational or light industrial purumra. Giod null fine troe cowrago.
ROSUURO, ORIOONi PORMON Of VCHRANt ADMINISTRATION HOSPITAL (PARCH
cIdll?rflZroVfc',yp8 "L 1hm t,w c,,y hn,il" i-w,n rnmt '"I rmnW. m good
. . . MIOIORO MHITARY RIMRVATtON. JACKSON COUNTY, OB ICON
Ain"rt "l,-hl!-'.1 75' J""?'"? ? -'7 '" facing on county highwnr near M.xlford
icS" IW iv 'Ll I J.T '''' 'V'- "'"" Pn..nd mor. and 2870 feet of Purity
liming, t roinrly could be d.-wx.,l f.,r resuhnlml or cinnmenml ptinxwee.
V I rA rJ IK t0n0 G"OVI lVOIR, IANI COUNTY, ORIOON
ll7.rSlv'nli.!iIi ,u'd.U T"'" nmr" or ,ol"lm appro. 120 acre. I'am4. .re
menu? Z!Li all . ill IT ' ""' ""' wh H-r. There are no improve-
mente. however, all are acciMe w county roods. Appro, ar, mil south of Eugene, Oregon.
0O"N """VOIR rHOJICT, UNI COUNTY, ORIOON
nT,',mmJ r,'7v"i.?'.lnmli ""' ,,,H""' '': appronmnlely 10. 7. 1 and .M nen.
toUilmi appnmm, tely l( acre. l'ro-rlv is neru-ultmal and Iran, ar not contwioiw. All era
7 DEY ST., NEW YORK"ciTY
Local licprrsmtatiue . .
EARl WILEY
Hotel Rose Building,
Rotcburg, Oregon
Phone Or. 3 3401
Send for Brovhum
of this and 3
other Oregon A
Washington
Auction Sakt
Stays Overnight An overnight
guest of Mrs. Celia Day on a recent
Monday was Mrs. John Moore of
Coquille.
Visit Here Mr. and Mrs. Zan
Dickinson and daughter, Lisa, and
son, Scott, of Portland spent the
last weekend here visiting Mrs.
Dickinson's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Len Mitchell.
Attend Grand Ledge Among
those from Roseburg who left today
for Tillamook to attend the Re
beka Assembly of Oregon Grand
Lodge were Kay Simmons, Thella
Webber, Lena Poole and Edith
Brock. They expect to return Fri
day. Leaves On Trip John F.
Heeler, Calins Road, left recently
for Minneapolis where he will be
the guest of the American Hard
ware Mutual Insurance Co., for
several days. Heeter was select
ed top field representative for his
territory which includes Oregon,
Idaho, Montana and Washington.
Mrs. Hildeburn Home Mrs.
Harry Hildeburn has returned to
her home in this city, following a
four-months trip around the world
on the Swedish luxury line, "Kungs
holm." After arriving back in New
York the last of April, Mrs. Hilde
burn visited relatives enroute to
Omaha, where she stopped over
for a visit with her son, Harry Hil
deburn Jr. She reports an espe
cially enjoyable trip.
Attend Convention Mr. and
Mrs. Fuller Johnson attended the
Pacific Northwest International
Circulation Managers Assn. conven
tion which was held Sunday, mon-
day and Tuesday of last week at
the Multnomah Hotel in Portland.
Both members of the association,
the Johnson's were appointed chair
man and co-chairman of the scrap
book committee, the second year
they have served in this capacity.
Mrs. Johnson was the only woman
member in attendance at (the con
vention which drew managers from
the entire Pacific Northwest and
several provinces of Canada. Lew
iston, Idaho, will be the scene of
next year's convention.
Move Mrs. Catherine Millikin
and Donald, Mary and Goldie Mil
liken have moved from their for
mer address at 1132 NE Stephens
to their new residence at 1175 SE
Douglas which they have bought
from Mr. and Mrs. Alva Laws.
In Minnesota Anna Keller left
recently for Comfrey, Minn., where
she will stay for a few weeks, vis
iting and renewing old acquaint
ships. En route, she stopped at
Fair Oaks, Calif., to visit a son and
daughter-in-law, Wr. and Mrs. Up
ton E. Keller, and family, leav
ing soon afterward with friends
from North Fork, Calif., for
Minnesota.
Back From Trip Mr. and Mrs.
W. R. Hirt returned Friday to
their home in Roseburg following
a month's trip to California. The
first part of the trip was spent at
San Mateo at the home of their
son-in-law and daughter, Dr. and
Mrs. R. E. James. The group at
tended the 50th Year's Progress
Parade held in San Francisco,
commemorating 50 years of pro
gress since the 1906 earthquake
and fire. The lavish parade was
four hours long. Later the Hirts
visited in San Fernando with a
son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Edwin R. Hirt, and family,
and also visited Hirt's two sisters,
the Misses Bertha and Ann Hirt,
who live in Hollywood. During their
stay in California they went to San
Diego and toured Disneyland and
many other places of interest.
Worry of
FALSE TEETH.
Slipping or Irritating?
Don't be embarrassed by loose fnlse
tflet.li slipping, dropping or wobbling
when you eat, talk or lnugh. Just
prlnkle a little FASTEETH on your
plates. This pleasant powder gives a
remarkable sense of added comfort
and security by holding plates more
firmly. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste
or feeling. It's alkiillilR (non-acid).
Get FASTEETH at any drug counter.
MOW!
Business Loans
ON MONTHLY PAYMENTS
MACHINERY
EQUIPMENT
LIVESTOCK
Loans to Purchaie, Repair or
Refinance f
Crawler Type Tractors
and ALL Typet of Equipment
a Specialty
maiwnemiM
s pacific .
IMiMlfffllftl-4
nwviiinink
GENE McCOY, Manager
PHONE OR 3-6668
664 S. E. Stephen! Roseburg
WE'RE THE AUTHORIZED HEADQUARTERS FOR
Vtttcfi Bo: Paint
...th paint that wot
used to beautify and
protect th hundred of
building in Walt Disney's
Magic Kingdom of
jr Disneyland is "Dutch Boy" PaintlanJ. All the areas of
this fabulous project near Anaheim, California Main Street,
Adventureland, Fantasyland, Frontierland and Tomorrow
land are painted with "Dutch Boy" Paints. Inside and out!
And "Dutch Boy" is the only paint picked by Disney for
display in Tomorrouiland the area devoted to industrial
exhibits by America's leading firms.
jr You can use the same paint
chosen by Disneyland in your
own home... "Dutch Boy"...
for outstanding beauty and
top protection. Come in NOW
for free help and suggestions
to solve your decorating
problems.
Phone OR 2-2683
W. Washington at S.P. Track
Roseburg, Oregon
FREE PARKING AT THE FARM BUREAU
i
LINCOLN
The longest, lowest, most powerful Lincoln ever built
' TL. s " N
People who know fine cars are changing to Lincoln
More fine car buyers are changing to
Lincoln this year than ever before in
Lincoln's entire history because they
recognize that this longest, lowest,
most powerful Lincoln of all time is
unmistakably . . . the finest in the
fine car fiehl.
Naturally, most of these people are turning
to Lincoln because of its fresh, trend-setting
new styling. But after owning Lincoln, they
praise this car's other fine qualities.
They tell us time and time again about
Lincoln's exceptional handling ease. They're
surprised that such a big, roomy car can be so
effortless to drive and that wives actually
prefer this Lincoln over the family's smaller car.
They tell us about Lincoln's outstanding
performance, too in dozens of ways. Those
who have never experienced Turbo-Drive are
astonished to find that an automatic trans
mission can be so smooth . . . and those who
take long trips say that this Lincoln make th
ride seem so much shorter.
And they tell us about roadability. They
like the way Lincoln rides so firmly through
a curve and the freedom of taking any
road they choose . . . instead of avoiding
the bad ones.
If you've been thinking this is your kind of
fine car, stop in and see us. We'll put a new
Lincoln at your disposal any time you say.
SI DILLARD MOTOR CO.
n
ORchard 3-6625
Iv
404 S. E. Jackson St.