Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1956)
Community Concert Assn. Membership Cards Mailed Roseburg Community Concert Assn. membership cards have been mailed to the members, reports' GUduy' !lrong' President. Any person who has not received his card should contact Mrs. W. J. Hutch, secretary, phone OR 3-4251. First in the winter series will be the appearance of Yi-Kwei Sze, Chinese bass baritone, the night of V ednesday Nov. 2. The concert will take place in the Central Jun ior High auditorium at 8:15 p.m. Yi-Kwei Sze (pronounced E-Kway Zee) is considered one of the most distinctive recitalists on the con cert stage today. Sze has a repertory in six lan guages. His recital engagements from coast to coast have been nu- My Dad, Walt Disney At last! Th IntimaU story of America's most balovsd ystlaast known genius, told by his daughtsr, Diano. In this week's Saturday Eve ning Post, read the whole rags to-riches story of the re markable man who gave the world Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck and Snow White! You'll follow Disney from his early failures in Kansas City to his triumphs as top Academy Award winner of all time! You'll go right into his homo find out what he is like as a husband and father. It's ths , whole story that only his J daughter could tell t K Disney's Daughtsr Reveals ' ' Why, though hi picture . have made millions, Disney is I usually strapped for cash How a nervous breakdown im- proved Disney's outlook on life The unique appeal The Mickey Mouse Club and Mouseketeers have for mil Hone of children Disney's tiling plans for future projects. Don't miss "My Dad, Walt Disney," as his daughter told it to Pete Martin! Out today on all newsstands lut - .-s . raw r t YI-KWEI SZE . , . Chinese baritone merous. He has been soloist with symphony orchestras in B o s t o n, Chicago, San Francisco, Cincinnati, Detroit, Pittsburg, Houston and San Antonio. He will present his fourth town hall recital in New York early in 1957. Alter a notable debut with the San Francisco Opera Co., Sze la ter won critical acclaim lor leading roles with the New York Opera Co. His recent portrayal of Sarastro was a highlight of the NBC Opera Theatre's TV production of Mo zart's "The Magic Flute. The youngest child of a Shang hai business man, Sze attended an elementary school conducted by Presbyterian missionaries, and there had his first contact with western music in the form of hymns and school songs. He began studying the violin at age 7, but decided to concentrate on becom ing a singer after his first voice lessons. He was graduated with highest honors from the National Conservatory of Music in Shang hai. He was -well launched on a professional career when the Jap anese invasion in 1939 forced him to migrate westward. He came to America m 1947. LOCAL NEWS Community Growth I Tied To Means Of Communication By BUD, BOD IN I Staff Writer, News-Review The growth of a community is tied directly to the growth of ex isting means of communication, Tom Croson, vice president of West Coast Airlines, told a Roseburg Chamber of Commerce luncheon group Monday. With two-thirds of West Coast's business in cities the size of Rose burg, Croson said, the airline is interested in Roseburg's future growth and expansion. Similarly, Croson indicated Roseburg has an interest in the expansion and im provement of the transportation fa cilities that serve it. Croson told of two major develop ments coming in West Coast serv ice. One is the-order of four F-27 type two-engine high-winged, air craft that will be put into service in about a year, Croson said. He added that the new aircraft, be sides offering passengers a much better view of the scenery, flies at 280 mph. and has a fully pressur ized cabin. Croson explained that West Coast is seeking to expand the area it serves in Oregon to include Sa lem, Bend-Redmond, and a con nection from Klamath Falls through Lakeview and Burns into Boise, Idaho. Outside of Oregon, he said, West Coast is trying to expand into Mon tana and into California and Nev vada to provide better air service and connections tor its present cus tomers. This expansion proposal will be put before the Civil Aero nautics Board in two separate cases sometime in the next few months. When these cases arise. Croson said, cities that will' be affected such as Roseburg. will have a chance to present an exhibit and send a representative or spokes man. Harold Hickerson. ' secretar'v- manager of the Roseburg Chamber of Commerce, indicated Monday that the chamber will cooperate in the preparation of such an exhibit from Roseburg and Douglas Coun- Hospital News To Mut Wednesday .The Friendly Circle Club will meet at a noon luncheon Wednesday at the home of Evelyn Paulson. Meeting Announced The Blue Star Mothers will meet at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday at the Roseburg Woman's clubhouse to spend the day sewing on layettes. A sack lunch will be held at noon. Coffee will be furnished. THROWN TO DEATH VALE, Ore. 11 Michael Clasen of Harper was thrown to his death Monday from a pickup truck that plunged over an embankment near here. Douglas Community Hospital Ad mitt td Surgery: Adele and Gertrude Spencer, Oakland; Mrs. Harry Crosthwaite, Mrs. William Lock year, Mrs. E. C. Patterson, Bar bara McKiernan, Roseburg; Mrs. Jack Keller, Sutherlin; Larry Sper itt, Winston. ' Medical: Eddie Camp,' Julius N. Ham, Roseburg; Mrs. Horace Freeman, Winston; Mrs. Carl Er ickson, Sutherlin; George Stephens, Dillard. Discharged Mrs. Fred Coffman and baby, Robin Gail, Winston; Mrs. Donald Hasbargen and baby, Judith Ann; Mrs. Abe Williams, Roseburg; Mrs. E. L. Simpson, Idleyld Park; Mrs. Russell Brownson, Oakland; John Stewart Jr., Portland. Mercy Hospital Admitted Surgery: Mrs. Kenneth Overton, Roseburg; Mrs. James rosback. Dillard. Medical: Mrs. Ralph Hickman, Mrs. Liovne Hansford, uarit roster. Roseburg; Mrs. Dale Page, Idle yld Park. Discharged Mrs. Curtis Huskey and baby, Karen Sue; Mrs. Stanley West, Jack McKern, Mrs. William Mc- Cullum and baby, Thomas How ard, Roseburg; John Kohl, Slither, lin; Mrs. James Hendrix, Winston Teachers At Dillard To Hear SOC Educator Dr. Alva Graham, director of graduate study at Southern Ore gon Ciuege, will discuss curri culum construction at a meeting of the Dillard Classroom Teachers Thursday at 4 p.m. in the Douglas High School library. Wilbur Bushong. president of the group, announced that the event was an open meeting. ff jf I J AWARD FOR ACCOMPLISHMENT Clifford H. Broad water, right, appointment clerk at the Veterans Adminis tration Hospital, receives a $200 check from Dr. R. G. St. Pierre, hospital manager. The check, first of its kind ever presented at the local hospital, was made by the federal government for "sustained superior accomplish ment maintained for an entire year.'' WA photo). Columbia River Ports On Way To Record Year PORTLAND Ufi Columbia River ports apparently are on their way to a record year. Al ready their exports are 60 per cent above the record set last year. The Portland Merchants Ex change reported 1,038,467 tons of cargo moved over Portland piers in October, a record for any single montn. Exports totaled 299,110 tons Grain was the chief export. Down river ports, including Vancouver, Longview and Astoria, exported another 253,879 tons. playing Santa I Yes, your mailman's playing Santa this week. He's jusy delivering Christmas Savings Club checks from U. S. National nearly a million dollars' worth! These gay checks mean wonderful, carefree holiday shopping for U. S. National Christmas Gub mem bers. If you aren't receiving one of these checks, be sure you do next year by joining our 1957 Christmas Club now. Tou save a little each week throughout the year anything from 50 cents to 10 dollars. Then, come next November, the entire amount k yours plus interest. You'll really enjoy being Santa with . money in your pockets and no after-Christmas bills. Diver To Try To Reach Submerged Automobile THE DALLES' I Weather permitting, a diver was to try Tuesday to reach what is believed to be an automobile in the Colum bia River near Mosier, west of here. S. P. Murphy of Mosier said he and a fishing companion no ticed tire tracks leading to the river's edge from a parking area beside the highway. A searcn was started and a grappling hook snagged an object Sunday. The river at that point is 90 feet deep so a diver was called. POLICE FORCE NEEDED ROME (fl Italian Foreign Minister Gaetano Martino said Saturday "an international police fiJrce might be required in Hun gary should the Soviets not give sufficient guarantees ipr tree eiec tions there." Oak - WOOD Fir We haul or you haul and save money. Phone OR 2-2903 SCOTT'S, 9 miles out . North Umpqua Rood Tue., Nov. 13, 1956 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 3 Fire Sweeps 3 Buildings At Missouri College FULTON, Mo. I Fire swept , estimated damage at more than through three buildings at Wil-1 $365,000 but said it will cost closo barns Woods College late last night I to a million to restore, the lost but the shouts and screams of facilities. t house mothers roused about lGOi students at nearby Westminister girls and they scrambled out un- College pitched in to help remove hurt. clothing and nossessions from -the Robert Martin, public relations i burning dormitories. Two were director for the girls' school, re- overcome by smoke and two oth ported all were accounted for. He ers were slightly hurt. . The VODKA of VODKAS There's a difference in vodkas and it's ' a difference worth knowing. It leaves you breathless ! 0mirnaff THE GREATEST NAME IN VODKA M jWilMW.ill"'J 10 PROOF. DIsTIUED FROM GRAIN. SIE. PIERRE SMIRNOFF FIS. 'DIVISION OF HEUBLEIN). HARTFORD. CONN.. U. S. A.. FRANCE, ENGLAND. MEXICO The first dream car you can own not just look at ! Join U.S. National's 1957 Christmas Club 1 ROSEBURG BRANCH . I If d ..' t- 1 rr r m THI UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK OF PORTLAND .'- C v. " f y i 1 ' mmtmmm jkwiii'Wiiii 11 immm mmt uwji.mu.hiui Jtt- MOST.ADVANCID DISION IN CARtGM the plump look of most other cars. Bulging curves hivo given wsy to bold, data-out lines. And there's new power te matchup to 290 horsepowerl THE BIG M FOFT57 WITH DREAM-CAR DESIGN The all-nexr Mercuiy paclcs years of progress in one. It's new from Jet-Flo Bumpers to V-angle Tail -lights, from a Keyboaixl Control to an exclusive Floating Ride. , New size, new weight, new ideas Avhercvcr you look! kswj isyi iiir NEW KCYtOARD CONtROtFar more than a push button trtnmi'ion. Controls 7 driving orierations. Starts engine eontrols neutral, drive, low afiil revcrelocks the trn. miaMon when parked, nd even releases the parking brike. ' NEW V-ANOtl TAIl.UOHTIA stunning example of Drram Car Drign. The drjiinalic slant of the tail. lights emphasizes the new width snH weight of this liiggnr all over rig m. Notice, too, the sculptureilsteel roof.inii the JotKlo Bumper, DREAM-CAR FEATURES IVERYWHERIA Power Boostrr Fan, in the Mnnlilair series, saves horsepower. The new Floating Hide has a cushioning action you have to ferl to believe. But why not see all the dream-car feature' Stop in today. Straight out of tomorrow -THE BIG MERCURY for'57 SI DILLARD MOTOR CO. 404 S. E. Sttphtn STATIWIOI BANK