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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1956)
URIAN ftlNEWAL SOUGHT SPRINGFIELD. Or.. Ir J" newil of a large tract of property northwest of Springfield under consideration by the Ceo VvUl1 plBn'nf Commission, me agency will survey the 161- ould be the best development Pl. A $63,000 federal allocation will finance the study. VENETIAN BLINDS W Castea-neee im u It ' mini W filMte MtoMU 1 V GyratMi VHLMlltllip. Fait service ft tttilMMt. ROSEBURC VENETIANS 214 S I. J.ckw. OR -S4l U Desired 4 U. N. Say. Plant Ready To Start Clearing Canal j CAIRO, Egypt The United I Nations, inlormalion ofilce here! .announced Thursday that plans are now ready to start clearing the Suez Canal of sunken ships immediately after "E Day" when British-French forces are' evacuated from Port Said. IS. U. Gen Raymond A. ; Wheeler, special U.N. adviser on ; the clearance operation, is mov-j : mg his headquarters to Ismailia, midway on the 103-nnle canal, on i the day after Christmas. Egypt's j Suez Canal Authority has its of-1 ficet there. The canal has been blocked 'since Oct. 31. Roseburg Student Wins Offices In His College Robert M. Hipp, son of Mr. Adam J. Hipp of Winchester, is serving as an officer in several organizations of Lebanon Val- I ley College at Annville, Pa., ac . cording to college officials. The.pre-denlal major is serving ' as treasurer of the Men's D a v Studen. Congress ind secretary of the college Chemistry Club. Hipj. a junior, is also active in the student affiliate chapter of the American LDemiril society. ley this $U.9S FLINT KITCHEN TOOL SET Oklahoma Woman Now In Dillard y ROSA HEINIACrl Mrs. Cora Maudlin arrived is Dillard Thursday from her horn in Douthet, Okla., to visit her son-in-law and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hull and fac.ily. Mrs. Maud lin, who is 81-years-old. made her first trip by plane, traveling 20 hours on trip which normally would have taken only nine hours. She was very expressive of the kindness rendered to her by the iiewaruess ina attendants along the trip and during the severe! times the plane was grounded to storms and heavy fogs. Maudlin will spend several months with her daughter and family in Dillard which is the second time she has been in the vicinity. From Home Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Post have arrived at their home in Dillard after being in Juneau. Alaska, since last March where the former was engaged in the lumber indus try. Mrs. Post preceded her hus band by a few weeks and visited her brother, two sisters, nieces and nephews and their families around Portland, before arriving last week at the home of her son- in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Burgess. They are now at tneir motel in south Dillard. Old friends visiting with the Rev. Rinke Feenstra Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Paul Alley from Mora. and the letter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. truest Buell of Roseburc. They were all residents of Moro during the years around 1924 when bluest Buell. now a teacher it Roseburg High School, was prin cipal of the Moro school and the Hev. and Mrs. reenstra were min- Kters of the Methodist Church there. Mrs. Mercy Buell has been re ceiving treatment at the Sacred Heart Hospital in Eugene the past week tor a severe cold and com plications. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Halverson and son Virgil of Crescent City, Calif., spent several days visiting old friends in Dillard last week. The Halversons are now operating a resnurant along the hichwav between Cave Junction and Cres cent City. They visited the Harry rown. uene Bridges, It a r r y Bratsch and many other families whom they knew during the years incy uvea in umard. kil i St 1 . J LJ G.f ffcii $4.95 FLINT UTILITY SET meet y Flint 1900" Set stainless steel kitchen tools with smort black hang-up handles ... so good they're guaranteed for 15 years. Set includes hamburger turner, fork, spoon, potato masher, ladle, spatula, rack, luy this set and get a FREE Flint Utility Set thai includes 3" paring, 5' utility, 6' Fr. Cook's knives. UrtwqmValleu Corner Oak & Jackson Dial OR 3-6628 hu inumt. v SWORN IN Douglas MacArthur D (left), nephew of Gen. Douglas MacArthur, as be was sworn in as U. S. Ambassa dor to Japan in ceremonies at the State Department in Washington. Chief of Protocol John Simmons (right ad ministers the oath u Secy, of State John Foster Dulles looks on. Portland Milk Price Raise Talks Continue PORTLAND i The president of the Oregon Milk Producers Assn., Richard Weslerberg, Med ford, assured Portland area dairy men Monday that the state group is still negotiating with distribu tors for a Portland milk price in crease. The talks started in Oc tober. Fti., Doc. 21. 1954 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 3 County Association Meets In Oakland DAIRY FARM GIVES WAV PORTLAND ufi A 40 year-old dairy farm gave way to rapidly growing residential development southwest of here Wedneday. - , . ., . Duuaing ana equipment of the The Douglas County Vocational Walter SchalihergVr farm and the and Industria Arts Teachers Assn.! last 17 of a dairy herd that one. held Its monthly meeting Dee. 14 numbered 150 were sold a auction at Oakland. On the program were Dick Boss from Roseburg who gave a report on a proposed technical school that will Be located in Koseburg to Directors of the association met teach vocational subjects to stu Hungarian Freedom Fighter Testifies Russians Have , Deported 30,000 Persons WASHINGTON UP A refugee I fense. Ruff said, and was re freedom fighter testified Wednes- leased, last Nov. 1, by the revo day the Russians in Hungary 'unionists. have deported 30.000 persons' Then, he said, on an investigat whole trainloads of them to the , ing mission for the revolutionists Soviet Union since the October 'he discovered at the grounds of revolution The estimate came from I.ajos Ruff, (a pseudonym) who showed Senate investigators scars he said were from torture suffered at Communist hands. Kuff gave his testimony through here at the requett of some SO dairymen seeking new efforts for We proposed Portland Increase. Speakers said there were two manr obstacles to setting a price boost failure of dairymen to sup port the association and the milk price war at Vancouver, Wash. steps were taken to overcome both. A continued effort to end the ux-month-milk price war in Vancou ver was pledged. Maior dairies at Vancouver, trying to meet the competition of low-price gallon jug milk, have been selling milk for 68 cents a gauon in paper con tainers. Distributors have expressed the fear that if a price increase were granted in Portland, the Vancou ver price war might spread here. Only about half the dairymen supplying the Portland market are members of the association. To strengthen the Portland area organization, a committee was : named with Arthur Ireland, For- lest Grove, and Tom Hall. Ska- mokawa. Wash., as chairman, and I the first meeting scheduled next week. Other committee members are C. A. Chapman, Gresham: K. W. McKenrie. Vancouver, Wash Ned Palmer, McMinnville: and John Lienhart, Mt. Angel. Last week Chapman, at a meet ing of Portland area dairymen on dents throughout the county. Russ Madsen of Roseburg, gave a report on setting up an auto mechanic course for the industri al arts program, pointing out that it is a very expensive cours-. to establish. The group will meet again Jan. IS beginning with a dinner meet ing at t:M p.m. Place of the meeting will bo announced later. The farm's M acres have been sold and subdivided for homes. Roseburg Stores T0NITE Tell Your Store You Sow Ir In The Newspaper Liner Monterey Will Start Sea Trials Today PORTLAND i Th new Mat- son passenger liner Monterey, converted by the Willamette Iron and Steel Works here from a mariner class cargo vessel, was to start sea trials Thursday. Matson spent $27,400,000 con verting the Monterey and its sis ter ship, the Mariposa. The Monterey will go into regu lar passenger service Dee. 31 be tween Los Angeles and San Fran cisco and South Pacific islands. The Mariposa began its service in time to take passengers to Australia for the Olympic Games. th home of Matyas Rakoski, former ton Communist in Hun gary, a crematorium with the! the price question, was sharply hodirs nf 12 beaten rierioni beside I critical of Milk Producers Assn. it obviously waiting to be Manager Lester Adams, Medford, burned " i nd called for his removal. He said he thought the secret! Monday night, however. Chap- an interpreter at a public hearing police used the crematorium 'to!m,I offered a resolution express- bv the Senate Internal Security i completely erase traces of special : "IS commence in tne management subcommittee. The group is at-1 nrisoners who had been taken to f association and it was tempting to document charges of, this place." adopted unanimously. mass deportation which the Com-1 Ruff identified documents he said munist Hungarian government bat he had removed while searching denied. Ihe home of Rakoski one of them Ruff slid ha has Interviewed i a book of telephone numbers which railroad workers in Hungary who named "the aristocracy of the Hungarian Communist Party " in cluding its secret police. Ruff was one of two witnesses called by the subcommittee for Wednesday's hearings. told of seeing trainloads of de portees crossing the border into Russia. He said he also hat talked to two Hungarians who told of hav ing been deported to "Russian soil" but allowed to return. He said one was the chief engineer of an electric generating plant, and that the Soviets apparently released him in the hope of pla cating plant workers who had staged a protest strike. Ruff said physical and np'iT:"l:ru " Washington - a long Fed. MIllCU Ull mill sillCI IIC ell I I i . r- v j i --. i rroH rower voinnusMuu rrv, n'eneml .f thV'c.mm'un ? S" JR Hearing Ended On Snake River Dams Projects ' Post Office To Deliver All Mail It Can Handle YULETIDE GREETINGS regime. He was imprisoned after a trial in which he was allowed no de- Covernor Takes Issuo In School Politics Rift TOPEKA. Kan. '.f The gover nor of Kansas takes exception to Ihe University of Kansas chancel lor's refusal to allow partisan ex pressions toward national and state politics by student editors. They should be allowed to "get their feet wet and be as partisan as they please," Gov. Fred Hall said yesterday. Chancellor Franklin P. Murphy told editors of the camput publi cation, the Daily Kansan, they could take tides in university poli tics, but forbade them to go any further. ..-.. m , fffteoS - ... ii 1 1 wi jerry. ' Cnrisfm CfCa it 0 hop that ike joy of tne Christmas season will abide witri you always. May iis spirit of good fellowship live in your lieart throughout the new year. Douglas County Flour Mill Corner of Oak and Pine Streets Actor Adolphe Menjou Picks Best Dressed Men HOLLYWOOD Lti Actor Adolphe Menjou, a fairly stand ard fixture on lists of best dressed men, has coma up with his own list. Menjou, confining his selectioni to California, released thit litt of sartorial standouts: Charles Thomas of Los Angeles. secretary of the Navy; Gary Coop er, actor; Robert Gross, Lockheed aviation executive; Jacques Ber gerac, actor; Sidney Franklin, mo tion picture director: Fred Aatalre. dancer; Robert E. Petersen, pub private power dams in the Snake Kiver ended weanesday. The hearing, which had run in termittently since June, was on a construction license application by the Pacific ISorthwest Power Co. (PNP) for the Mountain Sheep and Pleasant Valley dams In the river bordering Idaho and Oregon. Examiner Edward Marsh let Feb. S at the deadline for Ihe filing of a written argument by PNP. He directed also that reply briefs be filed by March i by the FPC lecal staff and by the Na tional Hells Canyon Assn. which opposed the PNP proposal and ad vocated a federal Nez Perce high dam. PNP later may file a rebuttal brief. After Ihe bricft are received. Marsh will make an initial deer WASHINGTON t The oostof- fice says that it will deliver before Christmas all the mail Us employ es can handle physically, even though Dec. 24 has been desig nated at a federal workers' holi day. The department said the desig nation by President Eisenhower will not apply to "any postal em ploye whose tervicet are needed to get tne mail out." Deliveries and post office hours will be on a normal basis Dec. 24. There will be no window service Christmaa Day, but delivery of Christmas packages will be made on mat aay. lisher; Clark Gable .actor: Leigh pe,i'fj t,, ,ne Power Commission oaison, oroKer, ana wiinamlfor , fin, de.jsjon. Keck, Superior Oil Co. executive "Each of these men," Mejou commented, "stands out at an oas is in an otherwise bleak landscape Hearings were held in Idaho and Oregon June 25-29. Sessions were held here July 14-Aug. 17 and Sept. 24-Oct. 1. The last phase of of fading elegance on the part of ; ihe hearing opened Nov. 7, the average American male. j sg hearing days. 245 NECKTIE STRANOLES BOY MIAMI, Fla. i - An old neck tie caused the death Wednesday of a 12-year-old boy. Howard Baker died of strangulation, with one end of the tie knotted around his neck and the other tied to a door latch. Investigators said the death ap parentlv was an accident but they ordered an autopsy. The boy's par ents are Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Baker. The death occurred while Mrs. Baker was away for a 10 minute visit. exhibits were introduced and the test! mony of 37 witnesses approxi' mating a million words was spread over 7,300 pages of trans script. JOHNNY RAY IN SALEM PORTLAND ii Crooner John ny Ray arrived by plane at the airport here early Thursday for a Christmas visit with hit parents who live near Salem. He was greeted by hit parent! and friends after fog delayed the plane nearly three hourt. Juaf a friendly 'jv oreeiine lo inon all ' our Unci friends one patrons and to with fnem the very merriest of noffefoys. STEEL SERVICE COMPANY INC. NOTICE: 416 N.E. Fulton We will be closed oil day Monday, Dec. 24 so thot our employees ood their fomihet may hove more time to enjoy the holiday. Our sincere thanks to alt our kind friends for their continued patronage and our botl wishes for a happy holldnv. 608 S. E. LANE V GSHOMt FURNISHING A GIFT FOR THE HOME THE MOST CHERISHED GIFT OF ALL... LIVING ROOM WHETHER YOU DESIRE A LAMP OR A LIVING ROOM SUITE - CHOOSE A CIFT YOU WILL BE PROUD TO GIVE FROM OUR LARGE STOCK. RUGS OR CARPET FROM A THROW RUG TO A WHOLE HOUSE OF CARPET. CURTIS BROS. HAVE A LARGE SELECTION TO FIT YOUR COLOR SCHEME. 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