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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1957)
4 Tha Nowg-Raviaw, RoMburf Ora. Wn, Fab. 1, 19S7 9&c 9kuHeMew CHARLES V. STANTON, Editor and Monger ADDYI WRIGHT, Asst. W Mtr. GEOKGI CASTILLO, Aitt. Uf Mmbr f tha Auaoattd Pnu, Ora Ncwta LNiUUtwa AsmiariM, Ha Autfit yrM GrcMlatiwia MfrwmU4 kf WIIT-ROLUDAI CO.. INC., IfUvt Is Mv Tark, CfclMC rraclM, Aiitlu, BmIIU. rrUa4. DBVff ul.ihil Daily ! U4f by News-Review Company, Inc. StAirKITTtON BATKft la Orf f Hall Ptr ?r. HIM; atilki. MM; lkr H tl OiliMt Orta Bf Mall rf tlt-Mi ila aniki, tl Mi tr IS M. By Ww-t1w CtrrUr P Yr, 111 M (m 4vac, Um Uta per aiaath, II -U. Ialtr m ho4 Iim MlUr Mr T, lata, al t . ifflM M BvMkarf. Oria. aa4.tr ! Marra t. MIL ADVERTISING WEEK By Charles V. Stanton We have no many npecial wwli and daya that it be comes an intolerable and impossible task for a newspaper to recognize them all. One special week, however, cannot pass unnoticed for it is Advertising Week, beinff celebrated Feb. 10-16, and newspapers and advertising; complement one another like ham and eggn. We hear and read of the things that make America irreat. If we were to center on the one thinfc that has been of 'most influence in producing our present standard of liv ing I believe we would find advertising standing alone. But advertising, to achieve its remarkable influence upon our national greatness, must have a vehicle. That vehicle was and is the newspaper. You are inclined to take advertising for granted. It is a part of your everyday life. You "shop" your newspa per. You read advertisements in your magazines. You hear and see commercials on radio and television. Your route is lined with advertising billboards as you drive along the highway. Sound cars bleat advertising messages into your ears. Skywriters even "paint" signs in the sky. Sel dom are you free from the influence of advertising. Advertising Produced Crowth But go back in history only a comparatively few years. The only way in which goods could be advertised ws by word of mouth. A factory could sell its merchandise only in its own community, because no one else knew of its product. Then someone put an advertisement in the hand-printed newspapers. As newspapers were distributed over wid er territories, the manufacturers began to get orders for merchandise from more distant points. So manufacturers began using more newspapers in more communities. As they took their message to more newspapers and more people, they sold more goods. They had to enlarge their plants and hire more people. Increas ing the number of people earning wages caused those peo ple to bnv more goods for which their appetites had been whetted by advertising. Sale of more goods brought about more factories, more employment, more wages, more pro duction, all of which resulted in more advertising. As competition became keener, manufacturers had to devise ways and means of selling cheaper than their rivals Out of this competition of free enterprise came mass pro duction; Mass production put many items of consumer goods into a classification cheap enough to attract more buyers in low income groups, and so the cycle or produc tion, buying power and employment keeps going around and around, with advertising the energy which keeps it mov ing. Without advertising the wheels of industry would grind to a sudden halt. Business would wither. The high stand ard of living, the gilt-edged prosperity which this country enjoys would melt away, as does an icicle in midday sun. Can Ward Off Depression Depression is caused when dollars are taken out of circulation. When dollars are kept moving we have pros perity. Advertising keeps dollars moving. Advertising, properly used, is the best weapon we have against depression. Advertising comes to us in many forms. It is as com petitive as is the merchandise it sells. Its art forms, as found in many magazines, compares favorably with the best art to be found in the world's most noted galleries. Today's commercial artist, in many cas es, is the peer of the masters in color and form. Newspaper advertising exerts a unique appeal, and by all measures has been found the most productive for dollars spent. It is the one form of advertising the prospective con sumer actually seeks. It does not have to be forced upon him, thus creating the danger of resentment and prejudice. Instead, he scans the advertising columns of the newspa per as he does its news, seeking the information offered. Radio advertising, and the more recent television ad vertising, run the gamut from ridiculous to sublime and are still in experimental stages of develonment. i ne auveruser today can spread his message Return From The Picnic I956 IX -J j3 II J. People Must Have Part In Forming Legislation Specialists Recommend Klamath Forest Purchases WASHINGTON im - A roup of under th. Oreaon itat law would management ipecialista Tuesday ,b set up to protect the Indian!' recommended government pur-j interest!, they said. chite of the forest Unas oi in Klamath Indiana in Oregon when federal wardship over Um trib is ended. The wardship it to end in Aug ust, 1958. Three specialist! named to atudy methods lor me iraosi Plagued Day And Night with Bladder Soma yeara ago, at a community lion. T. B. Waller.. Eugene nicAAItlf il4? club meetmg, I waa a member veii ana tan. "- '"' " 1IOUUIHI VI I. with voting privileges, mis waa i :J : ut . tain a. w something of an event in my life. i Affairs Subcommittee on proposed 4rl.k, b. . i,r .( Hjvim irom uo in the back amendment! to the termination "'"-'" naving grown up la Ul u... i a -. 1 . . mi and unc.mfon.bi.. Ana wood!, and gone to a little wealh-.lw enacted by Congress in 1954. ; ;pT.IItu. -.u. b.k erbeaten. unpainted school house. The committee was told Mon-; imduu or " hw I had dreamed at timea of taking day that unles. the required dead- rr"i ."K part in group work, learning pro- line for sale of tribal forest lands' ur do.. rub. cedurea. rulei of order and ao on. is extended, the pine market may I Do... 7"'.! Consequently I waa thinking very be glutted to the disadvantage ot ZLZT-Z&. , seriously ot how 1 wouia cast my.ine inaian owners. : .ooininr iti on ouadr irrtuimn.. z- vote. . .u.1 The law would require sale. of, iiiib"' acres oi ronucrusa pmc chairman, after receiving the voteitjmber i,n(j by Aug. 13, 1958. Asst. of the nominating committee. an-ji;ecy 0f interior Hatfield Chilson nounced calmly that "Mrs. X "proposed that this deadline be ex our next president." tended for four, years. R.,,J.!,? fir'.! It.mnl. of1 told the committee it e-ra'X T 1 been about to touch a rain-! 'h .!' J."0"1. " J1 bow and mv fingera closed on a " :T" .'"J" Z bunk of clay ize the long-term interest of the Later I realized that thia partic ular chairman had not known how ! Indians." he said. Walters said he favored the gov 1 p.ina. S A wonderfully mil. diurvtic .rtioa tbra th. kidntn. Undine to lnrr.M th. output of th. IS milM of kidn.y tubs.. So. st th. wm. hMUuy rvlirf million, h.v. .njoytd for over SO yror.. Ak for Brw. I.rg. economy au. nail uv. noa.7. Get Dots, .flllt, UKUty 1 ..I -feeler di don WASHINGTON gradual shift in the rolea and prin ciples of the Republican and Dem ocratic parties ii becoming dis cernible. A large part of this may be sim ply a matter of politics. Anything the Republicans in power are for, tne Democrats are against. So as the OOP grows mora lib eral under the Eisenhower pro gram, the Democrats appetr to be mora and mora conservative. President Eisenhower's first five mes!age! to Congresa this year leave little doubt as to which way he is leaning. His special message on Middle East policy and his inaugural put the whole GOP elephant all the way under the tent of the inter nationalists, and not just its trunk His economic report, budget and State of the Union messages spell ed out a domestic program just as liberal as anything Presidents Roosevelt and Truman wrote pn tneir siaiei. THE MIOOLI EAST POLICY proposed by President Eisenhower la entirely in keeping with the Dem ocratic policies to contain commun ism and give aid to free countries wanting to resist it. President Tru man waa completely consistent in endorsing the new Middle East doc trine as a necessary development of hia own policy. tne spectacle which Washington observed, however, was that for mer Democratic Secretary of Stale Dean Acheson was called back in something of an heroic role to tes tify on the Eisenhower doctrine be fore the House Foreign Affairs Committee as an expert witness. When the hearings got to Ihe Senate, it was the Democrat! who led the attack on Republican Sec retary of State John Foster Dulles. hventually, it seems now. they (NEA) Al romped all over Dulles the way In The Day's News (Continued From Pag One) McCarthy, Jenner and Malone used to jump on Acheson, The political reasons wert the same in both cases. Only the roles of the two parties were reversed. That neither party has designed or can design and carry out a foreign policy that will be completely f- doctrine. The doctrine calls for a fective is a point that both parties Big Four (U.S., Russia, Britain conveniently overlooked. anrj France) declaration of hands of which wants to run its own she bang) are the least odious. There's always the chance that different "kinds" of communists will get to fighting with each other instead of everybody ganging up to fight us. Speaking of communists. Russia comes up with its own Middle East to proceed, or bad suffered st.je ' ' i r fright, but the incident made an Unds-instead of having it pur impression that time has never '"J".1 ' mltr ,r"'! .J" erased vate interests because of the lack In Ihe current controversy sur- "P.ri'nce ,n 'he 5?rt,hof a" rounding the planning commission, the lnd"" ' handl thtir own it seems to me that the real iscue t ... . is scarcely being touched; that the ,H h ni other members germ of contention is not planning ' ,he ruP r S'vln lh commission, zoning or building dlan .v01 ,'ne maltcr d lhe codes, but, rather, whether or not '"?. .' ,0 b ola . , people are to have a voice in gov- .thihon and Lewia Siegler, so i erning their own homes and de-e'loS 0T th' Indian Bureau, testi u.in. ,.;- -...,,.. nit 'fied it would be a mistake to as- ered a package which they have no' !.u.me ha' ..lu members of the direct part in making, and little ama,h tribe would automatical! opportunity to examine, the human P . ob'ain control of the money attitude likely ia to be, ' even if it Pa!d 1lhenl for tn"r snare of ,ne was good I wouldn't like it." .tribal property. Nnt I nf it. h.v th vnri " "ic as hiiiiuij iiiu ill- ence, training or, in some cases, the mentality to grasp and under stand the complex problems of gov ernment which often are presented in technical or legal wording on our ballots. A good deal of it seems remote, over our heads, or out of our circle of interest. Frequently we are quite willing for those who have greater knowledge and capability to shoulder the respon sibility for us and to make the de cisions. I believe that this is as it 33 ') minutes J PORTLAND I Big game was hunted by nearly 17,000 Oregon and Washington sportsmen in 1956 on Crown Zellerbach Corp.'s 700,000 acrea of Northwest tree farms and other forest lands should be. up to a point, and one i Their bag included 2,183 deer, competent Indians it i! expected that guardianships of trusteeships Big Came Was Hunted By 17,000 On Tree Farms IT CANNOT BE from this that all Republicans have gone international while all Democrats are now isolationists. Much has been made over the Republican split in the Senate DEDUCED off the Middle East that is, let j reason for having a legislature. I 2 elk and 123 bear. the Mid-East countries fight it out 1 At the same time when the legis-l Best game producer of 1956. the among themselves with the rest of lature enacts a law mat gives a company sain, was ns au,uij-acre the world staying out of it. The Russian "doctrine proposes that if there ia to be any economic aid it will be provided by ALL th where 29 GOP aenalora are rated Blg Four natlons of . as conservativea while only 18 lone 0f them, more or less in both cases are ' rated as Eisenhower Republicans.! On the face of it, it sounds good. The split among Democrats is, But-like all Russian proposals it almost as pronounced. There 22 are has a catch. The catch is this: rated liberal while 27 are rated con-i The United States, Britain and servative. This waa the diviiion on France must close down their Mid trie first vote in tht new Congress, idle Eastern military bases. That to change th Senate rules. It ia would mean that we'd get clear as good a test of political aentiment I out and move back home, thou as any. I sands of miles away, and leave IT IS CONSPICUOUS in debate the Russians JUST OVER THE over the new budget. In the past, . the Democrat! have always been ji, 10 ,ump m " mommt accused of being the party of tax and spend. Now the shoe is on the other foot. President Eisenhower's new Re publicanism hai stolen a lot of th notice. It's ( typical Russian proposal. In closing: A couple in Birmingham. Eng land, tired of having a neighbor New and Fair Deal thunder on in- in.rir'hi. .:.. k.. j- creased social security benefits, Clded t0 teacn mm , lmoo; farm aid, housing aid. school aid, one Qark ,(, they painted his public works, drought relief, aid , Car brown and white, with the col- for depressed areas and even anti trust policy. But the more the Republicans swing towards the left, the more the Democratic majorities in Con gress seem to awing right. This few people sole power of making or adopting building controls over an entire county, without a vote of the people, it is my belief that the lawmakers are assuming a prer ogative of the people. If luch a law is not unconstitutional, in my opinion, it should be. To impose regulations by force, through another legislative bill, would, to my mind, be a very se rious error. The leaning toward more appointive offices, and to ward local ordinances, without a vote of the people, troubles me, just as the community club inci dent troubled me. I think it ia a sign of danger. It is at the local level that people should have most to say about their government. The Very fact that a county is growing rapidly hi a reason why a county court, although elective, can no longer truly represent the people: not that it is not capable or honest in its work, but be cause it is not possible for more of us to know the people elected, or for them to know us. A direct vole on the proposed regulations themselves supplies the only deter minative opinion of the people. I claim there can be no true progress without the unity and the ors sketchily daubed on But The neighbor turned out lo be a police constable, and yesterday the couple was hauled into court and fined the Enehsh eouivalent of SlOO snirit nf all nennle hphinrl it and does not apply to Democratic ni- i that this linilv ran not he achieved tional headquarters thinking nor to! William Shakespeare, in Ham-1 by legislation, unless the people the northern Democrats Who Stick! let's sollloauv. tUDDhes the moral: I Ihemselvea have a nart in it I will have to accept some kind of a I to the New Deal philosophy. But1 Is it better to "bear those ills believe our need for unity super- new urciarauun on aiiuuie r.asi tnese groups just aon t nappen to w nave man to !iy lo others mat , series our need for orderly devel policy. But at th outset. Senators be in control of th Democratic ma- w know not of?" rulDnght, Humphrey and Morse 1 jonties in .Congress today. -Mat ANDROS TOWN, Balutma t.ft America' 20 million fishermen. ror year I nave secretly ieit that a Israelis Have No Comment JERUSALEM Israeli For eign Ministry officials had no comment on the new U. S. pro posal to get Israel's troops out ot opment. important though that may be. I do not believe in waste, either of people or work that has been D-nc. 'th these things in mind. I offer the suggestion that the planning commission continue as it is, but that it make its rec ommendations to the voters in stead of to the county court. Let it explain, expound and advertise its recommendations through the medium most likely to reach all j . . iui iv gri ini.ri s uouui viit ui : nieuiiiiil mui lively tu Irani ail 1 owe an apology to th, Gaza Strip and Egyptian tern-1 the people which, in my opinion i tory along me tiiill of Aqaba. is the newspaper. fisherman was A Foreign Ministry spokesman1 Public hearings cannot reach Clackamas tree farm in Oregon. MEDFORD $5.15 plus tax Vmstcow r untunes fJr CONSTIPATED? new laxativediscovery un-locks. bowel blocks wit houtgag,' 6oot"or;grip Constipation ii earned By what doctor! call a "thrifty", colon. A "thrifty" colon ia on that, instead of retaining moisture aa it should, does th opposite: roba tha colon of so much moistur that ita con tents become dehydrated, ao dry that they block th bowel ; ao shrunken that they fail to xcit or stimulata tha urg to purg that propela and x pela wast from your body. 1 TO RECA1X NORMAL REGU LARITY two thing an ncJ aary. F int. th dry. shrunken: content of your colon which! now block your bowal must b r-moi!tncd. Second, bulk muit b brought to your colon to S-T-l-C-T-C-H STIMULATI it and ao, xcit iti muscles t action; to a normal urg to purg. AND, OF ALL LAXATIVES, 0nM Colonaid, th amaiing ntw laxativ diacovery possesses Colonaid a great iKoii(uri;tn; capacity plus Colonaid s ItretcA-itimklatuif bulk that activaUB'normeircolonU reflexea. So effective 'that it relievo even chronio consti pation overnight, Colonaid it yet ao smooth, ao gentl it ha veen proved aaf even for women in th most critical atagei of pregnancy. (SUPERIOR TO OLDTSTYLK (bulk, aalt or drug laxatives, Colonaid neither gaga, bloat Jior gripea; doe not interfere Eith your absorption of vita ins and other valuable food itrienta; and in clinical tests, did not eaus-raah or othr aid reactiona. ' irs A PHYSIOLOGICAL TACT r Exerciae tonea your body I 'And Colonaid exercise your colon to ton it against consti pation, overnight! Whether occasional, frequent or chron ic, whatever your degree of constipation, get Colonaid, in ajy-to-tak tablet form at any drug counter, today I Th price, only 98c for the econom leal 60 tablet package, bring you positive relief at less than 2c per tablet. ill bold nd Hashing- colors, in words and pictures, in lights nd.like a professional Rambler who plavj poker for keeps with '"' Proposal, mad thra week i everyone. (.ntlows. in music and in rhythm. The advertiser todav has a crouu of kinderw-arten kids : Sewtary o( State Dulles to By this method the public i low hnnnilar s l. i.il u. r,K...ii: u.. i -V. ,. ' Israeli imoassacor Aooa CDan, i wouin or nearn on incse n ... .. ............ ... v..riiiaiiuii wi um mmnftKC Sec. Benson Says 'We've Got To Get Out And Fight' For World Markets' Share rishing seemed unfair to me. in a r..r. r... M,Am-nf. r, . ... nA ... i . . nt ,,t.i imnAH A m I Any man ought to be able to out-1 j.J rmi..l.i k.,., ,.ii h. h.. , I smart anything dumb enouiih to h.k,A ... . .,ij '., .1 "-. V. -jj-j ... ! ,r Harry anc I . , , . . . w., nwwau rAtliru IIIU lUf JtrBUill IUUCU UU Will ' iTi? vom- nd hen-np!-Dae would cial reaction would be available i 11" ' M'nd ,h flv rchlnlt 'r out into until Kban"! report of the Araen- I The Androi Yacht Club here lhe water. But nothing bit. can offer had been received and I nas w come a mecca tor anglers 1 siarcil and stared. Kach time studied or three continents seeking every- I saw nothing but rippling waves. thing from delicate needlefish lo Once, when Joe pointed and called : AMMAN Jordan l Prim blue merlins big enough to fill a softly "there! ". 1 nodded as if 1 Minister Suleiman Nabulsi said in Cadillac. had really seen somethine and .n i.t.ni.i Ti,..h. ih. ir.h Alter listening to a lot of their said, "yes, there were four slates will "us militarv fore'- s voice matters Rt. 1, Box 37 A Oakland. Ore. Court Ordsr Halts Cabl Car Wracking SAN FRANCISCO AS A court order halted wrecking crews four ciinb'AVV im c . ii i . . .. . . . . . - .w. stairs win us miuiarT lure , - ..r..r..., m aiiinpiiuii. im, wouia oring aoout lau yarns anout record catcnes, counting the little one with the i rim. Israel mil of th. r..ra hours after mev nad started tear- Agricullure Benson said Tuesday a substantial reduction in carry- 1 ventured the opinion that fish- narrow forehead" ,n and shaVrn .1 S..h ifih. P abandoned section of the we ve got lo get out and fight"! over at the end of the 19S7M tn was basically a childish sport. "Sire." said Joe. reproachfully. id ationa fafl. "".Washington and Jackson street! for a share of world markets and ; marketing year." i "As a matter of fact." I said, "it was a school of si . . . maybe Th. Dremier said Jordan 1 ,h ' nl "r lin' Monday, said he favors trade wilh lronlur- The Farm Forum, sponsored by "I set a record mvseU when I eight " ' ' , f. cv "' jf.f ir.h,." J"d- WiUum T. Sweigert is- ain countrie! if it doesn t jeopard- the Spokane Chamber of t orn- was only 10 ear old. I caught "How far can tou really se a h... . h. I ed a temporary restraining or- Ira KftmrttV . mare Ia n-AMn. I..ta .. i - ik... . . L. . . . ... . k. w 1 - . l " j nij (T1U HB 1 1 11 . BtrPa lO . . ... . nrr liopDinti int; iiw.wu proieri I'd trade with Ih drill if I tot ndinK betw?fn (arnifrt and bui- Troott Lak in Kansat City. Mo a CM, deal." Benson lold a meet-, meismen. nearti a pie a for ing ot wheat farmers. "I won't just barge ahead and traile with the Iron Curtain coun tries, plm to keep close contact with the State Department on any uch trade." Benson spoke hcra Monday nijtht at the Pacific Northwest Farm Mx hundred (eel in th light." Ur lf ,h refused to bud The ?? complaint Wed by attorney ... tinrrn Aiaianinai ruini r ai aisr . "The largest wa. about three he said, and at th. look of .- Arab . t. " The added a.?eed . ,n.h.. - th. k.i,.r nn 4 k. Arao siates. ne added, agreed " nr,nr,,;i.-. th. ..,. .h.ih.r .,mn I. ' ""2 "' November t their t.i. ' . ' . . : ' summit conference in BeiruL more realistic federal farm pro gram" Tuesday. "Allotmenta will hecom more ou're alter a minnow or a whale my eves are mv hand valuable than land if government A" ,,,h r dumb What chance Pas offered to let me flick out controls continue to grow." said " ,h'y got. once you learn a few flies, but by then l was R..L...L.- ("I.. . ..... Robert C Liebenow. president of ln"r weakness"' so exhausted I couldn't hive BMtOtTinop yuarrtrt Ihe Chicago Board of Trade A" ,he fishermen moved silent- hurled an underweight mosquito Contatt Fab. 28-Mar. 2 "The nr.at.st ham.r in d.i.tnn. ly away from me down lo the three feel to calch even a ailnn ; inn a sound farm program is a ol"'r rna 01 ,n Mr as II 1 Alter casting a bit from the l-oniin and s.id prices rercicd uepressinii atmosphere created by n'' nol,' ' with smallpoi. boat, we started home emptv- from several slates will romper have replaced th. cable c hv farmers have Iwn running J Socrnment subsidies in other seg- AI1- ,n" " ''rP' Roberta, handed. "Phantoms of the flats" here Feb M March 2 in th 1 1th lion? the Pacific Heithts loot to 7 per cent abme a year ago. ,,,,, , )n, ,conomv ,,,3 outdoor editor of the Cincinnati indeed. Jo and Dav had seen annual All Northwest Barber Shop "Thi! suit is entirely with "Domestic consumption n In-' The long-range goal mut he r:nllllr,r' who is a kindly, mavb. 20 bonefish 1 saw not one Ballad Contest. merit." said Dep. City Al rreasing, diets ar improving, mar-1 "a free agriculture" that provides tolerant man Pacific Heights residents They charged that abandonment !of the line west of Hyde Street as illegal, that approval of a IDM cable car renovation program 1 was won by an election campaign I based on "fraud." and that rents droDDed and business suffered be- FOREST GIOVK Jf Quartets cause people don't like buses that cars loop ithout Atty. Inless a man has 20 ?0 vision. Women s foursomes will launch Thomas O'Connor. kets are expanding at home and for efficient producti.n f all d- "Tomorrow, h said, " you re the patienr of Joh. and th. en- th songfest the night of Feb 2 Only a few of San Francrsco'i aiiroail. ' rr said ed food and fiber aa a.vu """""n wnn me. me uurance oi a wen irained infan- and male quaneta will Dold their cam car still operate. He sin) the national whr.it litua ua- t.diiar I .Smith, a .,.,m,.nl . ,,.,...... ,., mir ir.v. nw. eiiminauon! lion "is improving ". that the total St John. Wash f.r.i.r ii,i ih. ' . Iisnmg to real he fishermen-and nine vsncat crop tnis year may he annul rorum Ihe th following ev-1 ASK FINANCIAL STATEMENTS l.att v.ar's women's rhamDiont But no fish is ever Mini to ..i from s.aiil.. ih Northwest Hi- SAI ESI P A bill to require u up Irr.h t reek. a chance lo make a fool of me Fliers, are entered to defend their " Public officials to die personal wheal out of nrodurlion in ih. on. rron lo .re.i. . . i lr" ln' ,n wallows, tnn in jiioiic aiiain i,1e Another eattt entrr is th "nanviai n.iemenis wnnin IJ v,,, n.nL LPr. 1 !".,k..P ' ' ",rp'"' ' f1' 'd. 'now. v. get out and Th next one I catch .,11 b, Velva Hears of the Pu.et Sound days after taking office wa. ra ws. uh a knife and fork, and if it chapter of Sweet Adolin.s (roduced Tuesday by Rep. Vernon in in j;er- I aske.i ecn uares i,hia up irom Ih pine ' Strolling Through the Park" v.oo iui. l,resham. 1417 SJI " h. .aid "A .r.,n .J lfl nt ...,. l.nJ , ..'p l n ll yvii S.n, . myymi . ISIIC. Or Will O. 10. Selling IOr inil yeBTS r SiairmrniS, l D Hied Will m Ion dAJ, ? 1 ' rz. ':"rJ':A nJ . . .... ?: . . ft" " r r ,h .... would b. Im un mi Imn hiith-.it. hnm n tnmV ' h aiitH w ,l"n" nf. ana aner orcesirrsn ire vauce rifiht square at pari of tha ballad contest open onlv to the foemor. attor- - " - - .auuiH a miir oi inn i oegan pmi- in ua oif leering diu eyt I uraurl Tha na.l m.irnintf alrno a.lortt unix.. 110 million bushels if farmer, lake lion of ih. So,l H.n. .,.,.. ". n""' Pl" PU,,M aome 3 miilton acres of spring "tends to eliminate surplus., of Soil Bank program. , another " "Domestic use and exnorts mav "the acrpae. r.s.rv. r,mu,.n he around S0 million bushels in is not suited to Ih 1 million acres finals. ney general or a district attorney. MAYFLOWER ARRIVES IN ROSEBURG-For Tha FINEST SERVICE POSSIBLE IN LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE MOVING! AIIO NATION. WIDE FURNITURE MOVERS - t . Tf tM rta M t imm frrvtx aaa Mr II t tt it' mr f f wsi mn n i For Comptft Information r and fVr fjfi'moft. Call: LOCAL A Of NT WILLIAMS TRANSFER CO. 74J $. I. Stphni St. Ph. OR 3-8252 Roteburo MOVING JTORAOi . PACKINO CRATING. I.