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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1957)
"1 J 4 The New-Rview, Roseburg, Ore. Thur., Mar. 21, 1957 nsin FRIDAY SATURDAY SPECIALS FOLCER'S COFFEE 2 LB. CAN $j77 LIMIT 2 CANS FOLCER'S INSTANT COFFEE -49c EGGS -Sy-Tyj LARGE Dox OJJ' Grade AA 37a- aa f V PILLSBURY FLOUR 1.89 BLU HILL MARGARINE li-.. 2-, 29c LARGE PACKAGI CI IDF NT -Q jUIr Regular 2e Our Price 7C BORDEN'S MAYONNAISE 49c PENNANT JAM & JELLY 5 99c Post Grapenut Flakes Or Post Toasties Regular 25c OUR 12-or. Pkg. PRICE 19' mm Wi'jJjjfil STEAK SHOP SPECIALS NEBERGALL Sausage Rolls . . . uh. 29c NEBERGALL Bacon Squares ib 19c NEBERGALL LARGE Frankfurters n,.29c NEBERGALL'S NEBRASKA PORK PORK ROAST ik.35c PORK STEAK ,b. 39' BONELESS SIRLOIN STEAK ,b.89c A mon'l itaak cut thick for broiling Schilling HHtt GROUND BLACK PEPPER 4can 29c OCEAN BEAUTY Fish Sticks 8-ai. pkg. 29c SEA PACK SHRIMP 10 oi. pkg. Regular 79c 59c GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS LARGE SUNKIST ORANGES Lere,e Red Deliciout St e ratine, APPLES The FOOD MART MORE FOR YOUR MONEY 930 S. E. Stephens Op.n 8:30 A.M. to 8:30 P.M. WEEKDAYS 9 A.M. to 7 P.M. SUNDAYS GILBERT'S 'What Young People Think New Survey Shows Presley On Skids Simer Elv Presley'! phenom-.th teeneri admitted liking Elvis enal popularity among the. less now than they did last year, nation's teenagers seems to have "He's nothing anymore," a It taken a nosedive. year-old girl put it. "Last year As receotly as last October, our he was news. Today he's just an-country-wide survey showed that other wiggler." a whopping 35 per cent of all 'Last year I used to think El- youngsters quesuonea considered vis was the sexiest male alive the guitar strumming squirmer their favorite male vocaust. But going over the same terri tory again, we find that his rat ing has skidded to 21 per cent. That's still a hefty following and also a remarkable decline. Gene Commercial? Moreover, a full 35 per cent of Circuit Court COMPLAINTS FILED Roy Van Arsdale vs. Industrial Accident Commission. Plaintiff seeks to have compensation claim reopened and be granted additional compensation for temporary total disability and compensation equal to 85 per cent loss of use of right leg and M per cent loss of use of left leg. Milo Mates vs. Industrial Acci dent Commission. Plaintiff asks for jury to hear case and for de fendant to be ordered to cancel its orders and reopen his claim and allow benefits provided Dy law. Dismissal Lumber Sales Co. vs. H. T. Ben son. Decree South Umpqua State Bank vs. Harrison and Jeanette-M. Munger. Plaintiff to recover $1,540 83 and mortgage to be foreclosed for that amount. Order and Judgment Arthur 1. Rich and Arthur W Lamka vs. James Decker and Ken neth Gary. Appeal filed by Isla Mills dismissed and plaintiffs grant ed judgment from defendants and from the surety, Isla Mills, for $291.83. Default Judgment Unemployment Compensation Commission vs. Grant Walker and James U. Walker doing business as Grant Walker and Son Logging Co. James U. Walker found in de fault and plaintiff to recover $463.- 56 and interest on $321.21 from Jan uary 31. Unemployment Compensation Commission vs. Thomas W. I.loyd and Harold W. Schwesinger, doing business as T. W. Lloyd LoRging Co. Plaintiff to recover 51,323.26 and interest on Sl.158.31 from Feb ruary 28. Notice of Appeal E. J. Smith vs. Kay DeKraay. Defendant to appeal to State Su preme Coert judgment favoring plaintiff and providing he mar re cover $3,799,411 from defendant. another high school girl observed. But i can see now that he 11 be come just another commercial singer, like the rest." "Hollywood's got him" boy commented glumly. "The person al appeal he had for all of ua teenagers is gone forever." Those, of course, represent ex treme viewpoints. They must be balanced against the fact that Presley who has managed to inspire almost as much antagon ism in adults as he produced ven eration in the younger set still reigns supreme in the affection of 21 per cent of the teenagers covered by our survey. He's Gaining, Too - Moreover, 12 per cent, predom inantly in the 13-15 age group, declared they found their hero even more resplendent than be fore. His recent movie, "Love Me Tender," apparently helped spark that particular counter-trend. "Elvis waa the very end in that movie." one girl glowed, in the feverish tradition of the Presley cult. "I bet someday he gets an Academy award." i "I sat through 'Love Me Ten der' three times in one after noon," another girl bubbled. "I was in a happy date for a week afterward." Boone Moves Up All of which doesn't alter the chilly statistical evidence of the idol'a 14 per cent popularity de cline. Who's threatening to fill his shoes? Our survey shows Pat Boone moving up strongly. He now ranks tops with nearly 13 per cent of the youthful balloters. Speaking for this group, one girl fluted: "You can take Elvis and give him back to the Indians. I'll take Pat any day." Echoing approval, a high school boy thought Boone "really quite a guy. Look at him supporting a family and going to school as well as being a successful singer . He's terrific." Another straw in the wind, pos sibly, may be in the teeners' prophecies on Presley's future. Thirty-nine per cent of the boys and 33 per cent or me gins i MP 8 Engine To Use Solid Fuels For Military WASHINGTON Iff A big new rocket engine, using solid instead of hard-to-handle liquid fuel for powering an intermediate range ballistic missile, has been devel oped and put under test. This was disclosed today in a routine annual report to stock holders by the General Tira Co., which seemed to contain consider ably more information about some weapons than has been announced by the Defense Department.' The report said the new rocket motor went into its testing stage last Oct ober. The motor was designed by the company's Aerojet-General Corp. and, said the report, is "the larg est solid propellant power plant ever used in any ballistic missile." The motor was developed for the Jupiter ikb.yi, the company reports. However, Army experts told i newsman that Jupiter IRBM pro gram does not now include use of a solid instead of liquid fuel. This appeared to indicate the new rock et engine may be intended for use oy tne navy in its Polaris IRBM. The annual report also mentions these hitherto little known devel opments: 1. A new type of motor for tor pedoes, using solid fuel like that for rockets instead of the tradi tional compressed air or alcohol powered motors. 2. Development of a mine-searching "mini-sub" for the British ad miralty. 3. A power plant for the Bull pup guided missile, a Navy weap on used for attack from planet against ships and other surface targets. 4. Development of a liquid-fueled booster for launching the Air Force's long. range Bomarc missile. ELVIS PRESLEY thought the Elvis crate would run ,nu, Vears mhre. while the rest'nect a fad to go on forever."' i Anyhow, 57 per cent of the boys its course within less than a year, thought the side-burned rock n Still Rocking and 33 per cent of the girls feel : committee, headed by Sen. Green Expert Proposes 10-Year Program Of Foreign Aid WASHINGTON (if) A foreign affairs expert recommended Wednesday that Congress adopt a 10-year 10-billion-dollar program of foreign economic development. Max F. Millikan, director of the Massachusetts Institute of Tech nology, told a Senate committee studying foreign aid that 80 per cent of the program should be de voted to loans, the remainder in outright grants. lie was the first witness as the Forty-two per cent of the girls ,h,p wMn't fade for another and 31 per cent of the lads gave I j years yet him from one to two years ofj ' ' ' , , . peak popularity. 8 5 and 17 perl "We like him." a Duluth, Minn , cent, respectively, figured tw to girl asserted, "but ou cant ex- Vital Statistics Marriage Licenses ALLEN-WILLIS James C. Al len and Ellen M. Willis, both Can- yonville. COLE-BRL'MMETT Robert Thomas Cole. Roseburg. and San dra 1-ee Brummett, Glide. Gl'DGER-l RITTENDEN Dan iel F. Gudger and Ora Lee Crit tenden, both Riddle. Divorce Suits Filed CRANFORD Joyce E. vs. Dan iel P. t'ranford. Married Sept. 3, 1955 at Ukiah. Ch(. Plainlilt asks custody and support tor child when born. CLEVENGF.R Mildred vs. Joe Oevenger. Married April , 1946 at Harrison, Ark. Plaintiff asks custody and support for four chil dren, property settlement. STAlrUKU rrea vs. neiiy Ixiiiise Stafford. Married Aug. 18, 1951 at Reno. Nev. Plaintiff asks court to award defendant custody of two children. STEVENSON Dorothy 1,. vs. Robert N. Stevenson. Married May 25. 1949 at- Roseburg. Plaintiff seeks custody of two children for 10 months esch vear. BEAI. Hobert A vs. Delores Real. Married Roseburg in 1956. Plaintiff aks court to award cus tody of child when born to de fendant and offers support. Committee In Agreement On Forestry Control SALEM i.f The House For estry Committee found general agreement at a public hearing Monday night that the governor should have more control over terms of members of the state Forestry Board. Witnesses on both sides also agreed that a seven - member hoard, proposed in a bill, was not large enough to give represents tion to all groups that should be represented I nder the hill, the governor would appoint the seven members without regard to representation among various lumber groups. The present nine-msn board rep resents each group. Rep. W O. Nelay (Dl. Rose burg, sponsor of the bill, said he had nothing to say against the proposed board Hut. he added, under the pres ent syntem. it would be possible to get a bad board sssai minimum lu ,wm, m.yymmmf PAT BOONE If Presley is losing some favor the music is certainly good fori(D-Rl) opened the first of a series in teendom, what of the music 1 another four years of high popu- of hearings intended to guide the of which he is the most spectac-; larity. Only 10 per cent of the Senate in its consideration of the ular exponent? By and large, rock 1 girls and 6 5 per cent of the boys I administration's $4,400,000,000 for n roll seems to have thumped feel it's apt to fade away in lessieign aid program for the fiscal along on a steady course, though than two years. year starting July 1. here too we detect a slight de-l Said a Rhode Island girl: "Why, The study, centering on the re crease in customer interest. I rock 'n roll is basic. It shouldn't I suits and prospects of military and Some 68 per cent of the young-. go in and out of fashion." sters remain fully devoted to it. But one Wyoming girl felt Twenty-four per cent of the boys I jaded. "You sure get tired of that and 14 per cent of the girls say i steady rhythm." she complained. they like it even more today than "I can't see people listening to last year; but 16 per cent of the , it much longer. I bet that a year girls ana id per cent oi tne noys trom now rocx 'a find it has palled on them a little, obsolete." economic aid abroad, is expected to last at least three weeks. Later hearings will go into top ics ranging from the exclusion of American newsmen from Red Chin to the pay of U.S. Informa nt! will be I tion Agency (USIA) employei I around the world. mm (Si OSOON I e)V mioicai I ( Kvyf j society I OtfOONS Ut SHItl P1AP4 O. P. S. covert brotl fielfl of medical needt nd withm the pock el book of tht aver ( family! You get quick, reliable bp tot everyday medical eipentea, 0lu$ hmlp wfSem you rMtf it moaf for lenc. complicated iltneieee when coitt are heavy. For belt protection at leaat cott, torn the Orefon plan dettgned for Or eContent, mi tear W stwtaxi 0 Oregon PhyMiant'htvkt eostuNo MNOtiTON aiioiu loirawae SAIIM I 4MI04M swrtKiaav utvKi I I auiswls awlWtog. . Or IhM a ft tfCte.li. tiM . M. O O ' t. 1 tvm.H ft o.e s. o ft o f -. 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