The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, November 21, 1957, Page 23, Image 23

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    10 Tha Newt-Review, Roteburg, Ore. Thun. Nov. 21,1957
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top efiia i
1ST PRIZEI Famous Big M Jr. jfl
ft Il.l a! TMrnnlli Pri.lcail '.l
2ND PRIZEI Ford Thunderbird, Jr.
Scale Model of Ford Thunderbird
Both cars are electric motor driven havo built-in
recharger controlled spaed electric lights loam
rubber cushioning puncturo proof tires ball
bearing mounted wheels
30 OTHER BIO PRIZES
10-3RD PRIZES
RCA Portable
Hi-Fi Sets!
20-4TH PRIZES
RCA Transistor
Radios!
50-6TH PRIZES
Folding Binoculars 'f-j
Pop open Snap shut! J J
enter the big
SNOBOY APPLE
coloring contest!
While you color for SNOBOY'S Contest,
munch on a SNOBOY apple or two! They're
the crisp, juicy, good kind because they're
picked for flavor and guaranteed for
quality. Get them at your erocers now.
SNOBOY Apples!
1
la
v IK
w j i ni rfw
mm
tt'S EASY
FREE
M BAGS Of
1. ' Vj.liIk", J
ySNiQBOW APPLES.
'::;i
jut... it.
J
"TFT
"i thirty 'tri
if.
AM 'AT
' f -"A
4
1
NEA TeHphot.
WINTER COMING ON WHO CARES? Cold weather
doesn't bother Cordelia Wysard as she frolics in the
Pacific Ocean on an Hawaiian beach. Cordelia backs up
Bank of Hawaii's report that tourists will become the
Islands' largest industry in the next 10 years. Airlines
have cut the time-distance to Vh hours and within two
years, or sooner, jets will bring the Islands within 4Vi
hours of the West Coast. Most Hawaii visitors come from
the West Coast and by 1960, tourist spending in Hawaii
is expected to reach an annual $100 million.
Girard Case Outcome Shows
Desire For Reconciliation
The following story was written
tor the Associated Cross by Hub
ert T. Hartmann, Washington bu
reau chief of The l.rw Angeles
Times, who covered the judgment
of both the U.S. Supreme Court
and the Maebashi District Court
of Japan in the William S. Girard
case.
By ROBERT T. HARTMANN
MAEBASHI. Japan 11 The
climax of the Girard case was
conducted with as much decorum
and judicial dignity as the U.S.
Supreme Court's ruling last June
acknowledging Japan's jurisdic
tion.
East is East and West is West
and there is a world of contrast,
both real and superficial between
tins small but tidy courtroom with
its oak paneling, and the magnifi
cent marble temple in Washing
ton where the first act of this
international drama was played.
Coversd Both Ends
By a happenstance of passing
through lokyo en route nor
from the Philippines election, this
reporter is probably the only one
to have covered Doth ends of the
Girard litigation on opposite sides
of the globe.
My impression and this is
all that is really valid without de
tailed background of the trial pro
ceedings here is that the Jap
anese judge who suspended the
American GI's three year sen
tence today was as conscious of
the international aspects of t h e
case as were the eight justices
of our highest court.
There was nothing in Judge Ka-
wachi's meticulously reasoned
verdict to cater to or to excite
nationalistic passions on either
side of the l'acific or to lend com
fort to the Communists. In fact
he seemed to go out of his way
to make clear that he was deal
ing with a wrong committed bv
one human being against another
rather than by an American sol
dier against a Japanese civilian.
Spirit cf Reconciliation
Girard himself seemed to fall
into the spirit of reconciliation at
the news conference.
Cynics may have scoffed when
he proclaimed his affection for the
Japanese people and married his
Japanese sweetheart to prove it
when he was in trouble. Now out
of jeopardy the 22-year-old Girard
reiterated his sentiments with
real ring of sincerity.
There is anti-Americanism
erywhere in Asia and it would be
extremely surprising if there were
none here. But the patient and
understanding handling of this in
cident by both Americans and
Japanese authorities, after a bad
start, seems to have kept It in
proportion in both countries.
Highway Patrolmen Bob
For Apples After Wreck
SAPULPA, Okla. wt - Highway
patrolmen were bobbing for ap
ples Wednesday, and it wasn't
even Halloween.
A truck carrying l'-i tons
of apples hit an underpass sup
port on the turner turnpike west
of here and the cargo was spilled
and smashed over the superhigh
way. Patrolmen spent more than an
hour clearing the apples off the
road.
L. H. Sayers, 40. Grant, N.M,
the truck driver, suffered t broken
leg and abrasions.
IF YOUR CAR NEEDS
NEW GLASS
PAINT TOUCHUP
CHROME REPLATING
BODY-FENDER WORK
COMPLETE REPAINT
Use Your Credit At
Si Dillard Motor Co.
For All Repair Work
FOR AS LITTLE AA
PER WEEK AS . . . . LnVli
Ike's Talk Spurs Activities Of U. S. Air Force Units
Mr. Cor Owner! Doci your car look at though it hod
bcn hit by a it com roller? Are the windows ctacked?
Chrome .rutted? Then you need a Si Dillard Motor
Co. beauty treatment tor your car. Bring your car
into our complete body repairing department for a
free estimate and then let our skilled, trained, com
petent technician! take over and retror your cor to
itt original beauty. The cost it low and you can pay
for all work on our eosy budget plan. All replacement
parte are genuine factory replacements and oil work
it completed under the tupervition of Horry Keatey.
body thop foreman. Uie your credit at Si Dillard
Motor Co. . tor oil your automotive repot n.
SI DILLARD MOTOR CO.
W Repair All Makes of Can and Trucks
S. E. Stephens & Douglas Sti. ORchotd 3-6626
By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
WASHINGTON W We're get
ting self-conscious.
We've been busting our buttons
talking and performing to show
how strong we are ever since Rus
sia fired the Sputniks.
But we didn't have the right
muscles at the right time. The
Russians won a propaganda vic
tory.
Allies and neutrals were left
with visions of Russian missiles
and hydrogen warheads dropping
in their flowerpots.
Something had to be done to re
assure friends, warn foes. A whole
batch of statements and perform
ances followed, none as spectacu
lar as Sputnik.
Last Wednesday Gen. Curtis Le
May, vice chief of staff of the Air
Force, captained a jet-tanker non
stop from Massachusetts to Ar
gentina without refueling, a rec
ord of over 6,000 miles. After a
rest, he flew it back to Washing
ton, also nonstop.
That same day three jet-bombers
flew 8,000 miles from Califor
nia to the Philippines, nonstop but
with refueling.
Over the weekend six B52 bomb
ers flew nonstop from Florida to
Argentina and without landing
but with refueling flew back to
upstate New York.
Meanwhile, the Defense Depart
ment announced the Navy was be
ing equipped with atomic depth
bombs, said it had shot off vari
ous kinds of missiles, and told of
breaking an altitude record with
a rocket.
Ike's Talk Illustrated
All this illustrated President Ei
senhower's talk to the nation two
weeks ago, a talk in which he
said he would give the "rough"
with the "smooth." There was
more of the smooth than the rough.
He said, with examples, this
country had developed a family of
missiles, with some 38 different
types either in operation or under
development.
In some instances he's been ac
cused of overstating his case.
While Russia is claiming devel
opment of a missile that can span
an ocean and a continent, this
About one mile above George
Washington Bridge in New York
City is the Cloisters, the medieval
branch of the Metropolitan Muse
um of Art. It was given by the
Rockefeller family who paid 7 mil
lion dollars for its construction 25
years ago.
FROM NINE TO FIVE
By Jo Fischer
think Hysteria already left for work, Mr. Wump
but I'll look under the bubble-bath to make sure."
Agricultural Co-ops
Advised To View Mergers
X7frh".i"ddw "lufri PORTLAND w - J. K. Stern,
"Iru?i.!f,J!r hW,.h iir. I president of the American Insti-
vo"M M""w ."- I.. Into nl f'n.n
mediate range missnes can uc
fired, if they have the missiles.
The United States has no inter
continental ballistic missile yet.
But Eisenhower said because of
these bases those shorter range
tute of Co-operation, thinks agri
cultural co-operatives sometimes
miss chances for healthy expan
sion if they refuse merger oppor
tunities. He told representatives of 118
issues are in some cases as good Northwest groups attending me
Hie other kind,
And he added that the intercon
tinental kind of missile, as of to
day, doesn't cancel out the deter
rent power of the Strategic Air
Force.
LeMay's tanker and the B52
bombers are part of the Strategic
Air Force. Their flight to Argen
tina is hardly unrelated to Eisen
hower's talk about their deterrent
power.
Pacific Co-operative's annual
meeting here Tuesday:
"The average farmer has only
about 2 per cent of his investment
off the farm."
Stern said most farmers won't
progress unless this trend is
changed, and observed:
"The magic word of big busi
ness today is merger, but many
co-ops are reluctant to follow this
progressive pattern.
World Rivers
ACROSS
1 750-mile river
in Utah and
Wyoming
6 Tibetan river
11 Harvested
13 Interstice
14 More facile
15 Lessee
16 Contorted
17 Devil
19 Mariner's
direction
20 Hebrew
ascetics
22 Seed
appendage
25 Female saint
(ab.)
26 Shakespearean
river
30 Venezuelan
state
31 Son of
Jacob (Bib.)
32 Leave-out
33 Repast
34 Essential
being
35 Green
vegetable
38 Shield
bearing
89 "Where the
River
flows"
42 British money
of account
45 Peruvian
. mountains
40 Peer Gynt's
mother
49 Most unusual
51 Seeular-like
53 Occurrences
54 Heronr
55 Rent
56 Weird
DOWN
1 Expanded
2 Erect
3 Facile
4 Root flnlal
5 Requirements
6 Feminine
appellation
7 Educational
group (ab.)
8 Medicinal
quantity
9 Rubber trees
10 Withered
12 Attire
13 Solitary
18 Encountered
20 Puffs up
21 River in.
Idaho
Answer to Previous Puzzle
SIAIOI IL.II imia odeir.
ARK lOOj.N.Riii
s w a rm e p y j Ieis
H TJS .L US
A T C W RED5RS
cam er a . a o a t e e
EHAEp"ETA7E
- SON N I P 3 T 1 eTp
T A p A R
PIAIREp STARCHy
i numpatepai g
23 Male sheen
(pi.
24 Rainbow
27 Change,
direction
28 Ellipsoidal
29 African river
35 Trousers
36 Conclusion
37 Anoint
22 Century plant 40 Hurry
41 River in
Kansas
42 Soviet city
43 Rant
44 Scope
46 Maple genus
47 11a, river
in Georgia
48 Otherwise
50 Abstract beinj
52 Anger
I i h W j I I; 17 IS p 110
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13 wiurowo's mem m&V its owlv
U vKlVE NOLAN'S CMS tiUM&l&f A WILE 10 AM
Sj FROM, THB INM.L. o3 ISOLAfEP LAKE
L"7HEY PU4H THRU OeHSB GROWTH, LWSEEM.. THEM
U JUMP A THE CAB. PLUUGES OVEg THE BAWK..
rwiw.u.tmj!.tiuip
rifcr m9&!3SfS Be pound N W W SBftfl
f -i! A IS FEET OF J' 7 MjfefeS
' r r" i" u ,1 t '. i im y m, i.m. ... u.i,. f, mfjl
THE HOURS
WORD OF CUkin JEAU
NOLAI0 GKOWS MOKE
ALARMED. HER HEART
SKIPS A BEAT AT TN5
S0LWD OF EACH CAR!
' ...BUT NONE
IF TOO WILL 06-
St"RVe,TtXJMS
PEOP1.6, OUR NEW
MAP OF THE LMTEO
STATES IS QUIW
LAR66" ANO PE-
11 rr lAtUEP;
Our lovect" town,
shadysipe , is evem
IMOtCATED evy A
ORCLE OM THIS map
EM AN " X "inside )
vTHe CIRCLE J
Shadyside
MOMC OF
BAZOO BOTTS
J T ' ae elm sr,
drowa S44- -42
PI I
OH, 1 JUST THOUGHT SOME OF
THE; DOLLS IN THE AFTERNOON
CLASS MIGHT LIKE TO GET IN
TOUCH WITH ME
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T S)'aI-UKRaPe J gg JL -r COME AH HAINT )0FFER,AN4V VO GOTTAGIT ME A AWFUL"
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T '?&rSSrA"feP7 $Z- Pi (Z? , r-r C0 OOUBT-'-V ME ON YORE HANDS Jff YO'A L
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" fetV Sad-eHouiKiosuiosthe' SrWj
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0 KZTTr settler Hekiebiah HauiKins. She VVN i M&TZiTM'
L-X Ox I j mas the hometot gal m the hills. I liL-y'!?'-''.; i-.V.a.r'i Iff JZf'i-i!tS3.
RfcKUWJvHE, ISM'T IT, s. PVRHAP3..BUT A 1(HKS I C.Y. COC...6un BETTER I rT;-r'VJJrj. f. I
HOW ONE MAN WITH PIS5USTINQ.' ) MAM OP VOUH YOURSELF. BUT MAKE tTSOOO Y ckI Xj V TIMF KKlt ''r-'J
A CAN TOV-b ,A J IMAGINATION tWH' n ME , T'M tSOlNG FOR VOU'VE fV K ' Sll k
k OVtKAWHOLS f iTT COUlPfitT WAS OLT5 TO HAVE A V IITTL6 ENCU3HI , J 1 ft fN 3 I
, X PEOPlr? vCSIV ) V AlCTa.lTSTlJPFBE- ? TIME! LEFT.' V VV MI Sl fl B
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