The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, May 12, 1958, Page 14, Image 14

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    14 The Naws-Raview, Rotabura, Or. Men., May 12, 19381
, or In-Season items at
End'of-Season price . . .
SHOP WARDS
SALE BOOK
CHEMISE DRESS 7.77
.. 2.97
. 3.27
. 19.88
. 14.88
114.50
158.88
ORLS'
EASY CARE DRESSES ..
CANVAS
WINDOW AWNING ..,
rOLDINOj
ALUMINUM LOUNGE
OUTDOOR
HAMMOCK
SRUSSIL'S WORLD'S FAIR
POWER MOWER ....
1 HORSEPOWER
AIR CONDITIONER ..
10,000 MORE ITEMS
SHOP BY PHONE
R0SEBURG-DIAL ORchard 3-4483
OAKIAND-SUTHERLIN
CANYONVILLE
MYRTLE CREEK
TOLL-FREE
COMMERCE 9900
CLIP OUT AND INSERT IN YOUR WARDS CATALOG
Kim Novak Says She Would
Return Gift Sports Car
If ItWas Intended As Gift
SAV FRANCISCO 41 Liven-1
er-haired Kim Novak said Satur
day she would return the Mer
eedei Bern porta ear given her
by Dominican Republic LL Gen.
Rafael Trujillo Jr. if It til a gut.
She hinted at romance with the
daihing Latin, ton of that coun
try'a atrong man.
Miss riovak, here lor tne pre
miere of her lateat picture. Verti
go, laid aha did not connder the
$8,700 apona car from TrujiUo a
gift "and if It la a gin l u
give it back to him."
rue actreia aaia ins waa anui.
only TrujiUo and that ahe had a
pet name lor nim irom me opera
Aida. She aaid the calla him
Ramfis." an Egyptian high
pheat in the Verdi clanie. (
Net a Spender
Mm Novak laid aha did net
classify Trujillo aa heavy spend-
She ilia on at wan two. 01
their dates they dined in dnve-
ini, adding: . I
He lovea hamburgera and as
do I." . ,
Down in Hollywood a car deal
er aaid the general had given fan
cy foreign iporta care to Mill
Novak, .ia zsa uioor ana oougni
$12,000 one for himielf.
Ia thia a aerioui romance?
"One never knowi," Mini No
vak replied with wide eyei. But
he added that marriage naa not
been discussed.
I like him very much and l
wouldn't like anything to happen
that would hurt him," she re
marked. Asked how ihe met him
ahe responded with a giggle: "I
wa introduced by Zsa Zia
Gabor."
In denying that the considered
the black and white sports car a
gift, ahe aaid she thought me wai
merely caring for the car until
Trujillo returna from the U. S.
Army command and general ataff
college at FU Leavenworth, Kan.,
ia June.
Kim, whose affection for
color ia well known, added
"I'm aura if it was a gift, the
car would have been lavender."
one
Record Tides
Fed By Winds
For Eight Days
Gentlemen On Horseback
Start Out With The Mail
SPOKANE HI The "gentlemen
on horseback" cinched up their
saddle! Saturday for their tradi
tional ride to the state cattlemen'!
convention and three mulea were
CORVALLIS- The record wave 1'. '" le . for PcjI
that .wept the Oregoi Co.it last1 H"! deUvnr to Walla
month were eight daya in the mak-1 "!'' r , ...
ing and were fed by unusual wind. ! . The Spokane area cattlemen
i .u. -... .hi, -tAA , .have been riding to their annual
nearly 3,000 milei. according to , ociation meeting for the last
weather map itorm study made! - but it a strictly first
No Room Left
On Enchanted Isle
Without Women
LOS ANGELES W Too bad,
men, that houtn seas paradise
where pay ia high, food and annus
cheap and women are barred is
not tor you mi. year.
The no-help-wanted sign i. up.
The enchanted islea are where
the United Statea testa ita nuclear
devices. Their appeal if you want
to get away from the little woman
was told in an Associated Pres.
story earlier this week.
"We've been swamped with
phone calls, telegrams and letter.
since tne new. got out, saia a
spokesman for Holmes It Narver,
Inc., a Los Angeles engineermg
firm hired by the Atomic Energy
Commission to run the Eniwetok
atoll Droving ground.
"The only trouble," sighed the
spokesman, "is that we don't have
any job openings and won't have
until next year. We have to aay
no to all the callers.
Especially intriguing about the
island life: $1.90 a day living ex
penses, 25-cent drinks and $10,000
a year net salaries.
The spokesman said the firm
hai received more than 124 lettera
from aa far away aa Florida, 75
long distance calls and IS tele
grams. The all-male community, 5.100
miles from Los Angeles, haa been
prospering since 1949.
Good Weather
Allows Farmers
Spring Planting
PORTLAND I Good weather
last week gave Oregon farmera a
chance to catch up on spring field
work, delayed by wet weather in
March and April.
The weekly report of the U.S.
Department of Agriculture Mar
keting Service indicated her
that crop development also was
good in the week ending May 2.
The report continued:
Seeding of spring grain was
nearing completion in Central
Oregon and the Columbia Basin.
In Western Oregon and in Union,
Klamath and Wallowa counties.
spring grain seeding ia about half
done.
Conditiona were favorable for
tha pollination of the many straw
berry Iields mat were in lull
bloom.
Harvesting was expected to
start on Marshall strawberriea in
the last week of May and on
Northwest varietiea during the
first week of June.
Onions were emerging in Mal
heur County, and Central Oregon
potato growers continued planting
with about one-third of tne crop
planted in the Madras area.
Pastures and range feeds pro
gressed well in Western Oregon
and fair to well in the eastern
part of the stale.
PRUDENTIAL LIFE
INSURANCE
HORACE C. BERG
Spetiel Agtnf Room 301
Pecifie Seiltf'inf
OH. OR 1-7491, Res. OR 1-7HS
Dog's Barking Results
In Rescue Of Children
AUBURN, Maine ( Three
small children were rescued from
a bluing farm home Saturday
thanka to a dog a barking. The
animal then scampered into the
flaming building and perished.
The fire leveled the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Oakes of
North Auburn.
The Oakes' daughter-in-law, Vir
ginia, was alone in the house with
her children sleeping upstairs
when the one-year-old terrier drew
her attention by barking wildly
and scraping on a door.
Opening the door she was met
by a wall of flames which quick
ly spread to the entire house. She
rushed upstair, through thick
smoke and carried the children.
S months to S years, to safety.
by Dr. Wayne V. Burt, Oregon
Stat College oceanographer.
Burt secured detailed weather
bureau maps of tha North Paci
fic Ocean to trace the build-up and
unfolding of the storm that was one
of the most spectacular in memory
of coastal residents.
Only the more severe hurricanes
and typhoons have waves higher
than those built up in the storm,
Burt pointed out.
The ocean wave, began to form
the evening of Mrch 27 almost 3,
000 mile, west of the Oregon Coast
Moved along by steady and strong
westerly winds, they gamed speed
and momentum as they approached I
the coast.
is Wave. Hit Coast
On April 3. when they reached
the coast, waves averaged 25 feet
in height and about one in 10
wave, during the peak probably
rose to 50 feet, Burt noted. A "big
one occur, regularly about that
often, he added, as the various
"trains" of wavea reinforce each
other at the same time.
By the time the wave, hit shore
line too, they were moving at a
speed of more than 500 nautical
miles a day, times faster than
they were moving March 27.
Highest waves hit around the Or
egon - California boundary and
slackened otf slightly up the coast.
The unusual wind and wave pat
tern also dumped a tremendous
number of Japanese fishnet floats
onto the Oregon Coast. Burt is cur
rently making a study of float re
coveries this year and in past year,
in the hope of uncovering new in
formation about Pacific Ocean currents.
fir the mulea and mail.
"I'll bet I've licked 6,000 stamps
and stuck them on," said dry
lipped C.C. Glover, who will trail
boss on tha trip.
Glover laid letters had come
from all parts of the world to be
carried on the special souvenir
mail run. The postal department
granted the cattlemen a special
one-way franchise to pack the
mad to Walla Walla.
Net Speedy Delivery
It won't be a speedy delivery.
The men, horses and mulea ex
pect to spend five daya on the
trail and of course there could
be delays if the mules are as un
cooperative as legend has it.
Owner Beyer Adley .aid Beulah
Two Navy Fliers Perish
In Crash Of Bomber
BERKELEY, Calif, i - Two
Navy flier, died Friday in t h a
crash of their attack bomber in
San Francisco Bay.
Officials said the plane went
down 400 yards northwest of the
pier while apparently trying to re
turn to its base. Although no word
was received from the plane, it
appeared to be trying to make an
emergency landing.
wai the lead mule and t
necessarily from hit choice.
"She haa to be. You put herj
second back, and she keeps crowd-!
ing ahead of whatever mule's try
ing to lead.
"That's a woman for you, al
ways trying to get in ahead," Ad
ley aaid.
Tha other muley mail carriers
are named Brick and Mike.
A newspaper columnist inter
viewed Mike on the eve of the
trip. She poked soma mail under
the mule', nose and reported be
seemed interested enough. In fact
it looked for a minute aa though
he might get himself in dutch with
the postal department by taking
a bite or two and ruining some
stamp collector's souvenir.
PIOP LI DO READ
SPOT ADS
That Is y M ntlUf mmw-
WANTED,
RECEPTIONIST'
SECRETARY
) kern weak.
WRITE BOX 686
THE NEWS REVIEW
Bob Evans Uniforms
Your aisuranca of tha
fashions, fabric and fit.
finest quality.
For Your Convenience
Phone OR 3-7409
For Evening Appointments
VERA'S UNIFORM SHOP
341 S. E. Rosa
'l Block North of Douglas
Phona ORchard 3-7409
1
27 Persons Are Killed
In Tractor Accidents
PORTLAND I Twenty-seven
person, were killed in tractor
accidents in Oregon last year.
The toll ia 11 higher than in
1956, the state Board of Health
aaid.
Two of the accident, claimed
the lives of youngsters under 15
years old.
Baker. Douglas and Lane coun
ties each recorded three tractor
fatalities. Clackamas, Linn, Mult
nomah and Washington countie.
each had two. Tha other, were
in Benton. Coos. Curry. Jackson,
Malheur. Marioa. Umatilla, Wal
lowa, Wasco and Yamhill coun
ties.
Walter Reuther
Asks Arbitration
On Profits Plan
DETROIT. uH Walter P.
Reuther proposed Saturday that
economic demands of hi. United
Auto Workers, including profit-
sharing, be submitted to binding,
impartial arbitration. '
'It would be agreed." the UAW
president said, "that the total
amount to be awarded x x would
not require a price increase" by
the auto companies.
Reuther, apparently stymied by
the recession and a tremendous
backlog of unsold cars in hi. 1938
contract bargaining, made h i s
second peace offer within 11 days
in a letter to Sen. Estei Kefauver
(D-Tenn). A copy went to the big
three: General Motors. Ford and
Chrysler.
There was no immediate reac
tion from the auto-makers. They
all have rejected profit-sharing
and have stood pat on an offer
to extend for two more years the
current three-y ear contracts,
which carry automatic hourly
raises of six cents annually and
tie wage, to ups and downs of
the cost of living.
CM rejected a UAW offer to
arbitrate in 1945.
Reuther proposed a five-man
panel of arbitrators. The union
would name two, the company two
and together they would select a
fifth. A separate panel would be
named for each company.
On Friday, May 16, Cast Your Vote For
ROBERT G.
DAVI
FOR CIRCUIT
JUDGE'
ON NON-PARTISAN
JUDICIAL BALLOT
EQUAL JUSTICE FOR EVERY MAN
WITHOUT FEAR OR FAVOR
Former District Attorney With An Active Juvenile Program
CONSIDERATE - EFFICIENT TRUSTWORTHY
Pi. Pol. Adv., Art Lemko, See.-Treas., Security lldg., Roseoure,, Oregon
I r- I
BREAKFAST
i Ai At i At
LUNCH
.
DINNER
,
MENU
DELIGHTS
Taste Pleasing and
Tantalizing Choices
K Corned Beef
0 Pastromi
S Bar-B-Cues (Beef & Pork)
H Weiners and Kraut
E Baked Beans (In Pot)
R Steaks and Chicken
SALAD
SENSATIONS
Salads Kept Cool and Refreshing
at the Iced Salad Bar
TOSSED GREEN
Choice of Drottine
POTATO
COTTAGE CHEESE, FRUIT
COLE SLAW, SOUR CREAM
POLICY
AT THE BROILER
Fast, courteous service and taste
treats from the broiler. Jerry Willis
at the Broiler assures your complete
satisfaction, regardless of your
choice from the menu board. Youe
choice of salads, desserts and bev
erages to compliment the entree
you select. THE BROILER promises
you an EXCITING EXPERENCE IN
COOD EATINC.
formerly...
MOORE'S CAFE
725 S.E. CASS
it DIFFERENT
DISHES
DELECTABLE
DISHES
rk DELIGHTFUL
DISHES
FAST Cafeteria Service - - HI-FI MUSIC While You Dine