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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1959)
o o SPACE LIMITED NEW YORK (AP) The Econo'l The ballroom's normal capacity mics Club says lack of space pre- i5 1,500, and about 2,000 guests vented radio or television cover- , ;,. A . , , A . ase of Soviet Premier Nikita! were lnv'ud' A selected numbcr Khrushchev's speech Thursday :f newsmen were allowed to at- Kinhl at tha U'llrlnof - A.,..-;..-,. tnnA K..t -It t.n 1 luiii t"c itsiuuu - naiuua ai iciiu, urn i wa puuiut tipilCl S I aranA hflllrnnm uura hnrrntt 1 Fairgrounds Zco Coali Mundi Welcomed Into NeiiHsM JAMES CROW created the first modern bourboa 1855 TASTE THE GREATNESS of James Crow's Masterpiece CROW Born 124 years ago. America's favorite today. Little Joe Friday, just as his de tective namesack, is a very inqui sitive sort. Joe, complete with a Ion? nose to match his curiosity, is a coati inundi who presently is making his horn with the David, A. Kesners 2154 NW Kline St., Hoseburg. Originally. Joe came from Latin America where he and his kind are frequently house pets. In addi tion to providing fun and amuse ment lor those around, the lone noses his kindred have are- useful in finding insects, small rodents and other domestic disturbers. There are no strangers to this raccoon-sized inquisitive animal. When someone new walks into the room, Joe is right there, his long nose sniffing its way into pockets and retrieving everything from car keys to money. Joe can manuever. When he leaps, he lands with all four feet, and it can be anyplace, including a person's back. He doesn't claw, however. He's just interested in a good grip. Listening to Joe eat a cooky or cracker he's no slacker on appe titeand it sounds like a minia ture saw is at work. Zip, zip, zip go Joe's teeth and whatever food was there is gone. The coati normally is gentle, but fear is not part of his makeup. Along with the Kesner's Pekingese dog, Tibby, and a gray cat, there's no doubt as to who is boss, it's the newcomer. However, the Kesners have found Joe will not hurt their two young sons, Lance, who is about 4 years old, and Donny, about 2. the Kesners like their new pet which they received by way of the Douglas County Fair. Joe needed a home during the cold winter months and the Kesners have giv en him one. Joe, in turn, has brought no lit tle amount of humor and additional interest into their lives. f- $3?T5 JROO Light 'Mild '86 Proof KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY OLD CROW 0IST11URY Co.. FRANKFORT.KY., DISTR. BY NATIONAL DISI. PROD. CO. I 'cm I M I mwpl OLD CROW gvramaiiji ji'iu'if"i 'jf 1" ijV n-v Tk turn JimuiiH - A. J S ,. C 1! m K1 t &0, Sept. 21, 1959 Thq News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 3 lnEMts$17lnPurge . -a LITTLE JOE FRIDAY, a Douglas County Fair coati mundi spending the winter as a house guest of the David Kesners, would rother eat than pose for the photographer. Here, Mrs. Lorraine Kesner tries to interest him in looking at the camera. (Darrell Maddox). Votes Of Oregon Congressmen Reveal Splits Tenmile School Adding 2 Rooms It will be necessary to have two more classrooms at jenmue School. The school has permission from the Tenmile Ladies Club to use the auditorium of the Ladies Club house and is building a partition di viding the room. The east room will be used for the combination first and second grade class and the west room will be used for the school cafeteria. The former lunch room in the school building will be used for fifth and sixth grade class. There are 39 pupils in the fifth grade and 37 in the sixth grade. Ten pupils wil be taken from each of these grades to make up the combination class. The school is not using the club parlor or kitchen and the cafe teria will be available for club and other social meetings when not in use by the school, reports corre spondent Mrs. Walter Coats. WASHINGTON (AP) How Ore gon members of Congress were recorded as voting on final roll calls of the session just ended: Senate On passage, 55-30, of bill pro viding a federal subsidy for con struction bf fishing vessels in U.S. shipyards: For Morse (D), Neu berger (D). On passage, 49-40, of bill pro viding that foreign economic aid shall be open to any nation or area except the Soviet Union and Communist - held areas in Far East: For Morse, Neuberger. On Bridges amendment, adopt ed 49-38, writing into foreign aid appropriation bill a provision for 50 million dollars for Spain: Against Morse, Neuberger. On Hayden (D-Ariz) amend ment, adopted 71-18, adding to foreign aid appropriation bill a provision for extending Civil Rights Commission for two years and giving it S500.000 on wnich to operate: For Morse, Neuberger. 0o foreign aid appropriation bill: r or Morse, ixeuuerger. Hous On overriding, 280 121, of Ei senhower's veto of billion-dollar public works appropriation bill: For overriding Norblad (R), IM1- man tui, urccn (D), rorier ( u). OPERATIONS TO END ANCHORAGE, (AP) Alaska Freight Lines Inc. has announced plans to discontinue ' operations and contract its functions out to a number of other companies. No date for the changeover was set. they come back for more ! International six-wheel Trucks can really take it and come back for more. That's why customers who use them come back for more! If you're from the "show-me" school, put one on the job. See what it can do. We're confident International will out-do other make trucks on four very important counts. POWER! Truck-designed engines built to move heavy loads. TRACTION I " ' Sure-driving tandems eet your job done faster. HANDLING! Easier steering on the road or in close quarters. COMFORT! Driver-designed cabs provide plenty of room, an easy ride. See us today! INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS WORLD'S MOST COMPLETE LINE! mm p mob. M S pMS(y-- I J I yj' taS IgLSSt """I ' ' 1 mini ii i i.inS'Viiihltiln . " ' ' 1..,..'. "2 Li LIU On passage, 194 109. of $3,225. 815.000 foreign aid appropriation bill: For Norblad, Green. Not voting Ullman, Porter. On motion, adopted 221-81, to concur in Senate s action in pro viding for two - year extension of Civil Rights Commission and ap propriating $500,000 for its opera- lion: For Norblad, Green; not voting ullman, Porter. BF.IRL'T, Lebanon (AP) Snec-r tators cheered Iraq's Premier Ab del Karim Kassem Sunday as fir ing squads felled 13 Iraqi army officers and hangmen executed four civilians as enemies of the , government. The executions were the largest! in a single day since the over-; throw of the monarchy 14 months ( ago and were the first to be an nounced m advance. The army men participated in: the abortive revolt at the north ern military headquarters m Mo sul last march or were charged with plotting against hasscni. "lhey were opposed to the left-wing ten dencies of Kassein's regime at the time. Brig. Nadhim Tabakjali, com mander of the 2nd Division at Mo sul, was the highest ranking officer to die. Also prominent among the executed officers was Col. Mustafa Hat Sirri. chief of the army's in telligence service in Baghdad. The officers, tried before the People's court and sentenced sev eral months ago, were accused of supporting policies of President Gamal Ahdel Nasser ot the United Arab Hi-public and Kassein's No. 1 enemy. The civilians, accused o' being criminal traitors were members of the government of the late Nuii Said, the pro-Western premier who was killed in Kassein's revolt of July 14. 1930. The best known among them were Said Qazzaz, former interior minister, and Bah jat Attiyah, ex-security chief. 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