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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1963)
MARKET TIPS New Potatoes Take Over As Old Supply Dwindles . By LI ROY I. INMAN Business News Dept. Editor Old potatoes for 1963 will soon be a thing of the past, but new Sbafler potatoes out of California are on in full swing now. The sup ply is plentiful and demand is good. Retail outlets still have some old potatoes, but wholesalers are prac tically cleaned out. Very good red Local News Mr. and Mrs. John D. Todd and fmily, Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Horton ind family and Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Horton and family of this city were in Dallas over the weekend, hav ing gone to enjoy the golden wed ding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Horton, parents of Mrs. Todd and L. R. and R. E. Horton. Ml Jul! Rob.rti. student at Marylhurst College, Portland, has arrived home to spend the summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rex Roberts. The Roberts' eldest daughter, Miss Rebecca, student at University of Oregon, is arriving home this week to spend the sum mer months. Mrs. William C. Lmdsell of this city drove to Portland Thursday and will return here tomorrow with her daughter. Miss Mary, who is taking nurses training at Univers ity of Oregon School of Nursing, and who will spend the summer here at the Lindsell home on W. Elizabeth St. The Lindsells' daugh ter, Miss Sarah, who is a student at University of Washington, Se attle, will arrive home next Tues day and will visit here until June 16, when she will return to Seattle to spend the summer working. more meat toarefiavots potatoes art also available out of Bakersfield. Carrots out of Bakersfield and Salinas are very good, the market steady. Very nice turnips are com ing now from Oxnard. Rutabagas and parsnips are all but through for this season. Dry onions are on the firm side, as rains in Texas have held back harvesting, putting Heavier pressure on other sources. Most onions obtainable locally are out of Bakersfield. Lettuce took a big drop, then bounced up again this week. The quality is only fair, as poor grow ing conditions in the Salinas area have held back the crop. Leaf let tuces, romaine and endive continue very good. The radish market is strong. Green onions are more plen tiful. The source is principally Cali fornia with a few from Portland. Cabbage remains good out of Ox nard. Nice quality cauliflower is coming from Salinas and a small amount from Portland, but that from the southland is the better. Good green broccoli is coming from Salinas. The celery market eased up, the main source being Oxnard. Also, corn out of Arvin, Calif., is im proving in quality and supply. Very good peas are coming out of Seattle and California. Snap beans are on the market out of Kingsburg. Zucchini, yellow crooked neck and other summer squash varieties are very good now out of the Kingsburg and Chula Vista areas. Likewise cucumbers from the same areas are finding a steady market with good quality. Peppers and egg plant both are coming off the Los Angeles market. Willamette Valley asparagus and limited supplies of rhubarb are available. Some local rhubarb can still be had. Tomatoes from Indio are much improved. Watermelons and cantaloupes are finding a better market and the quality has improved. Most are coming from the Yuma and Blithe areas, with a few out of Mexico. The apple market is very strong now, with few left in storage and the new crop not yet on. Peaches and a few plums are coming from Kingsburg, Strawberries are from both the Willamette valley and California, the quality being very good and the supplies more plenti' ful. The market on small Valencia oranges has eased, while that on large oranges is steady. It also is steady on lemons, but the grape fruit market is very strong. Only limited supplies are available out of Coachilla. Bananas are unchang ed, and other tropical fruits art available on order. i-v V -'Vl f -Vjff Vffir 'M Thurs, June 6, 1963 Tht Newt-Review, Rottburfl, Or, f Library Arrivals Journal Of Outspoken Rebellion Is Protesl Against Poll-Takers PAN AMERICAN WORLD AIRWAYS said Tuesday it has ordered six airplones that fly so fast, New York passengers will have to gobble their lunch to finish eating before landing in London. Artist's conception shows the plane, the supersonic "Concorde" airliner, being developed jointly by France and Britain. It will fly 1,500 MPH ond out flight time between New York and London to two hours 30 minutes less than half the time it now takes. The croft is expected to be in production by 1968. (UPI Telephoto) Childhood Patterns 01 Being Careful Last Through Life, Mrs. Huxley Claims NEW YORK (UPI) The "be careful, you'll fall" warning of the parent to a child often starts a pattern of caution which ties and binds all through life, says Mrs. Aldous Huxley. If we have been careful since childhood, by the age of 30 we will probably be very careful and by 40 we are extremely careful," she continues. "Unless we do something about it each year, the habit and the suggestion become more firmly implanted and we become more restricted in body and mind." Mrs. Huxley, reddish-haired, blueeved wife of the famous au thor, now has turned writer her self, producing sort of an instant therapy called "You Are wot inc Target." It is a compilation of 30 "recipes" for everyday living and loving and coping with problems from fear ana frustration to love and understanding of others. Terminology "I used the term "recipes" be cause I didn't want to get into the areas of religion or psychoanal ysis," said Mrs. Huxley in an interview. "And I wanted something that would heln.us rifiht now. The rec- ipes are for the well as well as for the not so well. But one does not need to be sick to Bet better. All of us are much vaster in our capacities than we think." Mrs. Huxley, born In Turin, Italy, is a certified psychologist and said she had dona a lot of work in psychotherapy. But she's convinced psychotherapy must be combined with physical activity to be most effective. "You can't divorce the body from the mind," she contends. Physical Activity That is whv everv "recine" carries suggestions for physical activity as well as mental. "Go into a room by yourself. Put on your favorite music. Throw off your clothes and dance. The goal of this dance is not art, the goal is personal freedom is one ex ample. Mrs. Huxley said the title of her work, for winch lier nusuana wrote the forward, comes from her belief that most of the time when you're being bombarded by somebody's bad temper or vi- ciousness. you're not the target at all. you ' just n a p p e n 10 be in the way of an outburst caused by some other Irritation. One section is called "To Hell with Caution (specially dedicated to those over 40)". "I'm not saying we can live without cau tion," said Mrs. Huxley. "It is ncccssarv for survival. I darned well better be cautious when I cross Fifth Avenue. Tension "But being too careful, being constantly afraid, suspicious crctive these feeling patterns produce a continuous Inner ten sion (which) constricts the circu lation of ideas, of feelings... "Habitual caution ties and binds us: it is as if we were dressed always in clothes that were sev eral sizes too small," said Mrs. Huxley. She suggested that the watchful parent fearful of a child's safety should use good sense in choosing where and when the child could run freely. Then let him. "The minor bumps and bruises are a learning experience," she said Young Republicans To Hear Gov. Hatfield SALEM (UPI) Gov. Mirk Hatfield is slated to deliver the keynote address at the Young Re publican National Convention in San Francisco June 26, his office said today. Hatfield also Is slated to de liver two college commencement addresses in California this week end. He will speak at Wcstmont Col pcee, Santa Barbara, at 10:30 a.m., and at Whitticr College, Whitticr, at 4 p.m. Saturday. For mer Vice President Richard Nix on attended Whitticr. Hatfield will leave Friday, and return sometime next Monday or Tuesday. With a jaundiced eye, a caustic tongue and a trigger-finger on the pulse of our virus-riden times, Cynthia Seton has compiled a jour nal of uncommon good sense and outspoken rebellion which should awaken resounding echoes in re pressed readers everywhere, la Burning," she writes with a com bination of charming domestic hu mor and sharp undomesucated bite that is a unique, potent brand that beguiles while it burns. Speaks On All Issues As a housewife in sometime-com mand of a large old house alive with mutinous modern appliances and five rebellious children, Cyn thia Seton, qualified or not, has a word to say on everything from the conquest of space to the con quest of Dr. Spock. Her aim swings from unpalata ble baby foods to the War of Flu oridation, from progressive illit eracy to a disenchanted evening at a drive-in movie, from the sub lime significance of real butter to the subversiveness of singing com mercials and high school courses in baton twirling, from physicians who aren't friendly to the certain prospect of mother-in-Iawhood and the uncertain prospect of family life in a fallout shelter, Cynthia Scion's book is her de fense against the poll-takers, mo tivational researchers and advice givers who have reduced her to a statistic. Forceful Novel Thoughtful and extraordinarily forceful is the novel, "The Far Road," written by George Johnston. The time in 1945. The place is war-torn China. The story is about two foreign correspondents who set out by jeep on an assignment to the famine-stricken interior. The death, hunger and abject misery the men encounter as their journey progresses create sharp dissension between them that grows steadily toward implacable hatred. They hold widely divergent views not only on their profession al rcsponsibilites but on the de grec to which they are responsible to their fellow man. The story emerges on two lev els one, a physical journey through the hearts and minds of two decidedly different indivdu als. Modern Robinson Crutoot "The Stragglers" by E. J. Kahn Jr. is a unique story of men fight ing to stay alive, using the most primitive means. Based on first hand interviews and orignal re search, it tells for the first time a fascinating but little-known epi logue to World War II. This is the story of Japanese . tie, John Toland; I Can Get It For soldiers, who after Japan surren- you wholesale, Jerome Weidman; dered. singly and in small groups. The Great HunEer: IreIan(i lg45. escaped into the jungle. Many of them set up secret communities on various Pacific Islands, either finding it impossible to surrender or too ashamed to return home to defeat. "The Stragglers" is the remark able story of these modern Robin son Crusocs fanatical misguid ed patriots, who lived a tough but often dramatic existence. Scudder Book On Order ' On order at the library is "Cus ter Country." The lavishly illus trated and easy-to-read volume is by Ralph E. Scudder, head of the social studies department of Rose- burg High School. Other books, new on the library shelves this week, arc: Adult Non-Fiction: Italian Paint ers of tlio Renaissance, Bernard Hercnson; Houses and Plans 1963, House Beautiful; The Book of Pa triotic Holidays, Marguerite Ickis; Masters of the Japan6se Print, Richard Lane: The Day They Shook the Plum Trco (GREEN), Arthur Lewis: The Hawker Hurri cane, Francis Mason: The Censors and the Schools, Jack Nelson: Let's Rejoin the Human Race, Joseph t'ecK: All the Way Down, Vincent Kiccio; Our Amish Neighbors, Wil liam Sclireiber; What is Item 1849, Cecil Woodham Smith. Adult Fiction: Water in the Wine. April Armstrong; The Far Road, . George Johnston; Proof of the Pud ding, Phoebe Taylor; Sissie, John Williams. Young Modems Non Fiction: Women in Aeronautics, Charles May. Young Moderns Fiction: The Dark Keep, Robert Alter; Kalena and Sana, Esma Booth. Juvenile Non-Flctlon: The Aztec. Sonia Bleeker; Sergeant O'Keefe and His Mule, Balaam, Harold Felton; Lives of an Oak Tree, Ross Hutchins; The Two Old Bach elors, Edward Lear. Juvenile Fiction: Who Walks tht Attic?, Laura Bannon; King Big Ears, Eilis Dillon; City of tht Golden House, Madeleine Polland. Easy Books: The Life-Savers, Anne Cleveland; The B Book, Phyllis McGinlcy. Dellenback Gets Nod PORTLAND (UPI)-State Rep. John Dellenback, R-Medford, ac cepted nomination this week as moderator of the Synod of Oregon of the United Presbvterian Church bored (STEIN), Alice Toklas; Bat-! in the U.S.A. Mabel: Have You Tried The New Meadow Gold Milk? Our Kids Love Itl the r REAL VW J I ...... x - - v v TOAST, THE MOST! TREAT! THE REAL BREAD STAYS FRESH LONGER! Growing rieSUrm need lota of hlmMhimH, metering protein, cakiam, minwrafe, YHamirn and other ekmenis to heep than strong and heatthy. Thftfs why so many muttwas sere ptenty of porxl fresh WHfians' Bread, the read yeanraised bread. Always buy the bread in the bright gjnpjwra wrapper - WILLIAMSI it kmgrri J J tt m .3 THIS IS THE ONE! 1 ... Jrif