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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (March 4, 1943)
TWO ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURG, OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 4, 1943. iMiurd Dully I : Ht Huutlnr hr tb NrttM-Kct irw 'u.f ln Member of The Aeimeil I'rran 1 ly fiiUIa lu iiiu urtK fur rupubl vu lion uf U Hewn iis.ttt;lie cruiIIU'd to It or not thwnvlio croilitcii in Ihlft pupr a. id to all loial iivh fiiihllxliuf. hwi-eiu. All ri;nU of ro inibllvutitm oC m.'iiil dlKpulcliM Jit-ruin aru aim) rrved. CHA8. V. STANTON. KOWIN U KNAPI. . KJItor r;ntTd Hi n-cinl iliixii imittt't Mav .7. J:. at li" I""" offn-u i lUiitfljui K. urrKon. urulr uil of Man li Z, 17. Jlriirmrnlftl hy !V- ) nrtt L'T 1 X1;tiirnn .vv. Nmi l'rnin'l' ---' IfJ"l' Hi' i.um Aiiiifli-M S. Sih-iiik Mr hen Hit' tm 1 Ml. -witt I St I1-- I. t'rf tiiml .''-'( H. V. SiMh Sin til, l.ttitiw 411 S. Tenth Mittnl. NuhNvrliMltin llntm rmllv. pur y-r by iimil.. ..o l'itilj. ti niimtiiM by mail - I'ally, ntontliK by until I. -ft Editorial on Newt iContlnntd (ram pg 1.) she isn't qualifiud to have one' IT sounls like a swell dish of stew when the rabbit is caught. MOVING his sights to Europe, Knox doubts if we're doing much direct damage to the Ger man submarines based along the French coast. They tire housed In deep concrete tunnels and he thinks It unlikely that our bombs tire reaching them. He says the Germans have somewhere from 300 to '100 sub marines. ON the tenth anniversary of the rounding or the modern German air force, the British hit Berlin with 900 tons of bombs twice Ihe maximum bomb load dropped on London In any one raid hy the Germans uu.u.g - , ... , , . . rNlllciccu X3llll.SU o v.- lost in the raid. ' This Is the point to remember: Jt was this same German air force that Goeiing boasted would make Germany Immune to enemy air attack. The British arc prov ing him a liar. , The purpose Is to shako the Germans' confidence in their lead ers. 01' the- Berlin raid and the others that have occurred every night for a week, Captain Harold Hal four, British under secretary for nir, says: "These are hut the oneninc bars, which will rise to Hie crescendo of a march on Ku rope." He adds: "We look forward to the? time when there will be no hour of the j day when axis forces will be free ; from the swoop of allied planes. Ills purpose is to Increase Her man Jitters. 1 THE Russians, closing down in ' the south. HIT MAUD IN THE . NORTH, in the neighborhood of; Lake linen, 200 miles south of Leningrad. They claim the piao- i Ileal rout of another Herman ar ' my. Tlmnshenko, unheard of for j some time, Is the Russian com- mander. ' NOTE that as the Russians slow ! up in one spot i possibly for re- , organisation and bringing up of ' supplies I they hit hard In an , ulher, giving the Hermans no rest. j That Indicates Russian strength. INT Tunisia, von Arnini 'tries I" out Hank Medjez el Hah to the north. The allied (iimnuini(ue says he "paid a heavy price In men and material and has been HELD in all sectors." He losl 23 tanks, including one of his big Mark Vi s. ROMMEL, having tailed to gel through and cut our supply lines In the rear, is RETIR1NH, having already given up most of the ground he took from us. Hut NOT any of the mountain passes he seized in his drive into j the first valley. IV litis African warfare, ground gained means little unless II is STHATIiGlC ground, such as mountain passes, commanding heights, rail and highway renters, etc. THERE'S still nothing nl im pirlnnce from Montgomery. j lint we've learned by observa , Hon that Montgomery makes Itis preparations carefully and when ly. liils !v- HITS IJARP. hs I IS 'tft NHrrqi 1 THE EDITOR'S MAIL BAG EDITORIAL. By Charles r I IE editorial desk of a newspaper each day receives many communication,) from .renders. Few .of these are written fur publication. Occnu'onally messages are anonymous. Un signed letters are never used, even though they may contain interesting items or ideas. Names of writers are not revealed if such request is made, hut it is a rule that letters from uniden tified authors are promptly relegated to the waste paper basket. The ideas and opinions of readers are always desired, and it is with much interest that sincere communications are read. I'or instance, we have the suggestion from a good News Revifcw reader, the idea ibeing presented in person rather than by mail, that a campaign be to deport nil Japanese. It is the opinion of this man that as lonfc as the Japanese cannot bo assimilated, they should be ex pelled from the Country and. in his opinion, the quicker the better. F le admits! 'of course, after' the war, but he believes the first act after the Japs have been roundly whipped should be to send all the "Nips" back to the land of their nnc-.etors. He proposes (hat everyone be lieving as he does should write the members of congress and urge such action. Whiles who would pampar the Japs, in his opinion, should be shipped out with the "Nips." If this gentle man is successful in getting the idea through congress, we would like U see a few rattle-brained theorists, some labor racketeers and political fence straddlers included in the first boatload. . 1 1 : Then we have a Very, interesting letter from Mrs. Emma P. Woods,., who is av frcqtent contributor to the News-Review j letter forum. s Because we do not have space to publish Mrs. Woods' communication in full, we report she is deeply concern ed because liquor is not prqhibitcd to men in service. "Can an : intoxicated anny or an army with a part of it intoxicated be victorious") shj asks. She urges an increase in religious faith and fiber, pointing out that crime is costing the nation fifteen ' billion dollars annually while six billion dollars represents the gambling cost. Liquor, she asserts, is responsible for much of the two items. Mrs. Woods also believes it would be a fine , thing if the $ 1 .600,000.000 spent annually for tobacco and I the one billion dollars sncnt for motion picture shows could bci spent for prosecution of the war. We also found much interest in a communication from the! Gold Beach chamber of commerce seeking cooperation in com batting legislation which would open the streams of Curry county and particularly .the Rogue rivor to commercial fish- ;ing. We cr.n remember how a jterosls in that same sec'ion were; inB of the Ko(?ue river ((J ne( fmWmi, 'imen. represented by thuir chamber of I these streams under normal conditions are even now' attract-! iug thousands of people, from all parts of the weal and even I the middle west und east, who seek the , Rogue and other j streams of the county for sport and healthful recreation, brio-1 ing to the state hundreds of .thousands of dollars spent foij services and motor fuel taxes incident to travel on the state's highways." Sports fishermen have long been claiming (hat a financial benefit would result to the state from prohibiting all ; commercial fishing. The business men at the mouth of the ' Rogue river have been converted the hard way, but now they , are ready to fight to preterve the condition they once opposed i so vigorously. We believe the time will come when this icali- ! zation will be general throughout the state of Oregon. ; KRNR Mutual Broadcasting System, 1490 Kilocycles. BEST BETS FOR TODAY THURSDAY 7:00 Raymond Clapper. 7:15 Guest Artist Scrios. 8:30 Variety Show. FRIDAY 11:15 Wheel of Fortune, with the B. P. W. C. 4:15 Johnson Family. i 5:15 Superman. 7:00 FriUi Zivic vs. Beau J.iok. (REMAINING HOURS TODAY) 4:00 Fulton Lowis, Jr., Plough Chemical Co. 4:15 Johnson Family. I:.'t0 Omtiilenti.dly Yours. 1 :ir Salvation Army. ri:l)0 Lest We Forget. 5:15 Superman, Kcllogg's Pep 5:30 Norman Nosbitt, Stuclc- baker. ri: I.V Our Gal Sunday. ti:00 Dinner Conceit. 6:50 -Copco News. 7:00 Raymond CUppor, White Owl. 7:00 Guest Artiat Scrips. 7:4.i David Rose's (ifeheslra. :()0 Dark Destiny. 8:30 Variety Show, Union Oil Co. 900 Alka Seltzer News. 9: 15- Round-Up in the Sky. E. G. High, Insurance. ! :.'I0 Young Dr. Malone. !l:l." Fulton Lewis. Jr. 10:00 Sign olf, , FRIDAY. MARCH a. Il'l.t 7:00 Rise and Shine. 7:30 State and Local News. Boring Optical. 7:35 J- M. Juclil says "Good I Morning " , -7. 10 Rhapsixh in W.iv N:M Breakfast Club. S:30 President's M.'ress Confer- f ence. .' ; S:3.". Interlude, 8:45 Douglas County Sunday ' ' ' School Union. .':() Hoalu' Caller. 9:15 Man About Town. )):40 : Black amt White. 1000- 'ka ScMJrr, Nci. 10-1 jrtjlie)pr'i Cincle. V. Stanton organized to influence congress that nothing can be done unti few years airo the busi ness in-' vigorously opposing the clos-1 But now the business j commerce, point out I0:,10 -Chi-er Up Gang. 11:(K) Cedrie Foster. 11:15 Wheel of Fortune. 12:00 Interlude. 12:05 Sports Review. Dunham Transfer Co. 1220 Parkinson's Information Exchange. 1L':L'5 Rhythm at Random. 12:45 9tatc News, Hansen Motors. I ILV.'ill 1 :()." News-Review of Ihe Air. Treasury Song Parade, Interlude. Sweet and Sentimental. Theme and Variations. Don l."e Newsreel theatre LIS 1 :.1 2:00 3:00 The Dream House of Mel ody. Copco. 3:.'U) Mutual's Overseas Re porters. t.l'i Dance Music. 4:00 Fulton Lewis. Jr Chemical Co. Plough I:l." .Inlinson Familv. 4:30 I'. T. A. I l'i Musical Matinee. ":!( oflice ol War Infornia- , lum. 5:15 Superman. Kcllogg's Pep. 5:30 Norman -Ncsbitt, Studc- I baker. i ."l"i Our Gal Sunday. i 15:00 Dinner Concert. . Ii:;tl) Treasury Star Parade. 6:60 Copco News. 7.'00 Fritiic Zivic vs. Beau Jack i Gillette Safety Razors. ' S I.") Lone Ranger. S:-I"i Music Without Words. 1 0:00 Alka SclUcr News. 9:15 HI Neighbor, MpKcan & ; Carstens. i !:e0 Young Dr. Malone. j 0 '1 -Fulton Lewis ,lr ' 10.00 Sign Off. 1 Cow Bears Quintuplets, Four of Them Live HAYS. Has. lAI'l A cow on j the William KicuUrr farm in: Rush county is increasing live i slock production. She gave birth to iiumluplet : calves her owner thinks M at least ties the world record and j four lived. Snipping one sixteenth to one- iuai ter of an inch otl each match j manufactured in Ihe. Cnurd ' Slales in IPl.t will save at least 7 j m'Mion hoard feet 01 ;tS'l cat load.-. ' of lumber. I OUT OUR WAY f HA-HA! HE THOUGHT A TH AT'S JUST TH' REASON.' : 1 lilil Hilly. SMAKE BIT HIM.' I DON'T) IT'S SO MODERN THAT ' ; SEE HOW A GUV COULD ONLY A FEW MONTHS AGO Milt I DC A DiTCk 1-r ..fclk ,ncr I ia.i-t ...a ,i t-i-. ,t . a ,.. f 1 ENOUGH TO THINK THAT AA BERRIES RIGHT ABOUT A SNAKE WOULD BE IN L VVHERE-AND THERE WAS '"IIZIAA BIG MODERN PLANTT S. SNAKES IN TH' BUSHES.' h yi .jw sr s&wa yreimmi a : 'a, .., .c. - MEMORY LANE News of Men From Douglas County . In War Service Robert Carl Langholff, husband j of Mrs. R. C. Langholff, Melrose! Rt., Roseburg, has arrived at the ! U. S. naval training station at ! Farragut, Idaho, according to j word received from that base. Following preliminary training, he will be either assigned to ac- j live service wit(i the fleet or i given specialized training. ;, Al Flegcl, former Texaco (lis- j tributor for the Roseburg urea, writes that he is now at Fort i Lewis, Wash., awaiting assign-1 ment for army training. Flegcl ! recently was inducted into the ar- my and reports that he is enjoy-j ing army life. j Gerirge Robert Inslcy, son of I Mr. and Mrs. Charles Inslcy, Rose-, burg, was commissioned Feb. 1( as a second lieutenant In the army air forces. Lieutenant In slcy was recently graduated from, advanced flight training at Black- land flying school at Waco, Tex-J as, and has been transferred to Blylhe, California. ' John Fletcher Denny, son of Mrs. Mamie Ann Archamheau of Roseburg. is Hearing completion of his basic training in the army air forces school al Bush field, A U. S. RELIEF HEAD HORIZONTAL 1.7 Pictured U. S. Director of KoreiRn Relief and Rehabilitation. 12 Before. 13 Honey producer. 14 Half an em. 15 Frozen water. 18 Gentle blow. 18 Require. "0 Pair of horses. 22 Oboe (abbr ). "4 Seine. Answer to BlEtN HjOG ONf- MS OA GiEITIS -A L OiN f-JA o:d LIE T S'E'S'E SiT.OlPI .' T Rl TjRiA I IL E'a r'n s n 51 Mineral rock. 52 Likely. 26 Gaelic. 28 Standing room only (abbr ). 29 Irritate. 31 Accomplish. 32 District of Columbia (abbr). 34 Therefore. 35 Walking stick. 37 Gun (slang). 39 New star. 41 Makes mistake. 43 Designate. 4f Row. ; 47 Electrical term. 49 River. (Sp.). 54 Circle parts. 57 Receptacle. 59 Bachelor of Science (abbr.). , 60 Work. 82 Singing voice. 64 Negative word 86 Limit (comb, form). 67 French article. 68 Backward. 70 Tatter. 72 Re Is in charge of in nations conquered by the allies. DEN UOCAN 1 li II j 14 15 jb I I? Js I 19 j i ri pij 3 Si? r:"- rr T t ' '.i- -fi Jr-a Ti - m- mb --zr '-Hii ifrvT W&iM T' 5 sF; ifel 3 tf- '5 I5 Ltd" M" 3 rr-rzr- -A'l ; ?". t it " 3 I Augusta, Georgia. Following the completion of the basic course, he will be assigned to an ad vanced flying school for the final phase of his flight training, at which time he will be instructed In handling the most powerful planes used by the army. Talented Pianist-Singer Billed for Broadcast Miss Annaloris Ward, well known to Roseburg music lovers, will present a program of piano solos and also offer several soprano solos on The Guest Artist series on KRNR Thursday night at 7:15. Frank Ward will accompany the vocal numbers, which will include "If I Were on the Stage," from Mile. Modiste, "My Hero" from the Chocolate Soldier, and two popular num bers, "Falling in Love with Love" and "That Soldier of Mine". As piano solos, Miss Ward will offer "Salute to the United Nations", "Why Don't You Fall in Love With Me?" "Stardust" and a Gershwin medley. Army Rest Center Debut To l?e Broadcast Topic Captain George L. Hall of Roseburg, now in service with the army in Alaska, will be heard in a radio broadcast to he released at 3:43 p. m. Saturday, March 6, by the National Broadcasting company. Captain Hall will speak in a program marking the open ing of the Mt. McKinley Park hotel as an army rest center. Previous Puzzle 21 Cow's call. 23 Mythical king of Britain. 25 2000 pounds. 27 Rim. 30 Arctic sandpiper. 33 Two-wheeled vehicle. 36 Always. 38 Group of three. 40 Operatic solo. 42 Native of Serbia. 44 Morality. 46 Abdicate. 47 Dine. 48 Trail. 50 Less important. 53 Become weary 55 Musical sign. 56 Street (abbr.). 58 Negative, 1 61 Paper (Gypsy). 63 Away. 65 Every third (comb. lorm). 68 International language. 71 Symbol foe silver. 73 He will feed populations. VERTICAL 1 Brave. 2 SuflYN. 3 Color. 4 Receded. 5 Musical note. 6 Five and five. 7 Sly look. 8 Finishes. 9 Kind of glove (var.). 10 High cards. 11 Approaches. 17 Any. 10 Ells English (abbr.). JJn A.G RjELE L E T:R I IT IE i v e 7! a pTeir TELES R E AIS 01 N S K V: C nW ROT AIUIU IK I I .1 IN Ol TIr'E AiT?A'SI ROLES IDIIILI a'n'sIE'rI-IpIe'wI By J. R. WiBktmi Roosevelt Mum On Party Query About 4th Term WASHINGTON, March 3. ( AP)---Members of the higher councils of the democratic nation al committee recommended to President Roosevelt .today that he should be the party's candidate for re election in 1944 if the war is on, but National Democratic Chairmnn Frank C. Walker said they "got no response" from the chief executive. A committee consisting of offi cials and members of the national committee called on the president. and Walker said "two or three of them spoke of a fourth term. Walker said he did not know whether the president had heard Ihe remarks about another term, and if he did,, had smiled them off. Walker said it was not a serious presentation of the issue. He added, however, that the delegation which saw the chief executive, I n a meeting o f its own yesterday, had heard the fourth term matter raised by s e v c r a 1 of those present. He said he would leave it to reporters to interpret whether it was the consensus that Mr. Roosevelt should seek another four years In office if the war continued. Walker said no one had raised any objections to another term. There was "no concerted effort at all" to line up a fourth term. Walker added, since the party chieftains "all agreed that it was too early to discuss it seriously." B. P. W .C. to Use Radio In Bond Sales Drive Well, hand mo a halo and call me angel! Who says there's noth ing new under the sun? Here's news that's new, and, as yet, with results unforetokl. Friday a. m. at 7, the first contingent of the B. P. W. C. will appear on the doorstep of KRNR and after that for all clay -what price a mere man? The gals are taking over the sta tion for the w hole day to help sell bonds and many and strange are Ihe voices you are going to hear, for the staff will change every hour until 10 o'clock at night whoa! pardon us. the girls are going to slay on the air an extra thirty minutes and brother, they're going to sell bonds or else! So just give in and buy right now, else the regular staff may have to sit up all night waiting to put out the cat and wind the clock. It's going to be fun -the kind of lun you can't have any place else fn the world except in a small town like ours. Let's all turn in and help -you folks, too because, as I said before, the staff wants to go home to bed at 10:30 sharp. LEARN THE TRUTH ABOUT DOWEL WORMS Nobody ia nurc to escape. And roundworms run entire real trouble fnitidc you or your rhild. Wnteh for the warninu aijins: un. easy utomarh. nervomneM, Ifhy nose or aoat. Oft Jayne'a Vermifutt riiiht Bwayl JAYNK'S is America's Iradmtr proprietary w orm mwdioim-: ued by millions for over a rentury. Acts genllj. yt driees our mum, worm. Dcnani JAYNK'S MRRMtFUCE. How To Relieve Bronchitis Crrniiiul .Inn relieves promptly bc rau.se it kocs ncht to the sent of the trouble to help loosen and expel perm laden phlegm, and Bid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, In flamed bronchial mucous mem branes. Tell your drujrgist to sell you a bottle of Crconiulslon with tlie un derstanding vou must like the way it luieklv allays the cough or you arc in have vour money back. CREOMULSJON fot Couihs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis Concernfmrth NORTHWEST At Viewed at the - National Capital " By John W. Kelly WASHINGTON, D. C. March 1. In the land of the prune the northwest housewife is doing some wondering that two pounds of dried prunes will take 40 of her points in the ration book, leaving but eight points for a can of beans and 48 points is all the housewife is allowed for one month. Later she can buy odds and ends of meat, probably less than two pounds a week, and if it is ground beef it will be adul terated with soybean flour. About 07 per cent of all food is price controlled. Mrs. Housewife, of course, has the privilege of pur chasing all. of the fresh vegetables and fruit she desires when it Is In season and she can, if prices are right for her purse, buy a chicken; but the era of the can opener is gone for a few years. From the Pacific to the Atlan tic coasts a howl of protest has been raised against rationing. People expected a mild rationing but nothing so drastic. Several agencies are responsible, not Just OPA or the food adrfiinist ration. Hundreds of thousands of tons of food grown last year afe still rot ting In the ground fruit,' vege tables and lagumes; there was in sufficient help to save the crop, although in the northwest entire towns closed up and went into the fields to pick beans or fruit. The army and navy must bear their share of responsibility. They have selected as sites for airports, airfields and cantonments land devoted to vegetables; the navy has acquired dairy and vegetable farms along the coast for instal lations. Army airport at Portland, for example, occupies acres of what was formerly a truck gar den; Camp Adair and its many thousands of acres has elimin ated rich farm land devoted to fiuit, vegetables, dairying and turkey raising. Emergency nous inc for defense workers has de stroyed vegetable gnrdens. In the I Pucet sound country vegetable tracts are neglected or abandon- im. yyiiuii me-uu(ttiiL-sir i.w 1111-1 of the northwest were evacuated to Tule lake or Minidoka the land they worked was not kept up by their successors. All of these have contributed to shortening of sources of supply. Not to be for gotten was the direction to the canneries of the Oregon-Washington area to curtail their ipack last year, and this created--ah-, other source of waste. Look for criticism from con gress of both, OPA and Claude Wickard, food administrator, for the food shortage, the high points which permit such few purchases. Living Standards Hit Stabilization Director Jimmy Byrnes has received a report from the office of civilian supply, prepared by Joseph L. Weiner, which takes the 1941 style ot living and considers 68.6 per cent as ample for present needs. This cut would be a reduction of S16, 000,000,000 below what it cost Americans to live a little over 12 months ago. Among the recom mendations proposed arc curtail ment of tobacco by 75 per cent, reduction of clothing 64 per cent, beverage consumption S4.9 per cent, medical supplies 69.7 per cent, household furniture 27.3 per cent, motor fuel -10 per cent of 1941. Not rationed yet, hut the drug store fountain will be hard hit when it can not obtain carbonic acid gas 1CO21. No cylin drical containers have been manufactured In the past two yearsj ,aid without these drums there will he no car bonic acid gas to put the fizz in the soda drinks. Besides making plain water zippy, the gas is used to inflate rubber liferafts of air craft, lifebelts and to fight fires on planes. The gas can he captur ed at a few mineral springs in Ihe northwest, but the difficulty is in obtaining the heavy metallic containers. As housewives must return to the practices of their grand mothers and "put up" fruit and vegetables and no longer depend on the grocery canned goods,! there is a sudden demand for In formation on home canning. A dime and a request to the superin tendent of documents will hring a brochure from the department ot agriculture on home eanninc FIGHT BROADCAST Friday, 7:00 P. M. FRITZI ZIVIC vs. BEAU JACK 12 Rounds, Madison Square Garden I b - KRNR---1490 DAILY DEVOTIONS DK: CHARLES A. EDWARDS Why should people shy from a reference to baptism by the Holy Spirit? One of the most blessed experiences of life comes when one has made his consecration so complete that the Holy Spirit comes into his life and as his guide from that time -on. On that never to be forgotten day of Pentecost one hundred and twenty souls were gathered in prayer and were ail filled with the Holy Spirit. The work of the Holy Spirit is to guide men Into all truth. He is to life what light is to a dark room. He reveals the stumbling blocks so that one may not fall over them. The new found light awakens, animates and guides the be liever into a richer and more useful life. It clarifies the un derstanding, quickons the per ceptions and enables men to be living witnesses for Christ and His kingdom. In these troubled times we must wait together in prayer till the promise Is fulfilled In us and we can say, "I know in whom I have believed." Then there will be all evidence of a spirit filled life, There will be love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gen tleness, goodness, faith, tem perance. "Ye shall receive power after that the Holy Spirit is come upon you. Con secration, trust and faith will bring the blessing we seek." Amen. The number of this bulletin is J762. West Entitled to More The entire Pacilic const beiaj in a "target area," suggestion is made that the people of that re gion be permitted to accumulate a small stock of emergency ra tions. The No. 2 ration book does not recognize the need of precau tions and has established points which do not permit accumulat ing of processed food. The state council for defense In California has distributed a list of canned goods sufficient to sustain a fami ly of four for three days. Modest though the list is, it exceeds the amount that is permitted by ra tioning for a month. The five-can limit is regarded as too low for people living on the west coast where there Is a possibility of in vasion and it is argued that resi dents of the target zone should be permitted to store sufficient "iron rations" to carry them through difficulties. Tire Inspectors Due For Purging Process PORTLAND, March 3. (AP) The OPA district office today pledged speedy action in weeding out tire inspectors who are at tempting to "feather their own nests" at the expense of the motoring public. The announcement followed a conference at which Russell Paul. Washington, D. C, special field representative, disclosed that re cent checks showed at least 10 per cent of the tires condemned by inspectors could have been left in service with only minor re pairs. Oregon Can Shipments Provide Big Arms Aid PORTLAND,: March 3. (AP) Oregon's tin can shipments so far this year, 670,527 pounds, pro duced 670 pounds o pure tin enough for the manufacture of 95 long-range heavy bombers, 25 light -army tanks and 12 short range heavy bombers. So said Claude I. Sersunous, state chairman of. the general salvage committee, today. He dis closed, too, that hy a new process Oregon' cans aided in producing 280 tons of copper after giving off their tin. . OPA Ceiling Reduces Cost of Insecticides PORTLAND (AP) The cost of insecticides to protect fruit will be lower as result of an OPA ceiling on lead arsenate, the state office disclosed. The new ceiling, effective Feb. 8, will save consumers around $180,000 a year. 'The price manu facturers may charge will be 111 cents a pound, half a cent below the current price. The new price will not affect stocks already on ha ndJ r 1 r