Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948, August 12, 1943, Page 2, Image 2

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    TWO
ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURG, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 1943.
iMurd Dully l!.A.cfiii Hunijar 17 ibr
Nena-Hevletr Couipaujr. Inc.
Mriulirr of the Awurlafrd I'rtw
The Atmociutud lresii lit ixcluive.
ly en tit ltd to the utte for republica
tion of all nWH dlNimti.-lieti rrfdttpd
to It or not othprwlKe credited In
tntH pur and to all lncnl newi
published herein. All rlK"i of r-
Rubllcation of special dmpatcliea.
reln ar alno reHcrvud.
WASTE IN WAR TIMES
CHAS. V. (STANTON
EDWIN L. KNAI'f
...Kdltor
.MaiinKt-r
Entered as second cln mat tor
May 17, 1020. at the poHtoffk-e ut
Hoieburg-, Oregon, under act of
.EDITORIAL.
By Chtrles V. Stanton
Itepnmtnteil itj
Hi I it yrk 271 MadlRon Ave.
'hii'iiKii Mil N. MlrhlKini Ave.
Umq Kuiih'Ui-o S'lft Alitrki-t tilrt'Pt
l,iN Aiik-Jim i:i.'l 8. SpiiliK Htr-et
Nrultti -i;il: HlcwRrt Klmel
I'orllaiicl r.20 S. W. Sixth street
til. I.uula 411 N. Tenth Htrei-t.
MmU
0tco(OlwspJpi
P O B L I S W E RJf 41-9-S 0Cl A T 1 0 N
Hulmprlptlun latrv
Dully, nor year by mall $r,.00
Lmily, 6 tnontliH ly mull 2.60
Dally, 3 montim by mail 1.26
Editorials on News
(Continued from page 1.)
real hope Is to win an easier
peace. That's what they'll be
lighting for from here on.
Some of them are beginning
to reflect that they'd have been
better off if they hadn't gone to
war.
Our remaining job Is to make
them EVERLASTINGLY SUKE
of that.
DON Whitehead, AP correspon
dent in Sicily, tells a moving
story of the plight of the com
mon, everyday PEOPLE In
blasted Trolna, which we've just
taken after a bombardment that
left the town in ruins.
He says:
"I walked through a passage
way Inlo the basement of a
Ihick-walled Norman church
built in the 12th century. Here
was the black hell of Trolna.
.Scores upon scores" ',of!,' people
were living all over one another.
The stench of sweating human
bodies, garlic and human ex
crement was appalling."
E adds:
H
"Along one wall a row of old
men stared listlessly Into space.
They seemed to have neither
. strength nor Ihc will to move.
Next to lliem a wounded man
groaned while another held him
In his arms and wept.
"He looked at me and said In
broken English: 'The great Muss
olini did this.' "
R
RIGHT.
The great Alexander did it to
the Mediterranean world of Ills
day.
The great Genghis Khan did
it to interior Europe and Asia.
The great Wilhelin the Kaiser
did it in 1!)11-1!I8.
The great Hitler is doing It
NOW. And the great Tojo.
THE great Napoleon took the
poor common people of France
in the hour of their deliverance
from the heartless aristocrats
who had ground them into mere
serfs, only a step above animals,
and bled them while on the bat
tlefields of Europe for a quarter
of a century.
Hi- MIGHT have taken them
In the fateful hour of their de
liverance from I heir oppressors
and made of them a peaceful
(except for vital HOME DE
FENSE), happy, progressive,
produclive mil inn.
Hut NO!
The urge of WOHI.I1 EM1TKE
was in his veins- the SELFISH
ambition to MAKE OF HIM
SELF the ruler of the earth.
So he led the people of France
down inlo the valley of the
shadow of ilealh.
! has always been that way.
Until the common, ordinary,
peace loving, industrious people
of the earth become WISE
ENOUGH to recognize these em
pciors and khans and kaisers
mid duces and fuehrers for what
they are and kill them as they
would kill a poisonous snake
WHILE THEY AUK STILL
WEAK ENOUGH In lie killed,
the world will always he that
way.
National Forests Yield
Receipts of 3 Millions
SEATTLE, Aug. 11 (Af
The national foiests of Oregon
nnd Washington returned re
ceipts of $.L M ".733. of which 'J.'i
per cent will bo returned to the
slates, during the last tiscal
year, A. H. Cousins, regional for
est service fiscal agent, reported
today.
Washington forest leu-ipts
were 52.033,119 and i.-t.ns 1.
41C.314
UIE hear a great many comments from the man on the street I
" concerning waste of money in the war effort. Speeches by
congressmen and other leading figures, reports of investigating
committees and news items, such as the one from Vincennes,
Ind., regarding the dumping of 37 carloads of potatoes onto
the refuse pile, do much to disturb the public mind,
"Why should we put money into war bonds only to have it
tossed on the city dump?" one Roseburg resident asked.
The answer is obvious. We must not relax our war effort!
regardless of waste. As Colliers Weekly so aptly states: "When
your house is on fire, you can't keep a minute-by-minute record
of loss and damage as they occur. The first job is to get the
fire under control."
The reason we waste money in fighting a war is because we
are not a military nation. Following the first World war we
returned to the ways of peace and our regular army was almost
disbanded. In 1925 our standing army numbered only I 31,624
men. In 1 940, with the war in Europe already several months
old, we had only 264,035 men regularly under arms.
To expand a force of a quarter million into ten million within
a space of a few months cannot be accomplished without waste,
when trained personnel is lacking. You cannot take a boy from
a service station, equip him with the insignia of a commissioned
officer and expect him to exhibit the combined qualities of an
experienced banker, business executive, organizational expert
and personnel director. He may in time develop the ability to
combine all of those necessary functions into his leadership, but,
lacking adequate training, he must gain his experience by the
trial and error method.
You doubtless know personally an army officer that you arc
convinced in your own mind is a misfit. You would never em
ploy that man to handle your personal business affairs, but yet
he is in a position of authority where he has control over the ex
penditure of public funds.
There are many men in positions of command in the military
services today who are not fit to be officers. There are many
people who cannot stand authority. In the rapid expansion of
our armed forces there has not been an opportunity to weed out
the misfits, the authority-conscious, the wasteful and the ex
travagant. ,
1 hen, too, there are times when waste must be incurred o
gain speed. We do not know the cost of the Alaskan highway,
but we imagine the expense was far greater than would have
resulted had the road been built under peacetime conditions.
Nor can we expect economy from an army representing a
federal government which has as its only solution to any prob
lem the spending of more money.
The wasteful practices on the home front certainly do not
lend encouragement to the military services to practice rigid
economy.
The situation may be distasteful. But just as we must fre
qucntly take a nasty-tasting remedy to cure a bodily ill, we must
accept waste and extravagance until the world's distress is eased.
There is rio reason why we should stop squawking. There is
no reason why we should not try to correct extravagances
wherever they are found. But we should not relax in our finan
cial support of the war effort because these conditions exist.
We must fight the fire until it is extinguished, regardless of the
cost.
KRNR
Mutual Broadcasting System,
1490 Kilocycles.
10:00-Sign off.
I
REMAINING HOURS TODAY
BEST BETS FOR TODAY
THURSDAY
6:30 "You Tell 'Em" Club .
7:30 Your Date With Fort
Lewis.
9:00 American Forum of the
Air.
FRIOAY
9:30 Edgewood Arsenal
Band.
6:00 Gabriel Heatter.
6:30 Eye Witness News.
8:00 A Date at Eight.
8:15 Congressional Question
Box.
9:00 Newspaper of the Air.
4:00 Fulton Lewis, Jr., Plough
Chemical Co.
3:15 Dance Music.
4:30 Boys' Town.
5:00--Junior Jubilee.
5M5 Superman, Kellogg's Pep.
5:30 Chick Carter, Boy Detec
tive. 5:45 Norman Nesbitt with the
News, Studebaker.
6:00 Gabriell Heatter, Forham's
Toothpaste.
G:15 Faces and Places.
6:30 "You Tell 'Em" Club.
7:00 Raymond Clapper, White
Owl.
7:15 State and Local News,
Keel Motor Co.
7:20 -Musical Interlude.
7:30 Your Date With Ft. Lewis.
8:00 American Forum of the
Air.
9:00 Alka Seltzer News.
9M5 Rex Miller, Wildroot.
9:30 -Horace Heidt's Orchestra.
9:45- Fulton Lewis, Jr.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 13, 1943
45 Rise and Shine.
:00 News, Los Angeles Soap.
CO.
15 Stuff and Nonsense.
:30 State and Local News,
Keel Motor Co.
35 Judd Furniture Store.
40 Rhapsody in Wax.
.00 Shady Valley Folks.
:30 Merry Go Round.
50 Musical Interlude.
.00 Boake Carter.
:15 Man About Town. '
30 Edgewood Arsenal Band.
45 Morning Melodies.
:00 Alka Seltzer News.
:15 Shoppers' Guide.
30 Luncheon With Lopez.
: 00 Wheel of Fortune.
:45 Rose Room, Kellogg's
Cereals.
00 Interlude.
05 Sports Review, Dunham
Transfer.
:20 Parkinson's Information
Exchange.
:25 Rhythm at Random.
;45 State News, Hansen Mo
tors. :50 News-Review of the Air.
05 Terminal Market Reports,
Sig Fett.
: 10 Melodic Varieties.
30 Theme and Variations.
00 Sheelah Carter.
:15 Welcome Inn, Ott's Mu
sic Store.
:30 The Dream House of
Melody, Copco.
00 Phillip Keyne-Gordon.
15 Johnson Family.
30 Mutual's Overseas Report
ers. 45 Tone Poems.
00 Fulton Lewis, Jr., Plough
Chemical Co.
15 Dance Music.
30 For Victory.
00 - Mnods in Music.
DIALffipiOG
By SUSAN
Don't forget to get your ques
tions ready for the Congression
al Question Box tomorrow, night
at 8:15, when Congressman Har
ris Ellsworth will be here at
KRNR to answer the queries you
mail, bring "or phone in. There
are other good things on tap for
you Friday too remember this
Is the night you have A Date at
Eight with Annaloris for music
and songs, and we're sorry wc
haven't had a chance to confer
with Annie so we could tell you
what her program would be, but
wo can eivp it nn linnn.-ilifiorl
recommendation for it's always
Good. Making a quick about-face t
here's Thursday night's best j
spots. "You Tell 'Em" Club I
1 6:30) ; Your Date With Fort I
Lewis (7:301 and American Fo-1
rum of the Air at 8:00. Sorry no I
advance dope on the Forum sub-j
ject we don't even k n o w 1
whether Theodore Granik is !
back home or not, but it's rath- j
er doubtful because we heard
tell the Missus was christening I
ships in California and Mr. G. i
was making speeches, so per-1
haps Walter Compton will be '
doing the moderating again. And, I
once again, may we remind you
that there is mighty good local
news coverage coming to you
Ihrnp limps: a riav nunr IRX'P .
so check up on the local doings I
at Hsu. 1
5:15 Superman, Kellogg's Pep.
5:30 Chick Carter, Boy Detec
tive. 5:45 Norman Nesbitt with the
News, Studebaker.
6:00 Gabriel Heatter, Kreml.
6'15 Faces and Places, Chev
rolet. 6:30 Eye-Witness News, Copco.
6:45 Orrin Tucker's Orchestra.
7:00 John B. Hughes.
7:15 State and Local News,
Keel Motor Co.
7:20 Musical Interlude.
7:30 Lone Ranger.
8:00 A Date at Eight.
8:15 Congressional Question
Box.
9:00 Alka Seltzer News.
9:15 Hi Neighbor, Carstcns
Furniture Co.
9:30 General Barrows, Union
Oil Co.
9:45 Fulton Lewis, Jr.
10:00 -Sign off.
down
WILL HOLD ANY
LEATHER JACKET
UNTIL OCT. 30TH ON
WARDS LAY-AWAY PLAN
If you're counting on a new leather jacket for Fall,
the lime to choose it is now! Now while Wards
stocks are wide. Now while size ranges are complete. Now
while you can select at leisure. And it's so easy lo
buy on Wards Lay-Away Plan! Just $1 down,
plus regular payments
holds any jacket until
October 30th.
M ncws or OUR
$W3t IN UNIFORM
ran; iiiffiriitvnn r-Tr una" rrann
Howard "Hap" Applegali',
who formerly resided here and
was sports reporter for the Rose
burg News-Review, is now re
ported lo lie attending the naval
.chool al Park college, Parkville,
Mo. He Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. V. L. Applegate, of Port
land, former residents of Yon
calla and Roseburg.
Lt. LaV'cin H. Baker, son of
Mr. and Mrs. II. A. Baker, of 821
Wesl Lane street. Roseburg, has
arrived at the Antiaircraft Artil
lery school at Camp Davis, N. C,
according to word received here
from the camp headquarters.
Second Lieutenant Richard D.
Fies. son of Mrs. C. D. Fies, 1111
Riverside Drive, Iuuelwood. in
this city, has reported to the
Carlsbad army air field, Carls
bad, N. M., where he will be a
student in the Air Forces Central
Instructors school for bombar
diers. Lt. Fies Is regularly sta
tioned at (he Kirtland field, N.
Mex., bombardier school, where
he Is an Instructor. The Central
Instructors school combines "re
fresher" courses in basic TninMiar
dicrlng wlih new techniques work
ed out in various commands. Of
ficers back from combat con
tribute their experiences. Stu
dents in the school return to Iheir
home stations to give cadet
classes the benefit of Iheir course
al CHIS. Lt. Fies' wife is the for
iner Feme V. Thomason, of Roseburg.
3,
j
3
Buy every other
pound of
GOLDEN WEST
in the temporary
war-Time Package
1
: 1 jti
iS.;-rSi
i
I MM m
! J I W sTAMP
Craig Dishinan, son of Mr. and
Mrs. C. W. Dishman of this city,
who recently enlisted in the army
air hirers, has arrived at Coe
college, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and
for five months will lake prepara
tory college courses given for
aviation cadets. His brother. Lt.
Robert Irishman, who is also In
the army air lorrcs. is at present
stationed at the air base at Gren
ada, Miss., w here he Is engaged ill
transport duty.
Inquiry Being Made Info
Death of Astoria Fisherman
ASTORIA. Ore.. Aug. 11 I API
All autopsy was ui dried today
or, the body of a man picked up
ofl the Clatsop -ounly coast
Tuesday by John H. Saaiinen of
the drag boat lleinicc.
County Coroner Fullest Giiin
Irntallvely identified the body as
I hat of William Thompson, who
ivportedly leaped from the As
Iniia Noi'ih Beach ferry on July
21. Metal weights were found
H'ou'id the man's waist and i.i I
lib pnektts, Glmi sjid.
W E'VE SOLVED TWO unusual coffee problems, caused
by the government's severe restrictions on the use of glass
for coffee packaging, and the lifting of coffee rationing.
First: w hat to use for a package! This is answered by the
glassinc-lincd bag. Second: how to insure freshness and
flavor! Speedy delivery to your grocer, in small quantities,
is now a part of our service, for our roasting plant is
located in this area.
Here's how you can help patriotically "Let every
other pound you buy, be the wartime package". The
price will be slightly lower than the glass jar.
Drip or Regular Grind, of course.1
(Golden West
(Cofiffee
IN THE WESr-lT'S GOLDEN WEST COFFEE
MEN'S AVIATION STYLE
LEATHER JACKETS
A rugged, built-for-action jacket of
long-wearing capeskin. The
Aviation-style construction lets you
button it right up to your neck. Has
4 handy pockets. Sport back.
; M
1
1549
Costack'ilylt Jocktl
In copeikin or luidt.
Zipptd chtit peefctf.
Rayon Itatd.jQ
Capftkin Jocktl with
2 zip chit pock t Ik
Bi-iwing sport boeV.
Royon Imtd.
ontgomery Ward