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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1944)
ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURS, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1944. Turks May Get Into War by Summer's End By FRANK O'BRIEN. ANKARA, July 11 (Delayed) (AP) . Conversations are afoot here which may lead to Turkish participation in th3 war before the end of the summer. .The talks are'"bDrivepn repre sentatives of Turkey, Russia and Britain. nmwxw,,-,..,, 'These conferences, o the So viet and Britiili' a.-nDassaaors and Tarkisn leaders, principally Pie mior Saracoglu, have been taken up at the point where the Cairo conferences last year left Tur key's position witniu the United Nations undefined Turks Still Bitter "fl-ey must first surmount (he bitterness orea ; I by allied thnrf.es that Turk" tailed to keep her word and t!ie Turkish conter that the allies failed com pletely to equip Turkey for war as had been promised. Actual mil itary talks can begin there. The United States has been fuly informed of the successive steps in the conversations, which got under way about 10 days ago. taking place in .Moscow and Lon don and probably In Washington. The Turks are said to feel that It would be beneath their national dignity to participate in the war by merely giving bases to the al lies. Before everything else the Turks want assurance on these two points: Assurances Wanted 1. Assurance of Turkey's post war political and territorial in tegrity, accompanied by a clear- cut statement of allied post-war aims. 2. A satisfactory explanation of how and when and to what ex tent Turkey will be armed if she should enter the conflict, plus a definite Idea of precisely what would be expected of her. The Cairo conference and the winter military talks here, by Turkish estimation, left those points unanswered. The Turks are convinced that failure to participate in the war would be against the nation's long-term interests, but they also feel that failure to get satisfac tion at least upon the first of the two points mentioned might result in even greater fu(ure ills. The allied representatives ad mit both points are difficult be cause of the uncertainty about the post-war world and the hesi tancy of allied leaders to reveal tNHr-millrary plans- to" a neutral She Hopes pV 4 I v'V-L"Ja -a " f 1 Fruit Spray Rule Lashed by Growers SEATTLE, July 7 (AP) The Washington State grange exec utive committee, prompted by a federal food and drud. department spray neanng at Washington, as serted the government has never been able to prove a "single well authenticated case of human in- Jury" from eating sprayed fruit ine group plans a vigorous fight against "unjustifiable spray j.tire Industry stands in jeopardy." residue regulations 'which force fruit growers to have their apples and pears parboiled by a com mercial warehouse, as a condition to placing the fruit upon the mar-1 kef . , Asserting present state regula tions are sufficient, the commitee said further the government "seems determined to place even greater restrictions upon the fruit grower," and added: "Our growers have suffered losses aggregating millions of dollars due to these so-called food and drug tolerances, and the en- Nudists in Clash With Gas Ration SAN FRANCISCO, July 7 (AP) At least "200 members of a vast nudist retreat, in the Valley of the Moon were called on the OPA carpet today to explain how they reached the place on "A" ration .gasoline, some ' from as far away as Oregon and south ern California. OPA agents, 1n the final move: of a six-day investigation, walked In on the startled nudists "yester day -as they -sun-bathed and play ed games In -an Idyllic setting some 40 miles north of San Fran cisco. The agents reported that as many as 250 nudists a week drove to the Sonoma county camp, call- (Sun-O-Ma. They ordered more than 200 of them, from 27 Cali fornia towns, to explain possible violations of 'gasoline regulations. The OPA also called lor the owners of the camp to ex plain why the place nd its ten ants had not been registered ac cording to rental . area regula tions. 25 States Grow, 23 Shrink in Population WASHINGTON, July 12. (A) Twenty-five states and the- dis trict of Columbia had population increases between April 1, 1940 and July 1, 1943, while 23 states had decreases, the census bureau reported today. Four 'states Arizona, Califor nia, Florida and -Nevada and the District . of Columbia in-! creased by more than 20 per cent. ; Calif orfnla had the greatest nu merical Increase, 1,559,135, and Arizona tnc greatest proportion ate Increase, '40.7 per wit ' The Pacific coast llcuret fol low: Washington "2,'832,929 ana 1, 736,191, up 17.1; Oregon 1,235, 482 and 1089,684, up 13.4; Califor nia 8,466,522 and 6,907,387, tm 22.6. flMPQUA SAVINGS AM IOAN ASSOCIATION : RmI EstcM Locm , . l;iw'7!vir;:; Only woman theater "doorman" on Broadway, .is Maria Montez, above, 18-year-old, Philadelphia model with movie ambitions, who took job In hope that talent scouts on New York's Main Stem would spot her.- She's currently door-tending during run of "The Story of Dr. WasseU.'.' t , whose capital still is overrun with enemy representatives. j eA .-J- ;,; H GOP's in Washington Outvoting Democrats SEATTLE, July 12 (AFM Washington, considered a demo cratic state ever since President Roosevelt's first election, swung back into the republican column today on the basis of returns from half the precincts in yester day's primary election. These unofficial returns gave an aggregate republican guber natorial vote of 119,267 to 47,884 democratic, and 89,119 votes for republican senatorial candidates to 68,599 for those seeking the democratic nomination. The re publican candidates in the six congresional districts had polled 79,416 votes to 67,051 for the dem ocratic aspirants. Tillamook Boy Lost -TILLAMOOK, July 21 (AP) Chester Malsolm Moffitt, 22-year-old graduate of Salem high school, died in the sinking of the submarine S-28, his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Moffitt, said to Kiay. '.;-' -;-.-". "CHuctted" i r flour! 'For all around baking you'll find Crown "Enriched" Flour the ruler of them all. It contains Government specified amounts of Thiamin (Vitamin B), Niacin and other im , portant Vitamins and Minerals considered essential to good health. . 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