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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1945)
1 ROT'"! ROSEBUR NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBUR, OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1943 40f000id!een Various Rows On Labor Front (Bv the Associated Press ) Labor disputes kept some 40,- 000 employes on the side lines along the nation's labor front to day. The strikes and work stoppages curtailed production in war plants; hampered transportation of some 60,000 passengers in a nine-state area and slowed truck movement of foods and war ma terials in parts of the midwest. The biggest single strike was In Akron, O., where 16,700 CIO United Rubber Workers at the Goodyear Tire & Rubber company stayed away from their jobs. Hopes faded for a prompt settle ment as union members voted to defy a War Labor board back-to-work order and there was a pos sibility the government would take possession. The strike was In its sixth clay and a naval official said it has halted shipments of tires for al most all types of navy vehicles and aircraft. Detroit Area Affected A new strike in the Detroit in dustrial area was more than off set by returns to work In other disputes there. One thousand CIO United Au tomobile Workers left their iobs at Packard Motor Car company in a Jurisdictional controversy be tween CIO maintenance men and AFL construction men. But 7,525 CIO maintenance men resumed work at three Budd Wheel com pany plants and one Ford Motor company plant. Packard production workers at tributed the walkout to the con tinued employment of AFL work ers on "reconversion construction. The CIO union demands that no AFL men be called in on automo tive reconversion jobs until all UAW-CIO manpower is utilized. Seven hundred AFL workers re mained on strike at five Detroit lumber yards in a jurisdictional dispute. The WLB sought to halt tiie Qudtinez Octets 'YOU PUT YOUR CAR IN THE (SARA6E BUT PUTYOUR LIGHTS OUT'Savt CF.WESn.AKE, " Some mammals SPEND OAr-JWAtO OF THEIR LIFE 6ROWIN& UPi SOME SPEND AS LITTLE AS OMB-rweLFTH. jl NEXT: Are waterspouts nude of water? spread of a glass workers strike to eight plants as some 6,000 re mained out at two Pittsburgh Plate Glass company plants in Ford City and Crelghton, Pa. 40,50,60! WantPep? Want to Feel Years Younger? Do yon blfttw Mtiutl, worn-out feeling on at af Ttiounafida Qmattti nt Wliat ft little lapping up wUb Out rex Iim dutio. I'ontnliii lonlo tnnny tired at 40. 60. 60. fur luKly old wilely brcuuo low In iron: lso rruiihyuirllR dia vllninJn H,, calcium. IxjW enntl ninxfurtory riie only 35cl Try IMrox lunio Tnlilotttor itew imp. youncer (eslli)K. tliU vary day. PaintRiglitOvcr WALLPAPER! MIRACLE HALL FflRSfl COSTS 0RIT A 8AU0B Umpqua Valley Hardware 202 N. Jackson Phone 73 Govt. Payments To Dairy Farmers Will Begin July 1 Dairy formers In ' Douglas county will receive increased dairy production payments be ginning July 1 when the summer schedule of rates becomes ef fective. These government pay ments, designed to encourage pro duction ot milk and butterat, are adjusted quarterly. i The new rates for this county for production In July, August, and September will be 55 cents per hundredweight for milk, and 13 cents a pound for butterfat, ac cording to Leo Sparks, county AAA committeeman. Present rates are 35 cents for milk, and 10 cents for butterfat. "Dairy farmers here are mat Ing every effort to increase milk production. Higher payments dur ing the next 3 months will offset the extra feed bills when pastures brown off during the summer and more commercial feed and hay have to be fed to keep up miiK yieio.,- -jvir. sparks says. The dairy production nav- ments, initiated in the fall of 1943, have helped farmers to push milk output to a record-breaking height to meet wartime needs without breaking the barriers against inflation. Applications for payments on milk and butterfat production during April, May, and June should be filed at the county AAA office as soon as possible after June .iu, ana not later tnan August 31. Checks are Issued at the time applications are filed. "We've sot theto fix your DODGE car. or truck!" . ...and our mechanics have the "KNOW HOW" to give dependable DODGE-PLYMOUTH SERVICE You'll find our stock of factory-engineered parts for Dodge and Plymouth cars and Dodge Job Rated trucks most complete! For your wartime service needs SEE US FIRST! Our expert mechanics have the "know how" to do the job right and our prices are reasonable! aw MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TO DA Yl M "SI" DILLARD MOTOR CO. DODGE TRUCKS Cattle Feeders May Now Apply For Payments Cattle feeders In Douglas county can now apply to the county AAA office for beef cattle production payments under the government s new program to increase the production of meat. Feeders are encouraged to feed more cattle, Including those he purchases and those he raises, to good and choice grades under the new program. The method of payment :s similar to the dairy payment program also handled through the county AAA office, according to County AAA Chair man Leo Sparks. . The beef cattle production pay ment amounts to 50 cents per nunureaweigni on gooa or cnoice cattle weighing 800 pounds or more and selling for at least the minimum stabilization mice. which for sales in this county is $iq.uo. ' The beef cattle production pay ment Is available to all feeders including slaughterers who also are feeders, provided their cattle meet tne program requirements, Eligibility Rule. To be eligible, a feeder must certify on. his application (1) that he owned the cattle at least 30 days before their sale, (2) that the cattle weighed at least 800 pounds when sold, (3) that the cattle brought not less than $14.95 and (4) that the cattle were sold for slaughter to an authorized siaugnterer. An authorized slaughterer Is any slaughterer who operates under federal Inspection or under an OPA permit at the time he siaugnters tne leeaer cattle on which the payment has been made. A feeder-slaughterer is eligible to receive payment provided pay ment had not previously been made on his cattle. He may also receive payment on cattle he raised provided they are eligible under the program. To collect the payment he must substan tiate the dale of puchases. the prices he paid, and the weight at the time of purchase. He also must certify the grade and weight of the carcass after slaughter to lurtner determine the eligibility of the cattle. Evldenoe Required A feeder other than a feeder- slaughterer must present sales receipts, invoices, scale tickets, or other written evidence from the buver to verify (1) date of sale, (2) the name of the buyer, iji me point oi sine, iij tne number! of head. (5) the total llvewelght, (6) the price received, and (7) the name of the legally authorized slaughterer to whom sold. In addition, the feeder. If he did not raise the cattle, must show the status of the cattle at flic time he purchased them by fur nishing the name of the oerson from whom purchased, and the owe ot purcnase. t he leeder may also be required to furnish evi dence that the payment had not neen made previously on these chi ue. Want to Get on the Good Side of Her Mother? from Prison Terms Dealt 12 Convicted Poles MOSCOW, June 21 (AP Twelve of 16 Poles accused of subversive activities behind rod army lines were convicted by a soviet court today and given sen tences of from four month3 to ten years in prison. Three were acquitted and the trial of another was postponed. The heaviest sentence 10 years was imposed upon mat. lien. Okulicki. commander of the un derground home army after the Ill-fated Warsaw uprising. Jan Jankowski, deputy prime minister of the London Polish government-In-exile and leader of the Polish underground move ment, was sentenced to eight years Imprisonment. (The Moscow radio, heard in London, said no appeal from the sentences wouin Da permitted). Okulicki received his sentence stoically. Each of the 15 had been per mitted to express his own views on what kind of government was needed in Foiami and nis opin ions on soviet-Polish relations. Each defendant, advised he was speaking under the privilege of "final statements," declared friendship between soviet Russia and Poland was most essential. World Peace Charter Agreement Reached (Continued from Page 1) of the United States told the del egates that the charter chanter 'is a great document an open door to millions of men, women and children throughout the world." But. he said repeatedly, It Is up to the nations represented here to give it life by carrying out its principles of human dignity and freedom. Lord Cranborne of the British delegation said that as now writ ten the charter "does not rule out independence but "leaves It to the processes of natural evolution in cases where it Is appropriate." Log Truckers Losing Heavily on Bad Roads (Continued from Page 1) is particularly costly, operators report The rough surface, with large and frequent potholes, is causing heavy loss to bearings and countershafts and some trucks even have lost fuel tanks, operators reported. Some Operators Quit - Loe nroduction is down more than 150.000 board feet daily be cause of transportation handicaps esulting irom poor roao suriace, it was stated. ' Several independent operators already have taken their trucks off the route, It was staled, and others will do so unless imnrove- ments are made immediately as truck breakage and tire expense eliminate all nrofit. . A delegation was appointe-.i ti meet at a noon lunencon r ri day with the highway committee of the Roseburg chamber of com merce to consider ways ana means of securing improvements to the road. Transfer of OPA's Food Power Sought (Continued from Page 1) Drlce and other powers and staff of OPA which are concerned in any way with animals and animal products, lnciuaing ieea, except the mechanical lob of rationing. That the OPA should continue." Vital Statistics DIVORCE COMPLAINTS TUCKER Arda vs. Claude H. Tucker; married at San Bernar dino, Calif., July 13, 1944; cruelty. MARRIAGE LICENSES LEGGETT-O'BERG Ernest Wilbur Leggett and Sonja Flor ence U Berg; Dotn residents ot Reedsnort. Heroic Chaplain J f 'if 1 i A c35l INEA Telephotot LA. Comdr. Joseph T. O'Callaghan, senior chaplain on U. S. S. Franklin, was called "bravest man I ever saw" ' i the flattop's skipper. Okinawa Conquest Ended, Admiral Nimitz Reports (Continued from Page 11 ably is near the center of the lront. The general's stand cost the Japanese 87,343 killed and 2,565 taken prisoner up until Tuesday, and the few soldiers still beside him were hungry, thirsty and short on ammunition. Eight hundred eighty-five Nip ponese surrendered the first three days of this week prob ably a Pacific war record but there was not weakening of their comrades' determination to live up to the Bushido command to kill 10 Yanks before being conquered. t ne Japanese nave been specu lating on where the Americans will strike next, whether at the heart of the homeland or on the Chinese mainland, 450 miles west of Okinawa. They have reported at least two U. S. task forces are on the loose in waters west of Okinawa with large numbers of supply ves sels ana assault boats anchored in Okinawan waters. These disproportionately large surrender figures were paralleled on a smaller scle in the Philip pines with a Tuesday total from scattered actions of 389 killed and 263 captured. In neither case were comparable American cas ualties announced. American troops, supported by Mexican fighter planes in their drive toward the end of the Phil ippines campaign, swept 30,000 Nipponese troops toward the northern tip of Luzon island and traps set by Filipino guerrillas and Igorot tribesmen. Australian units made another small landing on Brunei bay ot northwest Borneo while Tokyo radio reported continued ' mine sweeping preparations for an as sault on southeast Borneo at Ba likpapan. Chinese regulars gained an other 13 miles of the Asiatic coast, between Wenchow and Shanghai, and edged closer to strategic Liuchow in southeast China. Japs-Prepare for Invasion American bombers patrolling the length of the Asiatic coast sank three Japanese ships, har ried such ports as Shanghai, Can ton and Hongkong, while Tokyo radio reported 300 carrier air craft were striking at Wake, U. S. island still in the hands of the enemy. - Tokyo broadcasts again told ot American prepartions for even tual invasion of Japan while at home. Nipponese prepared to mine streets of bomb-wrecked cit ies for bits of Superfortress bombs and other scrap metal that can be converted into grenades. The navy announced that tne cruiser Nashville was heavily damaged by a suicide plane last Dec. 13, seven weeks after she re turned General MacArthur to the Philippines, but is now back in action. The suicide attack cost 133 Americans killed, 190 wounded. New Landing on Borneo Australians landed on the northern shore of Borneo's Bru nei bay under cover of artillery fire from Labuan island, five miles offshore. It was the third landing on the bay. Allied sources ignored Japanese reports of nearly week-long bombardment of Balikpapan on southeast Bor neo but told of heavy air raids. Tokyo said 56 oddly assorted planes varying from fighters to a Superfort scouted Kyushu and southern Honshu islands today preparing for new strikes at southern Japan. And the Nip ponese admitted yesterday's three-way B-29 fire raid tempo- n..llt, vail mmmiinlwittnns t Shizuoka and Toyhashi, Industrial cities somnwesT oi iimyu. tit fGRSATFOOO- "THE GRAINS ARE GREAT FOODS" Kellogg's Corn Flakes bring you nearly all the protective food elements of the whole grain declared essential to human nutrition. CORN mm - -" HAKES 7h A MAN I ADMIRE. AUOT IS ONE WHO FEELS AS' MUCH AT HOME IN OVERAUS Jtfe606iLN A PRESS JUIX LUMINALL The ever popular wall paint. The original cold water paste paint. The contractors and home own ers friend. Price: Gal. $2.10, Qt. 65c Sold Only by LUM'BERe&S Everything'por the Homc EVERY REASON SAYS VOTE YES" On Juo 22, trtry roicr In Oregon li ssked to go to th polls tnd l.gilter YES which will giro clearance to $10,000,000 Sutt Building Fond to proride needed educition tnd Slate building remodeling and expansion, of facilities.' This fund it alreadjr on hand and does not mean additional (axes but under the law it ii necessary that its use for this purpose be'approTed by the Totera. It U the duty of the State of Oregon and its dthena to proylde these facilities and it is our individual duty as citltens to provide the funds. VOTE 300 X YES Ml tit. VtUti Qunai Cmtima, W. Upk D. Kim Mnr. JSS S. W. Still Awm. rUu4 ICCF BCDOQDOm BUY MORE BONDS Don't "miss the boat" on these Summer Values. Come to Kampfer's now today and select your "playmates" for fun in the sun . . . for a happy cruise through Vacationland. Accessories that add comfort to sport and pleasure to leisure . . . toiletries for a BEAUTY-FULL Summer . . .health aids for "Summer complaints" they're all here at prices that mean smootn "saiemg" tor your budget. 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If so, your feet may need the aid of these FOOT COMFORT PRODUCTS, that often provide pleasant and welcome relief from minor foot troubles FOOT POWDER Shaker Top , HEXOL, 50c ATi For a Foot Bath 4U NORWICH'S v Athletes Foot fJOgk Treatment OV GETSIT CORN REMOVER, 35c size 29c DR. SCHOLL'S ARCH BINDERS, 1.00 89c DR. SCHOLL'S LASTIK SEAMLESS ANKLETS..2.73 DR. SCHOLL'S LASTIK KNEE CAPS 2.73 DR. SCHOLL'S SUPER SOFT CORNPADS 35c ..31c DR. SCHOLL'S METATARSOL Arch Pads 2.00 1.79 BLUE JAY PROTEST-O-PADS, Pkg 23c VDMnnEss-1?...?? I" -mmwi No Fooling - -It's COOLING There's nothing as cool ingly delicious ... as re freshingly good ... as a l-o-n-g glass of ICED TEA with the Ice tinkling against the frosted sides like sleighbells in the snow. No fooling it's cooling. Delightful as a mealtime beverage . . . satisfying as a betwee-time pick-up . . . taste-thrilling at all times. Simmon's LUNCH Hours 9 to 7 112 N. Jackson