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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1945)
T e f .(.Wjiilli llllii,iiill arHtiasnsiianr r'r -ka&Yirmn riiiiiiMtiiiairiUM WANTED Carpenters and Laborers Truck Drivers , 53-Hour Week Time and Half Over 4G Hours Union Scale General Contractor MAX W. DUDLEY Bellows Field Roseburg, Oregon wueie featuM! G0UN (TASTY FRUIT) FLAKES - W i A "'(V ft,. CEREAL AND FRUIT IN THE SAME PACKAGE! NOW IS THE TIME TO PREPARE FOR COLD WEATHER Save Fuel Promote Health and Living Comfort Stop Drafts Keep Dirt and Soot From Your Home. HOW By Weatherstripping your windows and doors. By calking all cracks around outside of windows. By having experts do your job of weatherstripping. WE HAVE HAD MANY YEARS OF EXPERIENCE IN ALL PHASES OF WEATHERSTRIPPING. We Guarantee Workman .ship and Materials for the .Life of the Building. WE GIVE ESTIMATES AND WITHOUT INTERSTATE WEATHERSTRIP CO. Temporary Headquarters 209 Watson St., Cor. of Lane St. F. L. Uran, Prop. Reva Taylor, Office Mgr. Aere cuaa a time . . . we chased and swatted .V-v One el:-. jNt ; PLUS - M -IN THE SAME PACKAGE ft NEW! DIFFERENT! Double enjoyment! Crisper golden flakoa and California's vino-ripe seedless raisins in a grand new cereal KELLOGG'S RAISIN 40 BRAN Flakes. Made of the finest soft white winter wheat chock-full of whole-grain nourishment. And choice California seedless raisins. Naturally sweet! Saves sugar. Be sure to get the one end only KELLOGG'8 RAISIN 40 BRAN FLAKES. Made by KELLOGG'S in Buttle Creek. Try 'em! Our Salesmen Will Be Call ing soon on people of Rose burg. Let them help you sotve your weatherstripping problems. FREE OF CHARGE OBLIGATION But Today INSECT SPRAY cm utu: whiff knocks flies stiff! -I IJ J:- Tl rues miuuiu uie, iney tarry deadly disease germs. Rid your home of flies, ants, moths and mosquitoes. Merely spray Bif in the air to keep them away. Get Bif at your store today. P&Viwuf Wi,ilJ ill Justice, Charity, Pope Pius' Hope VATICAN CITY, Aim. 21. (AP) Pope Pius told 11 II. S. representatives In congress at an audience today that lie hoped the postwar world would lie based on justice and charity. The congressmen flew here from Moscow, via Berlin. They will tour Italy and the Balkans 10 days, checking on how Amer ican money Is being used. Quisling Sags Under Questions as to His Guilt (Continued from Page 1) ling helped the Germans plan the invasion. Faced with the task of disprov ing the state's charges of pre invasion treachery, Quisling rose in his own defense on this second day of his trial. But he had spo ken only a few words when the prosecutor cut in with the new document. Information given the Ger mans, he alleged, was presented to Grand Admiral Raeder, then chief of the Germany navy: Mar shal Wilhelm Keitel, and Col. Gen. Gustav Jodl. Schjoedt said Quisling was ac companied to the conference by William Hatelin, lyorwegian-born businessman who later became Quisling's minister of interior. Vets' Leaders Express Views on Job Problems (Continued from Pago 1) turn to gainful, satisfactory em ployment and be able to live normal, useful, American lives, or whether tliey will face unem ployment." Ketchum said his organization had not taken a stand on the proposed measure but asserted "if we have full employment, the veterans problem will largely be solved. Ho said the VFW advocated legislation granting statutory seniority to veterans equivalent to the jength of their military or naval service to be used in ob taining employment. "If there is to he some unem ployment." Ketchum asserted, "the burden should not be borne entirely by the returning vet eran who could not accumulate seniority and job protection while in the armed forces." Other Views Expressed Miller W. Rice, national service director of the Disabled Ameri can Veterans, expressed general approval of the principles of the hill but stressed what he called the necessity of giving partly dis abled veterans preference In pub lic and private employment, and Increasing benefits for wholly disabled former servicemen. "Many disabled veterans are left on the economic sidelines because employers regard them as marginal material," he said. "It is really a crime upon our nation that all of our-employ-, nbles are not utilized." Charles G. Bolte, chairman of the organization of World War 11 servicemen, called the Amer ican veterans committee, en dorsed the bill ns "the most sen sible proposal in sight" to combat unemployment. The legislation, labeled the "full employment act" bill sets out the policy that "all Amer icans able to work and seeking work have the right to useful, remunerative, regular and full time employment." It declares that when there are not enough Jobs to go around, it is the fed eral government's responsibility In spend enough money to pro vide them. Occupation of Japan May Encounter "Incidents" (Continued from Page 1) Japan based on sheer might met with complete failure." A potent reminder of that failure was atom-bombed Naga saki, described in new Japanese reports as "a dead city, nil areas being literally razed to the .ground." Hot-Heads Are Warned lr. lwata, Justice minister in the new Japanese cabinet, and as such the highest police of licial in Japan, pointed out that tile Allied conquerors might take a hand should local authority tail, lie warned that the Japan "of the future will have to face a considerably ditferent situation than she did while she was still powerful, militarily and finan cially, because she is now a dc teated nation." The Tokyo newspaper Asatii urged the people to "rellect ser iously on the grave mistake made in the past of following govern ment leadership blindlv" and General Petroleum Corp. E. A. Pearson, Dtitributor Mobilhent Quality Oils FOR EVERY PURPOSE Automotive and Industrial Oils and Greases Diesel Oils Stovs Oils Lubricants iitj.1 all to p"'"C;p.-.;.- in the got eminent heiicoionii. "Only in I ti Is way," Asahi added, "can a change in national thought be effected and the Jap anese nation get out of the pres ent darkness and despair into a world of hope and construction." Rival Chinese Forces Clash in Civil Strife (Continued from Page 1) despite a demand from Adm. Mountbatten to Marshal Tcrauchi to surrender his forces in South cast Asia. Leatlets telling of the end of the war were rained on the Japs from airplanes, by ar tillery shells, and sent by canoes and posted on trees in the Jangles. In a defiant proclamation yes ter da-. Tcrauchi denounced American use of the atomic bomb as a "most deadly and inhuman weapon" a;id that that "as a re sult, large numbers of innocent, old and young, women and chil dren were mercilessly killed. The "likeness of the great catas trophe caused by the atomic bomb has never before in history been witnessed "the proclama tion recounted. "Such being the state of affairs today" the broadcast continued, Nippon decided to accept the "Joint proclamation" of the allied powers and negotiations now are under way "despite the fact that on the Nippon mainland as well as in Manchuria China and vari ous sectors of the southern regions the unchallenged dignity of the Imperial Nippon army re mains sum erne and is futhcrmore fully prepared to crush the (for eigner? -word unclear in text re corded by the KCC) if he should ever come." ! -7 Wirt - I 1 I ;. r; kiij :J:i& fir ' L,-1 - v . f: -M W ;'.. ' KlE 1 ' fey 1 I Lilian ''iLVsrw&Hi With VictQJuj, Wan the West stands on the thresh old oi a long-awaited new era. Under the pressure of war, this region has been transformed into a great industrial empire situated amidst rich and varied natural resources. Western Industry and Western Labor, with their record war-production records, can now put the tremendous advances of war-bom science and invention to production for peace and for the rebuilding oi a shattered world. Located on the trade-routes of what will be tomorrow's heaviest flow of commerce and linked to all the world through the miracle of modern transportation, this West will be at the doorsteps of world markets. As one industry long associated with the West we look forward with high anticipation and unbounded confidence to the new era just beginning. AiAcaiCuii' Induitry Get; Full Production Signal ; (Continued trom Page 1) board announced a plan to send American industry spinnin" back into full production fast: by lift ing wartime controls. The 210 lifted last night put the plan into official action. All but perhaps 40 ol the remaining 125 restrictions . will disappear promptly. The 40 will be kept for reasons like this: To prevent bir manufacturers from hoarding needed materials at the expense 'of smaller manu facturers., This would jam-up the change-over orogram. WPI3 tossed out, also, controls on making: Metal furniture, photographic film, storage bateries, electric fans, motorcvcles, shippin ' con tainers, caskets, construction ma chinery, machine tools, oil burn ing equipment, electric ranges, paper cups, stoves. Spare Tires Wait Decision Krug said the quest km of whether new cars will he de livered with spare tires still is being discussed. And he said this: Producers of consumer durable goods like stoves, refrigerators have agreed to turn out the same proportion of low-cost goods as they did before the war. If they don't, Krug said, WPB is ready to crack down with con trols. Price Boosting Barred William H. Davis, the economic stabilizer, said in an interview: "I am not worried that any raises under this program (to let bosses boost wages ar-t salaries CI irrvSJi Ti'v. : "w its. without gcvei-nrr.ent ol:ay if it doesn't mean a price increase) will be Inflationary. "I am confident they won't break down our price controls.'1 The new program had caused thoughtful people to ask: Can pay be raised right and left without eventually forcing prices up in spite of anything the government can do? Won't the pressure to raise prices be so great that inflation will result? (This Is inflation: When prices rise and the dollar no longer can buv as much us it did before the rise began.) But Davis reasoned: 1. Bosses who give raises will do It voluntarily, understanding they can't raise prices. 2. Even In normal times pay in creases don't necessarily mean higher prices. 3. Although some wages are in creased, the nation's total pay roll will decline because of elim ination of wartime overtime, loss of iobs, and other factors. The "full employment" bill is no guarantee of full employment. Put Variety in Your Diet with Healthful UMPQUA DAIRY PRODUCTS tt Elmplv. voujd 'attth(I?e, If !t became law, the government to survey employment prospeets Beth Buff am Formerly at Beth's Beauty Shop in Sutherlin will be ASSISTING AT LERAH'S BEAUTY SALON ... TOPS FOR QUALITY JPeptUCota Company, Long ItlaniCity, NtYoj'' Franchised Bottler: Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co., of Roseburg, Oregon IfswGAtfitUf Quality In thai days of shortages we cannot guarantee that there will a'.wars be enough Sicks' Select but we can at sure you that its superb quality will al ways remain unchanged. If your dealer Is occasionally out oi stock, be patient with him. New supplies are regularly on the way and he will doubtless bo nble to lerre yon when next you call. i OREGON'S FAMOUS BEER yearly, make recommendation', and spend federal money to pro vide 1obs If necessary. jpSif SICKS' BREWING COMPANY SALEM, OREGON PROMPT METERED DELIVERIES Roseburg and vicinity PHONE 321-J Plant 8. Mill Roseburg INSECT SPRAY A Wilco Product J. ! r - w-rrrsr twwf