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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (July 30, 1948)
TWO NEWS-REVIEW. ROSEBURG. OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY 30, 1948 V Allies Cautious in Dealings With Russia but Firm in Stand Taken By DeWITT MacKENZIE AP Foreign Affairs Analyst The current International tension was strikingly dramatized In . Thursday'! session ot the British House of Commons when Ernest Beven England's barrel-chested two-Hsted foreign secretary took the floor to tell of the mw Allied effort to pave the way for peace. Bevln spoke to hushed house. Contrary to his usual catchas-catch-can delivery of speech, he maneuvered cautiously for words. He was faced with the fact that U. S. Ambassador Bedell Smith had just arrived In Moscow with the plans of the Western Powers for a verbal approach to Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov instead of the usual austere In Inflexible written note. Kevin must be care- ful not to ay anything which would Jeopardize the Allied move. And he mustn't commit his gov ernment too far or disclose too much. He was even cautious In his keynote: "I have not given up hope . . . " Bevln made one startling reve lation in stating that Britain is considering a halt In the demo bilization of its armed forces be cause of the tension between Rus sia and the West. He was, I take it, killing two birds with one stone: He was letting the public in on a momentous secret, and he was tipping the Muscovites that John Bull really means business. TITAN Powtr Chain Saws srt tha choict of Uadinaj loaja;rs. Thif accessaries sua approval tell the story of Titan's superi ority and dependability. Titan Saws art fugged, compact, precision built and lighc weight the lightest power saw for its horsepower manu factured. Titan Saws undercut, fail, buck, rip or crosscut fast and easy. No timber bind . . . any angle cul ia possible. Maintenance is low. Cutter bars from 2 to 9 feet in length available. Write scaler far details. Lest there be ny doubt about British solidarity In this crisis, at the conclusion of the foreign sec retary's statement, wartime Prime Minister Winston Church Ill took the floor as leader of the Conservative Party. He pledged the Socialist government the full support of the powerful party which he heads. Allies Definite on Stand Bevin'g cautiousness Is also seen In Washington and Paris. The British, French and Ameri can ambassadors in Moscow are expected to meet with Molotov in the immediate future. From in spired speculation we may as sume that the ambassadors first will make it clear to the Soviet foreign minister that the Democ racies take the following stand: They will not get out of Ber lin, period. They will not be high pressured by Russia into nego tiating over the problems of Ber lin or over any other broader questions, period. Before there can be any negotiations the So viet must lift its food blockade of Berlin, exclamation point. Mean time the Western Allies are going straight ahead with their plans for forming a German govern ment for their three zones of oc cupation. The Soviet Union can Join In with Its zone or It can TRY PHYLLIS CAFE for home cooked food Your Fomily Will Enjoy Our Food HOME MADE PIE & CAKE Fried Chicken & Shrimp on weekends or to order , HOURS 6 a. m. to 8 p. m. CLOSED MONDAY PHYLLIS CAFE GARDEN VALLEY ROAD Out to Beat the Draft, 18-Year-Olds Line Up for Enlistment . n, , i t -ir i 1 1 mi 'TWir&'l9 Fi '. m$& v. , :.kv5Mc i .1-43 . i . . - Jmtsl t 1 .(,Af. ... T ft i ft muss - - INEA Ttltphata) Army and Navy recruiting stations In cities across the nation opened their doors July M to accept first voluntary enlistments of 18-year-olds, far exceeding local quotas. By enlisting now they win be exempt from the 31-month draft when they reach their lth birthdays. Line is shown her forming ouUMej New York Navy recruiting station. ATTENTION stay out. It has been reported, but not confirmed, that the three Allies are prepared to negotiate other broader European questions with Moscow if and when the German question Is ironed out. That would, of course, aim at settling the cold war in Europe. Wife Seeker's Specifications Eyed by Colleens Dl'BLIN, July 30. m Irish colleens perked up at a letter pub lished in the Dublin Evening Mail advertising for a wife for a well-to-do stationary engineer who pre fers "the short, well-built type not too slender." The letter was signed, "Bert Stone, 1.1297 Glen Oaks Boulevard, San Fernando, California. "She can be from, say, 20 to 30 years of age." It said. "She should know how to cook, keep house, and prepare a good meal. "She should be, at least, a high school graduate the more educa tion the better." The writer said he was "past 40 vears" and "aihletlcally built." lie nromised: 'The girl I mar ry will have a good car to drive, good clothes, money for luxurlesj and necessities." Man Bets $100 He Can Beat Horse In Walking Contest - LEBANON, Ore., July 29 (PI Paul Smith, 63-year-old and strong-legged, Tushed today to the defense of Linn County men. They haven't been feeling so good since Old Baldy, a Waterloo, Ore., horse, supposedly long past his prime, up-ended strong men in three tue-of-war contests. Smith challenged the horses to a walking contest. 1 can outwaiK any norse. A horse has to stop for grass and water. I eat as I go. And I get there first," the Mill City heel-and-toe expert asserted. Then Smith offered to bet $500 he could beat a horse over a 100 mile course. Linn County men perked up. In fact they brightened more than at any time since Chet Fitz water, 220-pound pool room strong man from Lebanon, met his Waterloo. That was where half the coun tryside lost bets on Chet. He got on his back, braced his feet against a timber and grabbed the tug of war rope. Old Baldy 100 yards away at the other end of the rope promptly pulled him up and sent him flying Into mud. Smith's challenge got an im mediate response. Jess Moss, Leb anon, who owns a horse Just three miles from Waterloo, took the bet. He will ride a ten-year-old ex- cow horse named Larry over the 300-mlle course. The race will be over a tour vet to be set. Smith even agreed the horse would run or gallop. He figures he can walk five to eight miles an hour and win handily. Tough Guy, Aged 4, Turns on 3 Fire Alarms, Swats Cop D ANBURY, Conn., July 29 T An unidentified boy who ap peared to be no more than four years old, had quite a time for himself here today. He turned in a fire alarm from a box in the center of Danbury's congested factory district, bring ing three lire companies to me scene. After firemen arrived, he gave the alarm box hook another yank which brought out all of Dan bury's fire fighting apparatus to gether with 150 firemen. Fire Chief John A. McNamara said the second alarm was equiv alent to a general alarm because of the nature of the area. He also explained that the boy was able to reach the fire alarm box the first time because "it was a low hanging one." me boy turned in tne second alarm, the chief said, while he was struggling in the arms of a fireman who saw him standing near the Instrument. "He slapped the fireman in the face with one hand and turned In the alarm with the other," the chief said. Later, during the excitement, the chief said, the boy disap-; peared in the. crowd. Gearhart (R.-Callf.), said in a statement. Gov. Earl Warren, GOP vice-presidential candidate, hails from Gearhart's state. Pending construction of the proposed home, the famous old Blair House, now used for visiting dignitaries, would be assigned to the vice-president. Oslo, the Norwegian capital, was founded in 1048, destroyed by fire and rebuilt In 1624, renamed Christians and then given its original name back In 1925. The new Mt. Palomar telescope extends man's range of vision by 500 million light years. ! 0 DEPARj"RiS, aaSTS .1 'Ar Phone 3 119 N. III 353 Stephens Vice-President's Home To Cost $2,500,000 Proposed WASHINGTON, July 30. UP) Congressmen from the home states of the two major party vice presidential candidates joined yesterday in drafting bills to build and furnish a $2,500,000 home here for the vice-president. Such a home should have been built when the White House was erected for the president, the two sponsors. Rep. Gregory and Wanted Bookkeeper Some Stenographic Ability Desirable Excellent Opening With Good Pay SEE Denn-Gerretsen Co. 402 W. Oak St. Phon" 128 DAIRYMEN WHO DESIRE GRADE A MILK SEE OUR INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER MILK COOLERS NOW IN STOCK -SIG FETT The House of Service Built on Service 527 N. Jackson Phone 1150 ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS ' Sealed proposals will be re el ved by the Oregon State Game Commission. 1634 S. W. Alder Street, P. O. Box 4136, Portland 8, Oregon until 10:30 A. M. Satur day, August 14, 1948. for the con struction of GR1NDKR ROOM Hl'lUMNG AND BACHKLOR QUARTERS, ETC.. at the Butte Falls Trout Hatchery near Butte Falls, Oregon for the Oregon Stale Game Commission and will then and there he opened and publiclv read aloud. Bids received after the time fixed for opening the same will not be considered. Plans. SDecifications. and forms of contract documents may be obtained In the Office of the Ore gon State Game Commission at 1634 S. W. Alder Street, Portland 8, Oregon, upon deposit of Twenty-five Dollars (S2500I. The full amount of deposit for one set of documents will be re turned to each actual bidder with in a reasonable time after receipt of bids. All contractors shall comply with all state laws pertaining to the qualification of bidders, and particularly title 98, chapter 1, Oregon Compiled Laws Anno tated. F.ach proposal shall be made out on a bid form contained In the contract documents and shall be accompanied by a certified check or bid bond made payable to the Oregon State Game Com mission of the State of Oregon In an amount not less than 10 per cent of the total amount of the proposal. The Oregon State Game Com mission reserves the right to re ject any or all bids. No bidder may withdraw his bid after the hour set for the opening unless said award is de layed for a period exceeding 30 ' OREGON STATE GAME CO Ml SSI ON, By: C. A. Lockwood. Supervisor, State Game Commission, 1834 S. W. Alder Street, P. O. Box 41. Hi, Portland 8, Oregon. Dated: July 26, 191S. 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