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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1949)
Sutherlin' s Expansion Mushrooms Under Stimulus Of Impressive Lumber Industry GROWING CITY These new buildings are indicative of growth at Sutherlin, Douglas County's "Little Timber Capital of the Nation." Pictured here are Sutherlin Homes, federa housing project, upper left; E. C. Young and Co. Bank, upper right; Rand Theater, middle, and Sutherlin Sun, lower. (Pictures by Paul Jenkins.) Lutheran Church To Confirm Five Thin Sunday will be Confirma tion Sunday at Faith Lutheran Church, with five boys receiving membership In the Church and their first communion after a year ot Instruction in the teach ings of the Church. This is the first such class to complete the course in In struction in the newly organized Faith Church. Members of the class who will be received into Faith Church are Dale Berger son, Ken Bergcrson, Bruce Dal ros and Bill Morgan. The fifth member of the class, Don Sund berg, will become a member of Eden Lutheran Church at Elga rose. The Rev. Willis F. Erickson is pastor of both Churches. The service will be held in the Armory, Faith Churchs reg ular meeting place, and will be gin at 11 a.m. this Sunday. Holy Communion will also be cele brated for the entire congrega tion. Visitors are cordially in vited to attend this service. Six Douglas Students To Get Degrees At OSC OREGON STATE COLLEGE, Corvallis, June 3. Special ) Six students from the Roseburg dis trict are among the graduating class of 1568 seniors and gradu ate students to receive degrees at the eightieth annual com mencement here June 5 and 6. Following are the students from the district earning bache lor's degrees: Agriculture Ro land Edward Cordon, Roseburg; education Janet Anne Burpee, Roseburg; engineering Carter Dixon Powell, Roseburg; forest ryThomas Eugene Shrum Jr., Glide; George Douglas Gremmel, Roseburg. Emilie Margaret France of Roseburg will be granted a mas ter of science degree for work done In the field of botany. I ! ? PlirT:1 " """ 111 I ! Mil. 1.1L1I--1-'.. " " I ; j : J Sutherlin well deserves the title it often boasts, "Little Timber Capital of the Nation." A number of lumber manufacturers are lo cated there and the city's busi nesses have expanded as result of the increased population drawn to Sutherlin by the lumber in dustry. Next month, citizens of the town will celebrate with their second annual Timber Days, feat uring logging contests, a parade, and carnival. The Timber Days Celebration is appropriate, be cause so much of the life of the town is built around the lumber Industry. There's such a demand for housing in Sutherlin, with its large population, that only vet erans and their families can find accommodations In the Sutherlin Homes, federal housing project operated by the Douglas County Housing Authority. As vacancies occur In the 100 apartments, only veterans may move In, according to Mrs. Thea Clark, manager. In February, the E. G. Young and Co, Bank of the neighboring community of Oakland estab lished a branch bank In Suther lin under managership of C. M. Howard. Already the bank has in excess of 650 checking depositors and more than 175 savings ac counts. The bank staff Includes Delorls Jackson, Mrs. Eleanor Anderson and Mrs. Betty May nard, E. H. Randall, owner of the theater in both Sutherlin and Oakland, last year built his new Rand Theater, seating 500 people. A concrete block building, It re- filaces a frame structure former y housing the theater. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wilson, pub lishers of the Sutherlin Sun, are moving their weekly newspaper Into a building on First St. In Sutherlin. They purchased the Sun last year from Charles P. Smith, long-time editor. These are a few of the business expansions noted at Sutherlin during recent months. More than a score of new businesses have been established and new build ings erected with scant attention, as the town keeps pace with its industry. Home Council Gives OSC Co-Op House Payment CORVALLIS, June 3. UP) Mrs. Edgar Leming of Cornelius was elected president of the State Home Economics Exten sion Council Thursday as the group concluded its two-day an nual convention. A feature of the meeting was presentation to OSC President A. L. Strand of a $25,000 check, first payment on a $45,000 goal for a cooperative house for OSC students which also would serve as headquarters for the council. Some fish catch Insects by shooting them with a jet of water. U. S. Planes' Speed Exceed 1,000 M. P. H., Senator Says WASHINGTON, Juno 3.-UP) Senator Lyndon B. Johnson (D. Tex.) said Thursday the Armed Services have planes that Ily f ster than 1,000 miles an hour. He gave the report to the Sen ate Armed Services Commmittee which promptly approved a $311, 000,000 program for construction of wind tunnels to test high speed planes and guided missies. Johnson's statements were based on testimony received from scientists and military leaders dur-' ing hearings on the legislation fr9 nowat VA fS'&K ha,f r: : TUSSY .s w J CREAM DEODORANT This dengutful deodorant keeps you dainty and tweet it oncel Banishea perrpiration odor, checks perspira tion moisture. Gives longer lasting protection, is extra gentle to skin and clothing. Deliciously fragrant-stays creamy-smooth down to the bottom of the jar. Get jars and jars of Tusay Cream Deodorant at half-price-now I FULLERTON'S REXALL STORE i Can You Face Additional Living Expense If fire drives, you out of your home and you have to live in tempo rary quarters doubt less paying a higher rental you would also be burdened with ex tra expenses like in creased transportation costs, telephone - con nection charges, etc. expenses in excess of your normal household expenditures. And think of today's high cost of living! But don't worry. Let us provide Additional Liv ing Expense Insurance to relieve the strain on your pocketbook. Learn now it reimburses you, after the fire, for addi tional expenses incur red in order to con tinue as nearly as prac ticable the normal con duct of your household. Phone Write Call. KEN BAILEY INSURANCE AGENCY S1S Puclfio Bldg. Phone 398 before t subcommittee which he heads. He did not Identify the planes which he said are flying faster than 1,000 miles an hour. It previ ously had been disclosed that Air Force's rocket-powered X-l has flown "several hundred miles" faster than the speed of sound. Sound travels at 761 miles an hour at sea level, slower at higher altitudes. Congressman Take 5 Pet. Pay Cut? 'Ridiculous,' Senator Bridges Says Bv EDWIN B. HAAKINSON WASHINGTON, June 3.-P Senator Bridges (R.-N.H.), one of the leaders of the current econo my drive, branded as "ridiculous" Thursday a suggestion that con gressmen take a 5 percent pay cut to help cut government costs. At the same time Bridges agreed with Senator McCarthy (R.-Wis.) that Congress should re main in session "until Christmas, If necessary" to consider $3,000. 000,000 of savings in government costs proposed by former Presi dent Hoover. Bridges, former chairman of the Senate Appropriations Com mittee, testified before the Sen ate expenditures committee in support of a resolution that would direct President Truman to bal ance the budget. "It is my sincere conviction that the need for economy la greater today than at any time I have been a member of the United States Senate," he said. "There la not a department or agency with proper manage ment at the top that would not absorb some small percentage cut without impairing efficiency or cutting salaries," Bridges said. Bridges said press reports In dicate that Senator Tydlnga (D. Md.), author of another proposal for cutting government costs, has suggested congressmen take a. 5 percent pay out. "I disagree with Senator Tvd lugs." Bridges said emphatically. "I think It's ridiculous to ask that Congress take a 5 per cent Eleanor Roosevelt U. S. Dictator, Spanish Claim WASHINGTON. June 3.-!P The Madrid official radio in a broadcast recorded Thursday by U. S. government monitors com plained that Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt la "dictator" of Ameri can foreign policy. The broadcast was based on published reports that the wife of the late President had prevail ed on Secretary of State Acheson to refrain from backing a recent proposal In the United States to return ambassadors to the Franco government. "Is Mrs. Roosevelt a sort of Stalin in petticoats?" demanded Commentator Juan De La Cosa. "Where does her power lie? Why does Mr. Acheson obey her with so much submission ?" If Mrs. Roosevelt has that much Influence, he suggested, she "per sonally directs U. S. policy" and "hence Mrs. Roosevelt Is a dicta tor and the United States a dictatorship." cut In salaries. The cost of Con gress is a very minor item and beside the point." Chairman McCIellan (D,-Ark.) of the expenditures committee said Tydings may have been mis understoodthat his suggestion was that Congress should reduce Its own costs 5 Der cent. McCIellan said this could be done without cutting salaries. Friday, June 3, 194 -Th Newi-Rtview, Rotebura, Or. 9 Robinson also explained how It ha- worked out In the Northwest. "A professional survey in t!Ta area," he said, "shows that 75 per cent of all voters touching our power lines favor the com pany as against public operation of the electric company. "Only 14 per cent favor public power." He prepared his speech for the closing session of the three-day convention, which hit devoted a great deal of time to mapping plans for an out-and-out battle against what the private power men term attempts to socialize the Industry. Private Power Wins Favor Of Consumer Against Effort To a ..t. m ' socialize industry, Claim ATLANTIC CITY, N. J June 3. UP) A Northwest utility executive said here the consumer is being won to the side of private power despite "a shocking underground organization with but one goal government ownership." Kinsey M. Robinson, president of the Washington Water Power Company, spoke of "all-out efforts to liquidate private enterprise in tne electric industry." It is an uphill battle In an area which he said "has acquired a re putation for being not only rug ged, but quite radical." He told 3,000 of the country's leading private power men: "Into the Northwest this little Soviet of America has drifted more than our share of the na tion's do-gooders and Fellow Trav elers. "National groups, with not the slightest Interest In Northwest development, but with a keen an ticipation of control, have ex erted pressures seldom seen by a military task force." Despite this, Robinson said, the consumer is being won to the side of private power by Washington Water Power's friendly employes and its "acceptable policies." "This Is a year when all of us need friends," he told the annual convention of the Edison Electric Institute, the trade organization of the nation's privately-owned power companies. "If the iron hand of govern ment is permitted to close com pletely over us, our era of happi ness, as Hitler once predicted, is over." ; Formula Offered And to make friends, he urged the Industry to bring manage ment closer to the employes; to take employes into their confi dence; keep their morale high; help them be good neighbors In their community. At Washington Water Power, he said, each division or local area elected an employee each month to visit the general office and sit around a table with top management. The employes asked questions, he said, and related anything that bothered them. By the time they returned to the home of fice, he added, they were on the inside. Robinson said it made for good morale, and he added "If an em Dlovee likes his lob and under stands It, he will fairly jump at me cnance to explain. Ideal Employee Described An Robinson explained: "An employee on good terms with his neighbor, leaning over the rocking-chair where grand mother sits, or grinning at one of the youngsters, or lending a hand to take down the storm win dowsthat employee can white wash the DOlitician's entire nhll- osophy with half a dozen words." FLOORING, SIDING and FINISH PAGE LUMBER & FUEL 164 E. 2nd Ave. S. Phone 242 imun MOTH-PI OOF DUST-MO Our "Frigid Fur Storage" is al lure's war of kr-aping year fur soft, pliable ana lovely! Givaj tkem guaranteed protection Milled. FUR SALON ; Second Floor of Fashions y SAVE FOOD- 111 WORK-TIME Ip AND MONEY! Up jJ&T PRICEI 12 C. ft. Ckl MaM money Thousands of lucky families are eating better, living better, enjoying garden fresh vegetables and fruits, choice meats and poultry the year 'round, in and out of season. They're making many worthwhile savings in food, work, tim and with HARDER Freez. the economical home freezer. 0 9 eu. ft ft 0D 18 eu. 12 su. ft. 11 eu. ft. ROSEBURG REFRIGERATION Harold and Mildred Hern Fariss' Friday Folly Between the Hours of 6 and 9 P. M. Jack Fariss and Son Bring You Such Savings as These PIN-UP LIGHT Regular 2.98 But Between the Hours of 6 and 9 Friday Night Yon May Have One For 1.88 Brighten up those dark spots In any room with one or mare af theae lights. Works In with any decorating soheme. Ivory parohment shade, metal base that wilt hang on your wall. CLOTHES PINS Regular 15 Doen But between the hours of 6 and t buy these rlng-type elethea pins for only 9c doz. HUNTING KNIFE WITH LEATHER SHEATH Regular $2.98 You sportsman may buy one batwetn 6 and 9 fir only 98c Thast are not the only buys that you will find hare bt twn t and 9 p. m. every Friday. Be aura to shop far other bargains during these hours. 1 Kluvar Radio Service open 'til 9 for your convenience. fS Stora No. 2 Next To Jj SS Wolly's ii 324 N. Jackson Phone 270 127 N. Jockson Phona 45