The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, July 07, 1949, Page 21, Image 21

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    Oregon's Democratic Parfy
jf Nbt-Yet inclined To Endorse
: Gus Solomon For U.S. Judge
- ' -(By the Associated Press)
" The " Oregon Democratic party
ttiUUnot accept: endorsement- of
CSus J. Solomon, Portland ' at
torney, for the Federal District
bench without a second look. , .
1 SLABWOOD
inJ26ond 24 irutengths.
" OLD GROWTH 'FIR
DOUBLE LOADS
WESTERN BATTERY
SEPARATOR
.' :, '.( . Phone 658
That is the effect of a letter
sent Saturday to 74 members of
the Stale Central Committee. and
the Executive Committee by
Party Chairman William L. Joss
lin of Portland, Mrs. Joada Leon
ard, vice-chairman of Klamath
Falls, and Volney Martin, secre
tary, of Portland.
Solomon was endorsed for the
projected third Oregon Federal
judgeship last week by National
Committeeman Monroe Sweet
land, National CommltteewOmari
Nancy Honeyman Robinson, and
Multnomah County Chairman
Nicholas Granet.
They were speaking for them
selves, and not necessarily for
the partv, Josslin said Tuesday.
The letter sent to the State
Committee members in all
parts of the state listed 12 at
torneys as worthy of considera
tion for endorsement. Solomon's
iTaste ?em :they,re'all meat!
Tfciteow-gopd, plump nd Juicy Armour
Ffnkfrtera I'el They're niade fresh tvery day
W..KortlandT3easoned just the way
you like 'em here in Oregon
Armour Frimcfuners
are ail-meat, too
!!nothmg but fine beef"
yand-porlc and - -'seasoning
l
Portland-made. .
) : ta Oregon's taste
A
U. S. GOVERNMENT INSPECTED
Frankfurters
a lepder in America's finest line of sausage
IM.WELUOFALL I HAD TO DO BlP
' W TH' CAMPIK)' Y SOMETHING. I - Epg;
m STUNTS I EVER 7i MX) BLANKET W
t1Pm I SAW WHUTS H PULLERS WERE -1
aU. TH'RjDGE POLE fe SA)TN,G 4 - Z-
THE ROLLER BEARING
t mo u i pai on
CQPR 1W BY KB SERVICE rW;
OUT OUR WAY
By J. R. Williams
name was Included.
Those receiving the letters
were 'asked to indicate tneir
preference for the judgeship and
return oanois in lime lor cuuiu
ing at 2 p.m. Friday.
Jackson County for Kelly
Jackson County's Democratic
Central Committee has been call
ed to meet Wednesday night to
consider throwing that county's
backing to Edward C. Kelly, Med
ford attorney.
Josslin said that the move to
get state-wide opinion on a suit
able candidate for the bench
should not be considered a
break between the state organi
zation and the national commit
teeman and committeewoman.
It is considered in some politi
cal circles, however, as a man
euvering to determine whether mook.
party patronage In Oregon will
be in Josslin's hands or In the
hands of the National Committee
representatives.
Josslin said, however, that
backing a candidate for the fed
eral bench should be above
patronage with the only consider
ation the man's qualification.
Twelve Names Suggested
The 12 names on the ballot sent
to the 36 county leaders: Hugh
Li. Biggs, Portland; A. fa. (Jrant,
Baker; Allan Hart, Portland;
Henry L. Hess, La Grande; Ed
ward C. Kelly, Medtord; i.arl u,
Latourette, Oregon City; Hall S.
Lusk, Salem; William B. Murr-
ary, Portland; Gus J. Solomon,
Portland ; Bruce S p a u 1 d i n g,
Salem; Orval N. Thompson, Al
bany; Robert Y. Thornton, Tula-
Buy your homo-canning; needs now. You will find a full slock
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Josslin said that also being dis
cussed, although their names
were not on the ballot, were Karl
T. Huston, Corvallis, and Edwin
D. Hicks and Manley B. Strayer,
both Portland.
"My own name is not on the
list," Josslin said, "I am not a
candidate. Although I would ac
cept if by some remote chance I
were nominated, I am doing
nothing to get the office ior myself."
More Protein
Food Production
Pattern Shaping
More protein and less starch is
the food production pattern shap
ing up in the U. S. Department of
Agriculture crop adjustment pro
gram for 1950, according to E.
Harvey Miller, chairman of the
Oregon State PMA Committee.
He points out that with huge
crops of wheat and corn in pros
pect for 1949 and with the ware
nouses filled with cotton, there is
a need to shift some 30 million
acres from the production of
these and similar crops. If this
acreage is used for the production
of barley, oats or grain sorghums
or commercial vegetables, It will
only add to the surpluses in these
crops. To avoid trouble, about
the only use for most of this land
is to put it into grass and legumes.
This will mean putting some of
the land that was plowed out of
grass back into grass. Sod was
broken to meet demands of war
and post-war famine conditions
in Europe but now there is a
need to get some of this land back
into sod. More grass and legumes
are needed in corn and cotton
rotations.
There is a need for increased
E reduction of livestock products
ut the bins and cribs and ware
houses are full of corn, cotton
and wheat. This obviously should
indicate the adjustment in farm
ing that is needed. But to accom
plish such an adjustment in an
orderly and equitable manner.
the chairman points out, it may
be necessary to have such things
as acreage allotments and market
ing quotas. Then, through the
Agricultural Conservation Pro
gram assistance is provided to aid
farmers In making the shift from
the cash-one-season-return-crops
to the slower return type of live
stock farming.
For this reason, Mr. Miller
says, emphasis this year is on the
harvesting of as much grass and
legume seed as possible. This
seed, he points out, is the key to
the shift from "surplus" crops to
livestock. And, since grass and
Thur., July 7, 1949 Th News-Review, koseburg. Or.
Grain Elevator, Near
Completion, Fire's Prey
HOOPER, Wash., July 6.-UP)
A 160,000-bushel grain elevator
Just being completed here was de
stroyed by fire Monday after
noon. The loss was estimated at $80,
000. No grain had been stored
yet In the unfinished elevator.
Carl Schrenk, vice president
of the LaCrosse Grain Growers,
Inc., which was building the ele-
legumes are among the best
means of conserving soil pro
tecting it from erosion and build
ing up reserves of humus and
fertility for future needs this
seed is also the key to conserva
tion. Instead of wasting the soil
in producing unwanted surpluses,
the land will then become a
reservoir for use when added
strength and fertility are needed
to produce food for an expanding
population.
vator, made the' damag esti
mate. He said the wood structure
was being built to enlarge the
firm's storgae facilities.
Cause ot the fire was not
known.
Land now combined as the
United States once belonged to
Spain, France, England, Holland
and Sweden.
R.G.Mc Arthur
Well Drilling
1 1 miles salt
on N. Umpqua
Road Watch
for sign or writ
Box 175, Idle
yld Route, Rosa
burg, Oregon.
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