The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, August 30, 1949, Page 3, Image 3

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    PAINTS
All Kindt
PAGE LUMBER & FUEL
" tl 2nd Ave S. Phnn 2(2
OIL HEATING
L
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TOZER'S
Heating Sheet Metal Works
314 W. Cats
Phont 1541
Coen
Supply Company
WILL INSTALL A 10' x 12'
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KEKTILE.
Asphalt Tie 4K
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en a now Kanlilt Floor
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Floed A Mill SU.
Phone 121
GUTTERS AIR COOLERS
Authorized Dealer For
LENNOX and KLEER-KLEEN
(Utility baement (Floor Unit 29" deep)
FURNACES
ROSEBURG SHEET METAL
Your
HEATING
Phone 141
ASK THE MAN WHO KNOWS
; REGULAR v.jktrrs-
24 HOUR WATCH
REPAIR SERVICE
ON ALL MINOR REPAIRS
Don't Mgltct yovr wotchl Don't bong orow4 . . Dont wtot
ft whan wofhing . . . Dont ooi ... Wind k rtowtorty . . .
Repair Ih brokn crytlol ot one . . . Havt H doonod ond o0d
rvgwlortyt Ifing row wattfc In for chodtv wMnow obKao-
tio todayl
Complete Overhaul
t ;
1 WEEK SERVICE
Loan Available
To Farmers For
Construction
Government loan 'to help
larmer construct or repair hous
es and other farm buildings are
auinorizea under the Housing Act
signed by the President on July
15. Also authorized are a limited
number of grants to correct hous
ing defects which menace health
or safety of the occupant or the
vuiumumiy.
If appropriations match auth
orization in the act. about 13.000
larmers can be aided the first
year, and a total of 135.000 dur
ing the 4 year period. To recieve
a loan under the housing pro
gram, a farmer must be unable
to get needed1 credit for housing
improvements from other sourc
es. Loans may be made only to
larm owners, but owners may
use the loans in order to provide
better housing for tenants, share
croppers, and farm laborers.
Loans for housing or other
farm buildings primarily for re-
moaenng rainer tnan new con
struction are expected to aver
age about $2,200. Where a farmer
cannot be made to make dwel
lings or other buildings safe and
sanitary or to remove danger to
the health of the occupant or
community. Grants to any Indi
vidual may not exceed $500, and
the total of grants and special
loans for minor improvements
may not exceed $1,000.
Financial assistance under the
housing program will be admin
istered by the Farmer Home
Administration, and other exist
ing agricultural agencies will
handle other phases of the pro
gram. Riot Bans Concert
By Paul Robeson,
Singer-Commie
NEW YORK, Aug. 30. CD
The Civil Rights congress said
today President Truman may be
asked to start an investigation
of the Peekskill, N. Y.t riot that
broke up a scheduled concert by
Negro singer Paul Robeson.
Will Lawrence, state executive
secretary of the congress, which
has been listed as subversive by
the Justice department, said a
delegation may be named at a
rally here tomorrow night to
take the protest in person to the
White House.
At least eight persons were
injured, two seriously, when war
veterans, protesting the Robeson
recital, clashed Saturday night
with several thousand concert-
goers.
Proceeds of the recital were
to go to the Harlem branch of
the Civil Rights congress.
Tomorrow night's protest rallv.
to be held in Harlem, will be
sponsored by the congress, the
American Labor party and a
group oi individuals.
Lawrence said a delegation
also would be named at the rally
to call on Governor Thomas E.
Dewey. The group, he said, will
demand a public investigation of
tne ianure of state police to
act" In time to prevent the fist
swinging melee.
Robeson, frequently Identified
with left-wing activities, was in
tercepted by friends before he
reached the concert grounds. He
claimed the disorder was part of
a "national terror" and an attack
on the Negro people.
The main military items made
by ironmakers during the Revo
lutionary War were cannon and
cannon balls, cast from molten
iron at the blast furnace.
850 E. 1st St.
Center
. ... TOUR WATCHMAKER!
:
tzjz.a ?n - !
niyi. r
ps T ST . v v ... '
t ' , . i A
"THIS LITTLE PIG
" Duroc.
low. rive or six hundred pounai, I never weignea er, rememoa
at the county fair Saturday. (Picture by Paul Jenkins.)
.. . a
Cats Don't Deserve All
Credit; Men Putting On
Dog So Dogs Put On Men
By ED CREACH
(For Hal Boyle)
NEW YORK, Aug. 30. UP)
Some day, I do not guarantee
when, this reporter is going to
learn to keep his hi; 'yap shut.
About dogs, anyway.
A tew days ago 1 committed a
piece for the papers to the ef
fect that dogs are not what they
used to be. I said they were
somewhat on the sissy side now
adays, that they weren't getting
In. the headlines much, that the
cats seemed to be taking over. .
It seems some dog-doters-on in
Jackman Station, Md., Chula Vis
ta. Calif., and points between dis
agree.
Also, tney write letters, rxice
letters. Suggesting in a friendly
sort of way that when I wrote
my piece I was probably drunk,
under ether, or in the pay of the
international association of dog
catchers. Newspapers React
Some newspapers also reacted.
The Utica, N. Y., Observer
Dispatch squandered half a pane
of perfectly good newsprint, wilh
pictures, to demonstrate inai
sand was running out of my ear.
Well, horrible as the thought
may be, I could be wrong.
A couple of the more construc
tive letters lead toward that con
clusion. There is. for instance, the case
of Jetty, reported by Dick John
son of Tampa, Fla.
Jetty is a Texan. (Why a man
from Ftorida should be boosting
a dog from Texas puzzles me,
too.)
Anyway, Jetty, a black mon
grel, is one leap beyond a see
ing eye dog. She' a hearing ear
dog. She telephone-listens for
Mrs. J. D. Ingram of Dallas,
who is hard of hearing.
When Mrs. Ingram's phone
rings, Jetty cocks her head to
the right When it rings a second
time, Jetty cocks her head to the
left The third time, Jetty de
cide Mrs. Ingram hasn't heard
it and starts barking like crazy.
Doesn't Know How
Mr. Ingram can hear Jetty
barking and she can hear on the
phone. What she can't hear is the
telephone bell. Jetty know that.
How? The man from Tampa
doesn't sav.
Then there is Pat, a collie. Pat
came to live with Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Douthitt of Darlington,
Pa., as a pup. Fine pup, too. His
favorite job was waking Douthitt
each morning and he sulked if his
master got up unassisted.
Well, one day Pat was missing.
No one knew why. No domestic
trouble. Accounts all in order.
Just another case for the bureau
of missing dogs.
Seven years later a dog turned
up in the Doulhilt neighborhood,
all pooped out. Dog tired, in fact.
"Why, he looks like Pat,"the
Douthitts said.
Remembers Old Trick
Experimentally, they took him
home. He ran all around the
place, sniffing, as if he weren't
quite sure, he belonged there.
The Douthjtts weren't sure, ei
ther, but:
"The next morning," Mrs. D.
write, "I said to him. Tat, go
fell
mm
displayed by youno Ervin Stritike of Winchester, is a lot of
ll .LI l II I
upstair and get Dick up.'
"He went charging up
the
stairs, barking his head off.
"He lumped right Into the mid
dle of the bed, in his excitement.
"We have never doubted for. a
minute after that that he is our
pup. Pat."
All rignt. I m convinced, uoirs
are still wonderful. Nice doggie.
Have a lamb chop. Have a piece
of thigh.
But if vou nave a dog wnicn
plavs Rachmaninoff's Prelude in
C sharp minor, while conducting
the band with his tail, do me a
favor, will you?
Don t let me near about mm.
Petty Offenders Get
City Court Penalties
Disposition of the following
cases were reported by Judge Ira
B. Riddle when they appeared in
municipal court today:
Guilty pleas on drunk charges:
Robert Oscar Pieln. 29, Portland,
disposition pending: Teddy Sow-
ards, 4S, Koseourg, line poio;
Morris Everett Koy, n, noseor.rg.
committed to 20,. day; Lester
Louis Collins. 41,' Tiller, disposi
tion pending; Walter Wilson
White, 32, Roseburg, posted S20
bail.
Cecil Orland Pipes, 61, San
Francisco, posted $10 bail on a
charge of disorderly conduct.
Carl Arthur Baker, 25, Rose
burg, forfeited $65 ball on charges
of drunk and disorderly.
Lee Marcus Russum, 43, tran
sient, pleaded not guilty to a vag
rancy charge. His trial date as
set for Tuesday at ten a. m.
Fire Damage Slight At
Kiss Lumber Company
Damage was reported as slight
in a fire at the Kis Lumber com
pany on the N. Umpqua road Sun
day, said Fire Chief William
Mills.
Chief Mills said the blaze was
confined to a small lumber pile
and an adjoining shed.
A grass fire in the 600 block on
Fowler street was also investi
gated Sunday afternoon by city
firemen. No damage wa reported.
Association Will Try
Regional Wool Sales
PORTLAND! Aug. 30. (."PI
Regional wool sales will be tried
for the first time this fall by the
Western Wool Handlers associa
tlon.
Eight sale are planned wi'.h
20.000,000 pounds of wool to be
offered. The hope is to gain more
buyers and induce higher bid
ding.
The sale dale Include: Port
land, Sept. 19-21.
SOUTH END FUEL CO.
Phone 1195-R 207 Rice St
Picture Windows
If you are building a home or
remodeling your old one be
ure and plan on picture win
dows. Nothing adds more beau
ty to any home than picture
window In the living room. We
will gladly give you estimates
on how much the Job would be.
See us today.
I L. A 1L- Li I
in owner to in pnoiogropnor,
Marshall Plan
Is Working Well
In West Europe
PULLMAN. Wash.. Aug. 30.
(JFi The Marshall plan is work
ing so well In western Kurope
that the Lutheran church feel it
is no longer necessary for It to
give supplemental food air there.
Dr. :s. c Michel telder, execu
tive secretary of the Lutheran
World federation, said in a
speech Friday night that the sit
uation was not as bright east of
the Iron Curtain.
He told 2,000 delegates to the
annual Lutheran league conven
tion that countries within the
Russian sphere in influence have
just about the same food situa
tion as existed all over the con
tinent in 1945 when the war end
ed.
He said the church Is continu
ing its aid program in eastern
Europe, with the approval of the
countries involved.
They want our dollar," he
said, "Just the night before I
left Geneva, we were Invited to
spend $250,000 a year In Hun
gary. We didn't have it to soend
but at least we were invited to
do so."
Dr. Michelfelder, whose head
quarters are in Switzerland, aid
he felt the financial problem was
a bigger one - than the political
problem In carrying on the
church aid program in "Iron Cur
tain" countries. He said it was
not too difficult to enter and leave
eastern Europe on church business.
magical! glowing! true -
this
camera
phptogr
xT
II ecu r
1ft uk ' tt .It
Railway Line In
Klamath County
Tied Up By Strike
KLAMATH FALLS. Aug. 30
(1P The thirteen operating em
ployes of one of the country'
shortest class I railroads the Or
egon, California and Eastern
went on strike Monday morning.
Traffic was stopped completely
on the 65-mlle line running from
Kiamain fans to my, wholly
within Klamath county.
The strike was precipitated by
a deadlock between the railway
company and the Order of Rail
way Conductors over four claims
for time pay, one request for a
rest period between runs, and an
issue over Injury to an em
ployee. Officials of the Great Northern,
currently operating the O. C. &
E., said they received no written
notice of the intention of the
employes to strike. Sunday eve
ning, they said, they were given
verbal information that the tie
up would come at 12:01 a. m.,
Monday.
The O. C. 4 E. Is jointly owned
by the Great Northern and
Southern Pacific. The parent
companies alternate in five-year
operating periods, the G. N., be
ing currently in charge.
G. W. Lange, vice president of
the conductors organization, Is in
to await developments. He said
all requirements of the railway
labor act have been complied
with and that workers Involved
have unanimously favored the
strike.
The railroad operate two
freight trains daily. Its major
business Is in cattle, lumber ind
logs. It hauls logs dally from
eastern Klamath county to the
big Weyerhaeuser mill here.
Pickets were thrown up at the
railroad yard office.
Lange said there Is no chance
of the strike spreading to the
bigger lines unless one of the
parent companies should attempt
to operate the O. C. E. with
G. N. or S. P. crew.
More than 95 percent of the
nickel produced from the Sud
bury mine in. Northern Ontar
lo, Canada, I exported to the
United States, Great Britain, and
other industrial countries.
LOOK TH.s SIGN
PA1NT1NO
DECOBAT1NO
AMERICA
IT IS YOUR
PROTECTION
.,iiy Guarantc .a
Rsllible Quality Work
At No Added Cost
Roseburg Chapter P. D. C A.
Phone 208
ENTIRELY NEW
now brings you glorious
true-col
Tuet., Au. 30, 1949 The Nwi-Rviw, RoMburf, Ore. S
Proposed Legislative Session To
Set Up CVA Referendum Disliked
PORTLAND. Aug. 30. (.'PI A
special legislative session to set
up a Columbia valley administra
tion ballot referendum was ug
Bested Monday by State Senator
Richard L. Neuberger.
The democratic legislator made
public a letter he had sent to
Governor McKay on the subject.
The CVA proposal la now before
congress and congressional hear
ings are due later this year In the
region.
Sen. Neuberger pointed to Mc
Kay' statement that the people in
the territory to be affected by
CVA had a right to express their
approval or disapproval at 'the
polls.
The Multnomah county legisla
tor suggested the governor call a
special legislative session to put
the CVA on the 1950 general elec
tion ballot. The session, limited to
the CVA topic, would be Inexpen
sive, Neuberger said.
SALEM, Aug. 30: (fly Gover
nor Douglas McKay indicated
Monday he doesn't think much of
the Idea of calling a special leg
islative session to set up a refer
endum on the proposed Columbia
Valley authority.
The governor said he hasn't re
ceived the letter from State Sen.
Richard L. Neuberger, Portland
democrat, and CVA advocate.
Governor McKay didn't say yes,
and he didn't say no.
But he pointed out that a spe
cial session of the legislature
would cost $T5,000. And he said
the law provide for Initiative
and referendum so the people
could get issue on the ballot
without special sessions of the
legislature.
me governor oppose the CVA.
SEATTLE, Aug. 30. (.P) A
contribution of $1,500 to finance
promotion of the proposed Colum-
r
mAfSASMOOf
HP 1
JOB. NIK. '
t nmcreoio
MAlCn.
Interested in saving money en
apaintiob? Saautfor
an stimata!
W -in paint your ear by factory
methods In yojr oholc of oolor
to your tatiafaotion.
ARROW BODY AND
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502 Main St.
(for children up to 14
MOtherS I D' "Other dy m capture the glowing Menu ot Am
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At J. C. Penney's
In Cooperation With
Parks-Chitwood
Photographer
bla Valley administration has
been authorized by the executive)
board of Washington State Fed
eration of Labor, Evan M. Wes
ton, federation president, announced.
Justice RuHedge IH
In Main Hospital
YORK. Me., Aug. 30. CP)
Supreme Court Justice Wiley B.
Rutledge, 55, is "showing Im
provement" at York village hos
pital, a spokesman said today.
The 55-year-old jurist Is under
tratment for a circulatory con
dition, the hospital said.
The Judge' family declined to
permit any further statements
about his condition.
Justice Rutledge wa admitted
Saturday.
There are an estimated 300,
000 miles of city streets in th
United State.
INSURANCE
LIFE AUTO FIRE
State. Farm Mutual Imuranct
O. L. ROSC
P. O. Box 489 Phon 288
l 116 W. Cass
Over Dougla County Bank
$199
50
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