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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 10, 1950)
2 The Nw-lttvlw. RoMburt, 0-Frl., rb. 10, 150 West Germany Votes Fund For West Berliners BONV, Germany, Feb. 10. VP) West Ctrninir'i perliament- against vigorous Communist oppo sition, voted 105,000,000 deutsche- msrks (2S.ooo,ooo) today to am Western Berlin. The bill provide! for channeling European recovery funds and Ger man federal funds for reconstruc tion of the West Berlin power sta tion, which had been stripped by tha Russians in the early days of Uie occupation. Tha measure also underwrites the trade of the western sectors of Berlin. It guarantees payment for goods manufactured in Berlin for export, wnere rum resulting irora the political situation" might be in volved. Western Berlin hss been caught ' in an economic squeeze because of ' its position as an isolated island in ' the heart of Russian-occupied ter ritory, subject to constant harass ment of its traffic by the Russians. ' Political bickering stalled the West German government plan to apend S.400,000 marks (S850.000.000) ! to provide Jobs for 1,000.000 unem 1 ployed in the federal republic. Lewis' Contract Dtmands Facfrtcj Court Injunction (Continued from page One) ' act injunction, aimed at sending ' the miners bark to work for at 1 least S days. Mr. Trumsn told his news conference yesterday h does not have, and doea not want, pow er to seize the coal mines. The pita have been shut down ' tight since Monday. Before that . some were closed and others work ed only three days a week, squeei tng the nations coal stores from more than 75 days' supply year ago to little more than two weeks' stocks above ground today. White house action waa expected because tha soft coal shortage was becoming more critical daily. Thousands of workers in plants and railroads dependent on the mines were being laid off in in creasing wives. Violence waa re ported in West Virginia and Ken tucky mines as roving pickets kept even maintenance crews out of the pita. r Give your children MUSIC nd all their llvaa they'll thank you.' Let ua place) a fine Baldwin or Wurlltzer Plans In your horn this week. it Convenient tytrms 0TT and RICKETTS Corner Jackson and . Cass Sta. QUALITY MEATS NICE LEAN Pork Roasts lb. 37c CHOICE TENDER Rib Steaks lb. 63c FANCY Veal Roasts lb. 49c MORRELL'S READY TO HAMS- ' I j r IWHJ Jhaaffc RINSO uc,,kC,. 24c , M0RRIlL.s FRESH FRUITS Deviled Meat u,' 2 for 15c gnd VEGETABLES lunkilt 7-lb. ! IDA DELL CREAM CORN - -2 cans 25c 0fan9 79c GARDEN H,,d" (ACH KRAUT nam can, 13c LETTUCE.. 10c ESQ NOODLES , T.r..r. C.,., 2 SUN. and Turkey -. can, 43c CARRATS . 17c hunt's : : ' HOT SAUCE cam : 5c TOMATOES KRAFT , 0) DINNERS.- 2 for 25c I Tube 23c Men O. Grttn, Flier, DIm In Plant Crash (Continued from page One) Service operating in both cities, and managed most of the com pany'a business. During the war, Green flew for the Civil Air patrol, doing a stin' of duty on anti-submarine patrol oil the Gull of Mexico. He was the senior member of Eu gene's Flying Greens, which in eluded 11 airborne members in one family. Milk Dispute Brought To End By Agreement luifiunuea iiuin pagf unei dairy was now considered 100 per cent unionised and "is deserving of the patronage of all.' The agreement is similar to those now in effect at Grant Pass and Medford. Prices Specified A third irouo reoresented at the rinal parley waa the Umpqua Val' ley Milk Producers association, headed by Secretary-Treasurer Al Hotten, who accepted terms of a vo-day agreement on price in creases paid producers for fluid mux, enective tto. j. As a part of the overall agree ment, dairy farmers will receive IS As per Cwt. for four percent milk delivered to the distributor. figured at a rate of f .90 per pound for butterfat and S2.3A for milk. This represents a flat 23-cent raise over the S5.73 per Cwt. farmers have been receiving. Hooten and two board of trus tee members, Peter Pon and Paul Newman, accepted the terms and declared, "On behalf of the Ump qua Valley Milk Producers aMoci ation, all differences with the Ump qua dairy are now considered to be amicably settled." All parties agreed that there would be no Increase to the con sumer! because of the agreement signed Thursday. Highway Relocation Of 2 Miles Designated (Continued from page One) Ian upon which the city could asa future street develnnmenta. according to Mayor Flegef. Street Widening In Abeyance The mayor aaid the city was reluctant to proceed with any street widening or realignment unless they conformed to the overall hishway picture for thia vicinity. One of the principal plana ad vanced by the highway depart ment calls for one-way northbound traffic on Stephens St. and one way southbound traffic on Pine St. No definite decisions have been made, however. The delegation also conferred with Public Utilities Commissioner Jamea Flagg relative to factors ot safety, delays, and improve ments at railroad crossings in the Roseburg area. Tha commissioner laid ha would endeavor to discuss ' the matter with the Southern Pacific's chief engineer David Don, upon his re turn from San Francisco. If a eat isfactory plan cannot be worked out, the next atep would be to hold public hearings, he said. SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY, FEB. EAT lb. 58c OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAYS Speed Fiend Gets Ninety-Day Term CHF.STER, Pa., Feb. 10. UP) A 72-year-old Cheater man is in jail today because he proved to be too young both in heart and spirit. Police said Jamea Wright found a liking for roaring through traffic behind a airen. A reported heart attack ten daya ago brought Ches ter's rescue squad truck to his door, snd provided him with a thrill-ride to Chester hospital. The doctors found him sound In hesrt and aent him home. But po lice said he had three more "at tacks" at two-day intervals, and three more siren-borne rides. Yesterday a filling station atten dant reported that a man had come in stabbed. The rescue squad screamed to his aid. There was Wright, un.itabbed and ready f-r another ride. Without benefit of sirens, he was taken to police court. There he was found guilty of disorderly conduct snd sentenced to 90 days in prison, where he wss takenwithout a siren. Contract Slated On N, Umpqua Highway Job (Continued from page One) timber will be permitted the length of this highway. The fhree agencies involved in the orosram are the State Highway commission, the regional engi neers' office of the Bureau or pub lic Roads administration, and the regional forester a office of the For est service. Responsiblity for se curing rights of way goes to Doug las county. Contracts will be let by the Bureau of Public Roads. Also in the planning stages Is an additional aix miles of road to be built by the Forest service in the Steamboat creek area. Nelson said this road will tan about two and a half billion board feet of additional timber. The recently announced North Umpqua highway plans are a part of future plans to connect itose burg with Diamond Lake and East ern Oregon by a regular two-lane highway. College's Marathon Of Prayer Lasts 38 Hours (Continued from page One) "because the Lord revealed other sins they hsd not confessed." Students at the college in this community of 8,000, 35 miles west of Chicago, agree on admission not to smoke, drink" alcoholic liq uors, dance, play cards, or en gage In other "lnvoioua amuse ments." Dean Roger J. Voskuyl said of the meeting: "I think it Is indicative of a heart hunger for a deeper life. While the human element is nres- ent here, I feel there must be a supernatural element, too." DOS LCENSES NEEDED City Recorder William Boll man todav reminded dog ownera of tha March 1 deadline for purchas ing licenses. i After that date, dog license fees will he increased by a penalty, he said. Persona living within the city limits may purchase dog licenses at the city hall. 11TH SILK TISSUE y m 23c Fuchs, Atom Scientist, ' Confesses Treason , (Continued from page One) Fuchs, describing himself as a "schisophrenic" (split personality) who had divided hia mind into two compartments. One permitted him to carry on agreeable con tacts with those around him at the Harwell atom plant. The other established him aa a person com pletely independent of the forces of society, . , Fuchs was the leading atomic researcher during the war at Har well, Britain'a atomic establish ment, and waa head of the theore tical physics branch, the heart of atomic, acience. In the United States there were indications that he had access to the most Tital of information, including probably the hydrogen bomb. Moreover, it was said in' Washington, such secrets aa e may have passed on could have aped Russia's achieve ment of an atomic explosion. During the war Fuchs visited the Oak Ridge, ' Tenn., atomic energy plant and the laboratory at Los Alamos, N. Mex., where the world'i first atom bomb was produced. Confession Signed At 'he hearing before Magistrate Laurence Dunne, aecurity officer William Jamea Skardon testified Fuchs had aigned a atatement when he waa questioned at the Harwell plant on his arrest last week. In the statement, Fuchs waa said to have asserted that when he learned the kind of work he was to do in Britain, "I decided to inform Rusaia and I established contact through another member of the Communist party." "Since .that time I have had continuoua contact with persons completely unknown to me except that they would give information to the Russians," the statement aaid. "At thia time I had complete confidence in the Russian policy and I had no hesitation in giving all the information 1 had. "I Vlieved deliberately the west ern allies allowed Germany and Russia to fight each other to death. I tried to concentrate on giving the results of my own work. "I used my Marxian philosophy to conceal my thoughts, which had to be scpsrated into two compart ments, one aide waa the man I wanted to be. I could be free and easy and happy with other people without fear of disclosing myself because I knew the other compart ment would step in if I reached a danger point. "Looking back now, the best way Is to call it controlled schizo phrenia. Envisaged "New World" "In the postwar period I had doubts about Russian policy. Even tually I came to the point when I knew I disapproved of many of the actions of Russisn policy. I still believed that Russia would build a new world and that I would take part in it. "During this time I was not sure f could give all the Information I had. However, it became more and more evident that Russia would spread her Influence over Europe. I had to decide whether I could continue to hand over information without being sure I was doing right. I decided I could not do so." The prosecution gave the court a story of Fuchs as a brilliant vouth in Germany who was an underground communist agent since 19.12 in Berlin. Humphreys, In his opening state ment, declared that Fuchs received money from Russian agenta after he began giving them atomic re search secrets in 1942. Fuchs Was interned In England In 1940 but was released in 1042 to aid in British A-bomb research. He was given naturalization papers and came to the United States in 1043 with a British research team to work with Americana on the atom bomb. "Blarney Stone" Sought For Roseburg Dance No blarney its the real thing. Efforts are being made to se cure the much-ublicized San Fran cisco "blarney stone" as a feature of the St. Patrick'a day dance to he held in the Roseburg armory March 17, sponsored by the St. Joseph's Altar society, circle one. According to Mrs. H. C. McDon ald, general chairman, the Bler nev stone is a portion of the original stone in Cork, Irish Free State. It will be displayed in the armory during the dance. TbtvtfwKi nowt By KEN BAILEY QUESTION: I'm a very care ful person and it swms to me that If I'm watchful of the up keep and repair of my prop erty, it la very unlikely that an accident could occur which could be charged to my ncpli pence. Why should I take on the needless expense of carry ing a "Home Owner Liability" insurance policy? ANSWKR? Cartatnlr pron whr ta caraful about tha upkeep and repair nf hie property ta much laaa likely U Offnm ilbla for rlamae: from and fcldrnt on that property. rlfevr. tl your car may not keep iomron trum ulnf you for damafra and even though you won the caac. you mifht ha foreed to vary frtMt ex panea In Juet d'fandtnf tha suit. Tha aropar tr.aurance will not only hand! your loaa If tha rat foaa afainet viu out tha Insurance) company will defnd yu In tha autt ilaalf. v II you'll addrvaa your own Ineur nr queattona to thta offK-a. wa ll trv to ftva you tha eorrwt an w era and thara will be) no char fa or abU tatton of amy ki.id. KEN BAILEY INSURANCE AGENCY 311 Pacific Blda. Phone 391 P"r '''" t Newspaper On Pine Product Is Boon To Industry MACON, Ga., Feb. 10 UP) The Macon Telegraph delivered to 1U readers today the first edition of a daily newapaper ever printed on southern pine paper from a newf print mill at Coosa Pines, Ala ' In addition, the Telegraph be-. came the first newspaper in Geor gia 'to utilise the products of the new mill, which nuns millions ot dollars annually to pine tree growers, . ' Since the paper was soma of the first produced at the mill, two of its officers said that future de liveries would be of a much higher quality. Peyton Anderson, publisher of me teiegrapn ana tne Macon News, and press room foreman Blake Jonea both expressed satis faction with the product. In the future, the Telegraph plana to use newsprint from Maine along with the pine paper since production at the Coosa mill is not yet aufficient to meet the Tele graph s needa and, at the same time, aupply other newspapera. For yeara the Telegrpah has been closely identified with the production of newsprint from pine, a plentiful southern product which the psper felt could add Immea surable to southern economic life if fully used. It waa through the efforts of the late W. T. Anderson, Telegraph publisher, that appropriations were obtained from the atate and interested Georgians to finance Dr. Charles H. Herty'a .'esearch on use of pinea for paper. There ia another newsprint plant at 1-utkin, Tex., the first to put the Herty method into commercial use. Warning Issued On Outside Building Firms A warning waa isaued today by City Inspector Charlea Boniols that unauthorized, out-of-town building firms, contractora and building ma terial aalesmen are canvassing the area. Boniola aaid that although there ia often nothing wrong with the materials sold, construction Jobs have not - been able to pass city building code specifications. Local citizena approached by these persons should ask for identi fication, boniols said. Authorized persons have been approved by the city and are required to carry with them identification permit! signed py the city inspector. Hit-Run Driving Charged In Medford Man's Injury UKIAH. Calif.. Feb. 10, Boa Curlier, 57, Medford, Ore., salesman, wss hurt seriously yes terdsy in a mountain highway ac cident. He was taken to Howard Memorial hospital in Willita. ' State Highway Patrolman Floyd C. Mullin aaid Cortier'a automobile waa aideswiped by another car and plunged over a pink and burned near Laytonville. A woman identified only as Mrs. Wallace, 51,'Salem, Ore., was ar rested lster tt Garberville. Calif.. and returned to Willita where she was charged with hit-run driving. WON0ECTUL NEWS FOR Chamber Of Commerce Report Being Moiled The IMS annual report of the Roseburg Chamber of Commerce haa been compiled and la now in the process of being mailed, re ported Harold Hickerson, secretary-manager. The attractive, ten-page booklet includes a messsge from former president, John Todd, i brief ac count of organization status and community development and re ports from the various committee chairmen. A financial report for the IMS calendar year ia also in cluded. . , An aerial photograph of the city, taken by photographer Gene Pow ell, ia featured on the booklet cover. Research Rocket Climbs 51 Miles WASHINGTON, Feb. 10 Pt The Navy aaid today that a Viking rocket fired yesterday at White Sands, N.M., reached an altitude of SI miles. A Navy officer aaid it could have climbed higher, but the ascent waa cut off from ground controls when the rocket began veering alightly off tha proving ground. The rocket, built by the Glenn L. Msrtin company ot Baltimore, waa fired in the third of a aeries ot 10 firings under the dirction of the Naval Research laboratory. The Viking ia 48 feet long and 32 inches in diameter. The Navy said it ia designed for upper atmos phere research. On its flight yesterday the rocket carried instruments weighting 258 pounds and fuel liquid oxygen and alchohol weighting S.000 pounds. The Viking also carried instru ments to record vibration of its motor and nose section, perfor mance of its power plant,, temper atures and pressure, the spectrum of the sun in the ultra violet re gion, cosmic radiation and X- ra diation. The Navy department said re cordings received by radio from Com rtSe&ye You Can't Match a WOSfl III Jf Puts A Super Market III :: R,flht ,n YUr Homel I t0VlH I V -zn 329,75 I Lte eklkaaVaVaa 8.8 CU. FT. Alsa 1 2 1 8 2 6 Cu. Ft. Models look Intld and out tee why me Frigidair Food Freezer meets all your requirements for lafe, con venient and economical frosen food storage. Re member, H't backed by 30 years of experience In building low temperature cablneri and refrigerating units. Plan now to enjoy your favorite foods any season of the year with a Frig ido ire Food Freezer. Youtl sava time, work and monay, tool UMPQUA 120 W. Oak N. Carolina Asks "Hold" On Pelley ASHEVnXE, N. C, Feb. 10.-W) North Carolina authorities want William Dudley Pelley when the former Silver Shirt leader ia releas ed on parole from the federal peni tentiary at Terra Haute, lnd. Solicitor W. K. McLean said to day penitentiary officiala had been asked to hold Pelley for return to North Carolina. Pelley, SO-jrear-old former Ashe ville publisher, ia scheduled to be released Tuesday on parole. He ia serving a sentence imposed upon him during World War II for se dition. Pelley waa convicted here in 1035 of violating securities lawa and was fined and given a auspended prison sentence. A superior court judge ruled in 1930 he had violated terms of the auspended sentence. But North Carolina waived if. claim at ,k , lim. K 1 1 - P-ll-, tk.n uaa under indictment at Nobleaville, lnd., on sedition charges. Pelley is being paroled from a 13-year aentence. The North Caro lina term facing him la for two to three yeara. The Weather U. S. Weather turaau Office neaaburg, Oregon Cloudy tedav with ahewera, be coming partly cloudy with scat tered showers Saturday. Highest feme, any Feb. 7t Lowest temp, far any Feb. 3 Highest temp, yesterday St Lewest temp, far last 14 hrs. 40 Precipitation last 24 hrs. .12 Precipitation from Feb. 1 1.31 Precipitation from Sept. 1 .. 13.U Deficiency from Feb. 1 .27 tha rocket were excellent and that the upper atmosphere research wss satisfactory. It aaid it doea not know vhether the reamina of the rocket and its recording instru i menta have yet been found. 1 CAPACITY HOLDS 308 VALLEY APPLIANCE Lincoln's Birthday Ta Re Partly Observed Lincoln's birthday, tha obajry ance of which falia on Monday, Feb. 13, thia year, will be a holiday for aome, but just another day for others in Roseburg. While most business will go on aa usual, the county courthouse and most state agenciea will be closed, except for emergency crew work. Aiso the city hall, axcept for th police and fire departmenta, will be closed for the day. The U. S. National bank will be closed, but the Douglas County Stste bank will remain open. The post office and federal officea will not observe the dsy. School! will carry on as usual, although special Lincoln's dsy programi are planned by soma of tha class rooms. In 1900. the United State had only 8,000 automobiles. TRUCKERS i CAR OWNERS Wa've ut installed aew Job Seee VISUAUNM that tells im m nieute It year wkeels are out el line. Imareper aliaeeMer hmom heiordeus driving, greater tire wear. Caraa in new far fast, ef ficient work. go00 $0 50 TP.UCKS ! CAM O WALT EDMONDS MOTORS I SOI N. Stephens Phene 704-J-l LBS. FOOD I e Nw streamlined dtsign o Automatic Interior light e Finger-touch counter-balanced lid e 3 handy, sliding bask oh e Automatic alarm signal Famous Meter-Miser mechanism Phone 1211