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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1950)
o o 2 Tht Newt-Review, Roseburg, On Thun., Sept. 21, 1950 Provision In Economic Aid Bill To Ban War Goods For Russia Faces House Battle Meeting Colled To Hear Speech On School Bill An important public meeting will he W4-on Monday, Sept. , at the jSilitir hish school auditorium at 8 p.m. to hear a discussion o( the measure to increase the basic school support fund from the pres. ent .V to the needed $H0 per cen sus child. C) Mr feril Pnsrv of Por and will , ina todav discuss the measure which will be 000,000 defense appropriation, b on the November traction ballot j -j- controversial provision is na win answer an ? " Part of compromise between a i-t ye, but carry on Mh trade witn O Congress Gave Truman What He. Wanted, He Says WASHINGTON (.Vt Congress is in the process of winding up its business this weekend and President Truman said today it ' nas given ntm suDsianiiaiiy wnai WASHINGTON (API Mouse leaders probed today tor au-he asked for. clan acceptable to President Truman which would deny U.S. j He told a news conference he Economic .id to nation, s.ndiQ war potential ,ood. behind the J-11 .Mks' hM iron curtain. accomplished the purposes for I hey hoped to nave it in snape to receiva oi-panisan d.cs- wnicn it met vhen the House resumes consideration of a $17,000, ih floor. The mam emphasis of the meeting is to stress the fact concerning the future of education for children in Oregon. How the local tremendous growth in popula tion will affect the children i n Koseburg will also be discussed. The meeting is jointly sasmsorcd by the Koseburg Parent- Teacher association and the Roseburg Edu cation association. Parents are advised to take this opportunity to become more familiar with the provisions of this measure. Printers. Loggers Best Paid Oregon Workers SAI.EM UP The average pay of Oregon's production work ers increased $1,211 a week during the first month of the Korean war, fenng versions passed previously j CommanM countries in order by both chambers, i-resiaeni nu- t0 0)lajn Kno(lll ..vjul l0 lh(lr ec man nas voiceu m u" position, adding to that expressed previously by Gen. Omar N. Brad ley, joint chiefs of staff chairman, KCA Administrator Paul Hoffman, and William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor. The amendment, sponsored by Senator Wherry (R-Neb) says Democratic and Republican lead era have agreed to close up shop Saturday night if possible and to stay closed until Nov. 27. Mr. Truman remarked that Con gress members want to go home and attend 'to a little private busi- onomic and military strength." ' ness, and he is for them. To require them to cut off alii That business is electioneering trade relations with Russia, he for the November races. Asked said, might force them to spurn j to campaign, Mr. Truman an il. S. aid and join the Soviet orbit swered in one word: no. Congress still wants to dispose of a few "must" measures and to stick around until Mr. Truman signs or vetoes the Communist control bill it sent him last nigh Truman sidestepped todav the question of whether he will sign the state unemployment compen- j ,oulnern Democrats are strongly in order to preserve their econ omic stability. General Bradley, chairman of fhe inint rhiefx nf Hlnff pnmnlnineH ciieci inai mj ,,nuu" V' . j i about tne "mandatory language economic help from the United I of ,he amcnimPnl. Hoffman said States shall lose that help if it m k i,. hi. aim exports to Russia or her satellites , pr(,SKient Green said it would ' or veto the subversives control bill arms or t.iiiiuiuuuics ..... i. . , ... ay ln0 nan(i, 0( American passea overwneimingiy oy von used tor military purposes, i n r cnemiP, ban would apply only while United , ' States forces are "actively en-1 . gaged in hostilities" to back up RCCr Handed United Nations security council de- mmiihsm cisions. Tun HPTPrih In House Republicans and minyi " Locals Attend )Ptpn Mr. and Mrs. Rusty Sleirtttfrger and sons at tended a Steinberger family re union at Silverton over the week end. Visit at Lawsen HomsO- Mr. and Mrs. Emil Nielsen left Tues day for their. home in Yakima, Wash., following a visit with Mr. and Mrs. George Lawson in Rotai burg. Other visitors at the Lawson home recently included their son- law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Howard of McMinnville. salinn commission said It brought the average weekly wage to $71.99, highest on record, and $6.81 above the figure of last October. The average earnings in the printing and publishing industry dropped $3 a week to $78.68, be cause of a shorter work week. Rut employes in that field remained the best paid of all workers. loggers were a close second with $78.02 a week. U.N. Assembly favor of the Wherry amend- -..;.. pi..h NEW YORK - IJT) - Russia C,ce,hadplaJ- neo lor a snowuuwil vine nnmta- ., ,j r--i i..ftmkiu f v:,,i- I -j . , . . V. hut a nose count ndlcated '"""" """ "! sain ne wouiu 1101 iKn in r.iiiri gress. He did indicate early action saying there will be no suspense about what he does witn tne bill Mr Truman told a news con ference the bill hasn't reached his desk, but as soon as it does, he will let reporters know his views on it While he didn't indicate whether he would sign or veto it. he pre viously has shown displeasure with many of its provisions and had dav but a thev could not knock the amend ment from the bill. Indications were that a final compromise might authorize t h e Economic Cooperation administra tion to cut off aid to foreign na tions when, in the judgment of the a list Chinas charges that the .So- form. vict Union aided the Chinese Com-; mun.sts to power. Second Operation Is Til. BacAn.l,l.,'. 1J ..tin. " lie nnrmuij b urn r ing committee defeated the Rus sian move 11 votes to two. The negative votes were cast by the Life Term Given Killer Of Wife's Ex-Husband ic.iinnal Wnriiv rounril I h n e : Sov iet Union and Czechoslovakia. nminni are sendinB to Russia or India abstained. National- PORTLAND (.f) William her friends articles or commod ities that are being used for mil itary purposes. Glen Jordan, 55. was sentenced lo Why Truman Objects life in the stale penitentiary Wednesday arter pleading guilly to a charge of second degree mur der. Jordan, an unemployed iron worker, had been on trial for first degree murder in the fatal shoot ing at the Labor temple here Aug 3 of Joseph N. Taylor, 42, ex-husband of Jordan's wife. He entered the guilly plea to the reduced charge and circuit judge Lonergan pronounced the life sentence. V P GETS OREGON BID SAI.EM fT) Vice President Alben W RnrMcy has been invited to attend a Democratic rally in bait-Hi uctooer 13. The invitation was sent by State Treasurer Waller .1. Pearson, who said Barkley would be in the north-1 embargoed the shipment of arms west at tnai time. The President urged elimination of the Wherry amendment in a letter to Cannon. He sent a sim ilar one to Chairman McKellar (D-Tenn) of the senate approp riations committee. "No one." Mr. Truman wrote. 'can quarrel with the ostensible purpose of the amendment to j Pe0D'e ist China's charges against Russia were first raised at the 1949 as sembly session. Russia also was defeated, 12 to two, on its efforts to keep the old Greek-Ralkan question off the assembly's agenda. Soviet Foreign Minister Vishin ky referred lo the Chinese Nation alists as "phantoms and ghosts" who have no legal right to be heard as representatives of the Chinese weaken the war-making potential of Communist dominated countries and on the surface the amend ment may seem to be a plausible nienns for accomplishing that end. "But (he ';.ct is that it would defeat its own purpose and accom plish substantially the opposite re sult from that intended it would weaken the free nations more than it would weaken the Soviet bloc." The president said nations re ceiving U. S. economic help have The Russian move in the com mittee marked the second time in the three-day-old session of t h e assembly that the Chinese repre sentation question has received an airing. Upon its opening Tuesday the assembly defeated Russian-Indian resolutions designed to oust the Chinese Nationalists from the U. N. and give their seats to the Chinese Communists. The pit of Mauna t.na, the Haw aiian volcano, is two miles deeo lo eastern Europe for some two and twice that long. Performed On G. B. Shaw LUTON, England Cf Play wright George Bernard Shaw to day underwent a second major op eration at the hospital wnere he has been recovering from a bro ken thigh, the British Press as sociation reported. The agency said the new surgery was designed to relieve a bladder and kidney condition which be gan to trouble the 94-year-old Irish born dramatist after he was first operated on for a fractured thigh. Shaw broke his thigh in a fall in his garden. After the thigh was operated on Sept. 11 Shaw was pronounced in good condition. However, the blad der condition shortly afterward caused his physicians some concern. PAGE POLITICIANS! ASTORIA iJP) Butcher shop not bars, are the right setting for campaigning, Austin flegel said here. Flegel, Democratic candidate for governor, said that in a bar, "somebody always wants to start i an argument. In the butcher shop, ' though, they listen. Mrs. Ingeborg Larsen Dies Here Wednesday Mrs. Ingeborg Larsen, 79, died Wednesday at her home here fol lowing a short illness. She was born in Norway, April 8, 1871 and came to the Uiled States in 1893, making her home in Minneapolis, Minn. She was married to Anton Larsen Sept. 19, 1896 at Blooming Prairie, Minn. They came to Douglas county in 1,904, settling in Lookingglass val ley, where they have resided since 1946, whei. they moved to Rose burg. They observed their golden wedding anniversary Sept. 19. 1946. Mrs. Larsen had been a member of the Methodist church for 60 years. Surviving are the widower, An ton of Roseburg, a brother, Olaf Helselh of Norway, and several nephews and nieces. Services will be held at the I-ong and Orr mortuary Friday, Sept. 22, at 2 p.m., with Rev. C. N. Currier officiating. Concluding ser vices and interment will be in the Lookingglass cemetery. Davenport Fire Spreads . To Walls Of Apartment The Roseburg city fire depart ment was called to an apartment house at 243 Sheridan street to ex tinguish a fire which had started in a davenport of one of the apart ments. The fire department reported that the blaze started shortly after 8 p. m. It spread to the walls of the room but the fire was put oui quickly. Damage to the apartment was estimated by the firemen at $500 The cause of the fire is still being investigated. MilcT Epid emics Of Polio Beset 2 Oregon Counfftff (WETLAND - c) L'matiJJ. and Linn counties are areas w "mild" polio epidemics, the state health otticer says. One of the 17 casei reported for Umatilla county resulted yester day in the death of Dale Patineau, 16, of Lftington. He had been under treafmOt in a Walla Walla hospital. Linn county has had 14 re ported cases so far this year. Dr. Harold M. Erickson, the health officer, noted that the Port-land-Multnomah county area has had 59 cases, but said this was far from epidemic proportions be cause of the greater population. A new case in the city boosted the year's tally to 51, of which five have resulted in deaths. Last year there were 28 cases and six deaths in the same pnod. The disease incidence appeared to Dr. Thomas L. Mador, city health officer, to have reached its peak. "It has followed the pattern of other years, starting in July's hot weather, gathering momentum in August and then tapering off with the advent of cooler weather," he said. The latest Umatilla county cases involved a 10-year-old Stanfield girl and a 35-year-old Athena man SAN FRANCISCO l!P A California national guard plane rushed three artificial respirators to Portland yesterday for treat ment of poliomyelitis patients. They were supplied by chapters of the National Foundation of In fantile Paralysis at Alameda, San Francisco and Sacramento. The Portland chapter had called for extra respirators when new polio cases exhausted the equipment pool there. Rosefirg Active Club Plans Amateur Program Plans to continue promotion of amateur shows were discussed at the weekly Active club breakfast meeting this mornjas at the Shal imar. O President KVnneth Atterbury named Barney Root, Dick Gilman and Kr4r. Webster on a special committee to work with the board of directors in promoting the nel show, a date for which will be announced later. Russ Marshall of Vancouver, Wash., was a guest of Arlo Jacklin. LOGGER KILLED DALLAS, Ore. i A rolling log fatally injured Mjjjayn Ritchey, Dallas, at the King wolhers log ging operation near Hoskins Wed nesday. f) He was the serond logging acci dent victim in the arejAin three days. DRIVER DIES AT WHEEL PORTLAND P Leon C. Me Reynolds, 56, Tualatin, slumped at the steering wheel last night and his car rammed into four parked automobiles. He was dead when taken toO hospital. POLLUTION KILLS FISH PORTLAND P There were many dead fish in the Willamette river here Wednesday and a state sanitary authority engineer blamed low water and pollution. Engineer K. H. Spies said the oxygen needed to keep the fish alive had been dissipated by pol lution of the river from Cottage Grove to the river's mouth. The condition may last through October, Spies said. THERE'S NO HAIFWAY QUALITY IN TUNA ! 'if 1$ A man can't do a full day's work on a "half, eaten" lunch! And, a tuna sandwich is either appetizing and satisfy iug...ori( isn't. Always liny this famous hrand of quality "Bite Sire" tuna and bt sure you are parking a lunch that will he eaten with gusto. ..and that is full of the valuable fond elements a man needs. It's a rich food . . . eas ily digested, so that it gives a quick pick-up! C'ttn uiei Trod.mofk el Von Camp Sm Foad Co. l.,T.rmiwi1 tiloftd, Calif. g nr. ifeif i . " ... . lit IMBmSlMMMEiSiB mmmf JUNIOR JURY spreads the word about Kellogg's great new cereal Th kids lobbied up lh evidence- Corn "p right out of lh tt. Nnd (hit (trteil that mrruM itH own wfM'trnin' i ih bt Ihu.jr tht' hp pnrd lo hrwiktMt vet I Wonderful unm-kin', too. M-4 "t ff ; a'j!ajiajHI'l''ll'''l' Wiisa ' iiianai ii'gi iis-o tmmwmfflmmwmm We at Kellopg's have seen peo ple go for cereals in our time. But neirr have we seen any thing like the way everybody's going for Corn Pops our brand-new cereal that's alretdy sweetened for you ! And there's more to Coj-n Pops than meets the tongue. It's rich in quick food energy, vita min D, and has whole-corn val ues of other import ant vitamins that growing kids need. Get plenty it gojefast ! at break fast timHncT any other time. " rfrv rs xr y 1 SEE l-hese ... BUY these VALUES at ...I Model Market, conveniently located in Winston, brings you all of the values that you want to help stretch your budget. Every day, j every week, you will find the highest quality foods and the lowest j prices. Save pennies, save more, shop Model Market today and every day. Your budget will go a lot farther. NO. 2i CAN TOMATOES Spencer Solid Pack PEACHES Hunt's Halves or Sliced TOMATO JUICE tibby, ...... DREFT SOAP M o D E L 2t CAN 11 V 1 29clk.- 75c 21c 31c' 27c - lb. 7Sr KUUND STEAK . I ::::29c::r75cL. AKS-"''-s9c r"5 - " 69c AC0N lb. 59r n subs i i TA L H. 59c -Vegetables TIDE SOAP 3IWi M A R K E T LETTUCE TOMATOES RADISHES f t RM 19c COFFEE, Folgers u. 89c?n. 1.77 PORK & BEANS, Libby'S3or;;s219c PEAS, Red Dart .30)ti 223c TUNA, White Star, Grated ,20c COTTAGE CHEESE, Kraft's pi-t 27c rin ADCTTCC vivnnm ik4 IlisDS ALL 0PUI 1 1A Larton l,t7 POTATOES Margarine Durkee's c lb. 35c MODEL MARKET.. ..winstons little super market 0 e o 0 3