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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 30, 1950)
coca CDo o . o 8 Th Newt-Review, Roteburoj, Ore Sot., Sept. 30, 19S0 im.iTf..r ..gn-. , ,- I ! ai r i . if' n I liyijr J-.''..; l,-3gje3-1 ' .r.- ' ' . r"-"" " p,"""V' ;iTMaiJl vwy'Mfr-5?5-'" ' ' ?'5Vy s- At Mufti. :SlKr.i 2Sfe,f S - , f,-- t?4V T v. ''J "J Li, seii o f H mum W. Roseburg Sewer Rushed With nearly a third ot the ditches he cut and the pipes laid, thus pre- at the rate of 3'j feet per min diiR and pipes laid. Stateside Can-' venting the need (or teanns into ute. i In more suitable soil it will miction Co. is rushing for early the streets every tim ea new sewer travel six feet per minute. It cle- completion of the installation of connection is to he made. vales the dirt and windrows it at sew ers in West Kusrhui . The accompanying pictures show one side of the trench in the same The latest report Irom City Man- the work in progress. The upper operation. The trencher is now asor M. W. Slankard is that in the left picture shows a trench on working on .Maple street.) first three weeks ;s.i fee.t ot pipe I'mpqua avenue. The work leaves The lower left picture shows an 28.500 feet. The completion dale room for only one way traffic on excavator starting work on Ham has been laid of ultimate total of this street, while in some parts son street. Upper right shows an has been set for Pec. 15, hut the traffic has to he stopped entirely excavator at work in a deep trench contractor hopes to he through ear- for a few days to permit the sewer in front' of the Seely residence Iter than that. installations. i alongside the river. The lower A lot of work is still to he done. ' The middle left picture shows right picture shows construction After the main linvs have been Karl Goodrich operating a No 31 i work on the pump house, west end placed, cross connection lines from Parsons trencher, digging a trench ! of the Roseburg high school grand- the main sewer to the property over lie feet deep ami Progress-, stand ai Finlay field. (Pictures by lines of the respective lots must ing in the packed soil in the street ' Paul Jenkins.) Oregon's Labor Shortage At SAI.KM i.T Record employ-' ment lias given (!gon its most is more Kian a vear ago.; acute labor shortage in five years, r There are Mam norsnn. -L . n . .. . ,nrs, -itv-oo in toon industries, and The commiss,on sauP It fille.1 3J.700 in construction jobs. ; iom non-farm jobs in August. . which is the :(ratest monthly totaCFvonn:,. A: ' c. ' smce September, IMS. tVOngellSt Arrives For Almost UXK, skiUcd and semi- Church Of Christ Duty ."tt'rS.""- ..- ... . . mZU Vi,- i. . . 'r' ".- .im mission saul U.(HH) (ht- looking for work, but half nf thorn irn (.. .k.. est re old persons or are parti- thud lower than at any time since :L:,r,nhvs? months The commission sad iW') nor nons are working in non twi jobs. which is only 2.000 shoft of the Five-Year Mark all-time peak of August, lnifl. It . v vimiuiu diiu my lamiiy to takp over the evelist duties at tho rhurrh nf rhrUtrt i,i.t,rV . . viuiiiiu duiidu -u worn ueor;e rrwrdineMIrK i 1944. AfteiT- una City. Calif. ' i una City, Calif. J Clifford is married and has three cmklren Tomato Hits Sen. Taft Dicing His Address ,., . .tAN'"-N- - Someone makinc a ramnaion ntvh in .borb?e W.TS?,hur T!h. . . u- . 2 ,h:heu,0mll Slruc,k ?'m ,h,sh " the chest some of it splattering nnch,,Sk,n1.W,U0,, " Waynesburg police Vaid they had noi arresied anybody in connection Wednesday but wa noc brought to i. ." . ""LD.ro.USM. ii-in.umu KUirsuav nililH. Hfn I nectler asked Taft about it. a didn't splatter much." said uJ . . . . CJ ., O Snow ia never aeen in Adelaide, the capital of South Australia. Truman's Letter nent Marines q Will Be Used In G.O.P. Campaign WASHINGTON (API The marine eorpi may have for. given President Truman (or calliM.it a police force, but tome Republicans ere out to $ee that tnir femoui letter isn't forgotten. A (Dumber were disclosed to have mede plant to use the letter in their cempeigns for reelection, accusing the President of heving blundered when he wrote it. O One house member, himself a former marine, was reported to have had 50.000 photstfaphic cop ies made of the letter Mr. Truman sent to Rep. McDonough (R-calif) a month a;o. Superimposed over the letter ia a photo shoawng two weary ma rines, hiding behind a dirt mound and ready to shoot, with one of them laying to th' other: "So thia is a police action!" Colleagues who told of his action declinea to identify the congress man. McDonough said the letter has been made available to some mem bers to copy, but that her doesn t know how many did so. Now that the letter is up for sale to tee highest "eligible'' bid der, he has curtailed reproduction privileges. To Hood the country with copies might reduce its value, he told a reporter. McDonough said he already has received several attractive bids from persons who want to buy the original. He is soing to let the Marine Corps league, an organiza tion if ex-leathernecks, decide who whall be allowd to buy it after all bids are in. Jo offer less than $1,000 will be considered, and the letter won't be sold to "crackpots," he said. The league, McDonough said, will get the money. McDonough said he has no doubt about legality of selling the letter. "It was sent to me and it is mine." he explained. "I can do with it what I want." The letter was the President's reply to McDonough's suggestion that the marine corps be iven equal representation with t h e fought against defense prepara army, the navy and the air force J tions in the past, even as he said on the joint chiefs of staff. ; in the last session of Congress, in rejecting tne suggestion, the President referred to the marine corps as "the navy's police force" and said it has "a propaganda machine that is almost equal to Stalin's." The letter brought a storm of protest from the marines, ex-marines and others. The President apologized publicly and subse quently appeared at the Marine Corps league s meeting here to explain what he called "use unfortunate language." of Speakers Scheduled On Freedom Crusade Finn Sagild. Denmark; Maruice Morello. France, and Wilfried Moeding, Germany, will be guest speakers at the first fall meeting of Riverside PTA to be held Mon day nilht, Oct. 2. at the school house. The topic will he. "The role they hope the United Slates will play in the crusade for freedom." Parents and Wends are invited to attend. PARIS BORN PARIS nira a mi lrV1- ifi3lfl ' CANCAN 241 N. Jackson LUMBER 11 For FREE DELIVERY in city area LUMBER SALES CO.9 Inc. ftrteil Yord LolatedQ GARDEN tlEY ROAD & S. P. TRACKS TT defense Program Not To Be Halted, Truman Advises WASHINGTON i.f) Presi dent Truman says there will be no letup in administration defense g plans in the event of expected vic tory in nuiea. The President would not say, at a news conference, whether Gen. Douglas Mac-Arthur wit pursue the North Koreans beyond the 38th parallel. But he did say that the instructions to MacArthur, the su preme United Nations commander, ore broad. It had been reported previously that MacArahur has been given the power to send troop across the dividing line between north and south Korea if that action is nec essary to destroy the Communist army. Mr. Truman said he was very happy over the improved situation in Korea. He added that he hoped that the peace for which he said he has long sought eventually will be realized. He said that Gen. Omar Bradley, chairman of the joint chiefs of sta'f. was exactly correct when he said in a talk Wednesday that there cannot be any letup in defense preparations after the Korean war is over. At the same time. Mr. Truman said he expected opposition to con tinued expansion of the defense program once peace comes to Ko rea. He nredicted the ODnosition i would come from those who have : but ne did not name them. Defense, he said pointedly, takes money. Mr. Truman said he had no in formation hatsoever on a r e ported peace feeler attributed in a roundabout way to the North Koreans. In response to another question, the President said Gen. Dwight Eisenhower is at his beck and call in the event he should be needed in any emergency. He said the former army chief of staff, now president of Columbia university, is always available should his services be needed bv the country, but he hasn't any job which needed the general's atten tion. DRESSMAKING ALTERATIONS Zoa Newman Cobb 8t Phene 3S7-R MADE PARIS IOVED 'V-'::; Cf ICCAlUE Dispensed by the dram in our store. from $2.00 icinnacii a Phone 7 AT PRICES YOU CAN AFFORD COMPLETE LINE OF Builder's Supplies Roofing Construction Hardware Points O .a. T7 0