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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 12, 1941)
Defense Garden Program Should Fit Needs of Family; Suggestions Offered Good Planning Will Maximum benefits from the defense garden are reaped when all work is done by the owner, The size of the most profitable garden will therefore depend upon the amount of leisure the owner has, and his inclination to do Hardening work. Unless the product of the home garden Is needed for food which could not be purchased, it Is not wise to plant a larger space than will be well tended. Two hours '( on each of three days a week aoted to this leisurely, pleasant I and healthful physical recreation 1 will take good care of a garden I 30 by 40 feet or thereabouts; I and from this space can be har 3 vested vegetables sufficient for the average family, except for potatoes and sweet corn. In deciding what shall he grown, these crops may be con-1 sidered as nccer:-arv in most : tions -of... our country: Beans, lima beans, beets, carrots, cab- bage. chard, cucumbers, lettuce, 4 parsnips, parsley, peppers, onion sets. peas, radishes, Swiss chard, Perdue, went to Myrtle Creek tomatoes. where they attended a. lecture by I Eliminate, of course, those you .a missionary who recently return ? do not like, and remember that ,,( from Tibet. The evening was lit is better to grow small m.-ule especially interesting by the S amounts of many things than lo j.howins of slitles depicting scenes t in-vutL- join t-ir.iti- ut-a i it.-in- I lively few vegetables which wi ' likely be overproduced, and give you a monotonous diet. Substitutes Suggested One of the great advantages of the home garden is the opportun ity it gives to grow annual veg etables which you might not oth erwise try. To replace Items i or to add to it if you have the I 'Brussels snrouts for fall crop: i celerv. brocVoli, especially ,he i green sprouting. Chinese cab- j 1 bage for fall salads; chicory or J endive for fall green salads; col- i lards, corn salad, eggplant, eel- eriac, cress, kale, kohlrabi, leek,!""""-" "" melons, mustard green, pump- L-i m .,- .,i:.nt cninaeh. I squash, both" the winter kind and -S u:..u Wo delicious in the babv stage. especially the vegetable mar rows; and turnips and rutabagas. which are especially successful in sections which have an earlvlJohn Ulam. spring and late fall. A ramble through your seed catalogue will produce other sug gestions which should be con sidered in making up your seed WE'RE HEADiN' FOR THE TAVERN GRILLE "The Home of Good Food' Carl Black, Proprietor POfiCBURn NEWS-REVIEW, Give Balanced Diet ( order. Some new vegetable or variety added to your list will give you more pleasure than the staples, and it will be something lo serve your friends when they come to dine. Days Creek PAYS CREEK, Feb. 12. Mr, lln(l Mrs- R.(-v nuncan and daugh- ,tei, iviarjone, Mrs. waller Wilson. dc-j1""1 John Wilson were attending to business matters in Roseburg Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Sumner and daughter, Donna, were Sunday visitors at the Dillard home of Mr. Sumner's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Dee Coon, During the week end Miss Gem j Hutchinson was the puest of Miss Susie Crispen at "Ford's" near sec-.Canvonvillo. Friday evening, Mr. and Mrs. David Fate and daughters, Ruth and Mary Ann, accompanied by Fiances, Betty Jean and Berdean ffoni Tibet. i Mrs. Archie Ferguson went to Roseburg on Wednesday of last week after a shipment of day-old chicks. Miss Thelma and Miss Zelma Davis and Bob Bonney were among those attending the thea ter in Myrtle Creek Saturday cv- j Mr. and Mrs. Homer Gallop of Roseburg were Sunday visitors at the homo of Mrs. Gallop's father. ;'ol" whpn lhl'' returned they were accompanied by M"' ie Su!,0,n' . Mr. and Mrs. Buster Barnes and "n. Hoy. have moved to Canyon- ville to make their home. Mr. ' there. iMrs. S.USIC AIVOI O arriVCU J ues- oay to spend a month here at the hnmn nf her niece. Mrs. R. A. liMoore. Sgt. Calvin Ulam, of Camp Murray is spending several days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Pete Ulam and tneir niece, nuss niarjorie wrigni were business visitors in Rose burg Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Poole and ROSEBURG, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1941. daughter, Edna Mae, were Myrtle Creek visitors Saturday evening. While there they attended the show. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hutchin son were Sunday visitors at the home of the latter's brother-in-law and sister, Mrs. and Mrs. Roy Duncan. Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Tison return ed Wednesday from Tule Lake, Calif., where they had been at tending to business matters. Miss Ivan Welch and son, Noel, and Alex Van Norman were Rose burg visitors Tuesday. While they visited the latter's mother, Mrs. Frank Van Norman, who is re ceiving medical attention at Mercy hospital. Mrs. Gladyes Culbertson left Friday for Washington where she will attend to business mat ters and visit friends. Miss Elva Sumner was an over night guest Tuesday at the home of Miss Gem Hutchinson. Jack Silva, manager of the I Cedar Supplies company, was a ! business visitor in Roseburg Fri day. Miss Marjorie Church and Charles Mather attended thr theater in Myrtle Creek Saturday evening. Ophir Perdue was taken to ! Mercy hospital in Roseburg Tues jday suffering from a severe in jury to his hand. I Mr. and Mrs. Joe Allin and Los jter Jackson were Roseburg call ers l ucsuay. in uie evening mey stopped at the Ivan Welch home for a short, time. Mrs. Ted Perdue is confined to Mercy hospital where she is to undergo a throat operation. John Sutton and George Morse were transacting business in r?ncohiii'(r WmlnpsH.-iv Mr. Snttnn was also attending to business Mintlmt In Pnselllll-ir Mnnrtav. Canyonville CANYONVILLE, Feb. 1 -Mr. and Mrs. Leon Nichols moved:';'"'" Thursday into the George iong house. Their baby son has just re covered from a several days' ilL- I- L. Brewer recently sold two ; Thursday to his home in Carlton, ncss. I hogs to the Ledgerwood Meat on.gon. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Paulson, and market, total weight 932 pounds.) ilosco'P Chancy took the school daughter Barbara, spent the past George Oldenberg recently sold a bus nm t0ok a ioa( f the local week at Tiller where Mr. Paulson 1 "five point" hog which weighed j fKS t0 ,.oot for ,he volleyball has been cutting shakes. Everett :S33 pounds. iam basketball games Friday ev stayed at the O. G. Moser home; !lnt jirs Harold Bay, who ening being played at Riddle, while his parents were away. ! have been at the home of Mrs. I Both teams wou over their Rid- Mr. and Mis. Dick Steele and , family moved this week to Wil-1 I lamette City to make their home. I Mrs. C. " E. Y'oung returned Sunday from the Mercy hospital i in Roseburg where she has receiv i cd medical care for the past sev : oral weeks. She is not fully re- covered as yet, however, and is j unable to do her work. , Faith Schroeder fell while skating at Winchester Monday evening, sustaining a badly sprained ankle. j Elinor Kambcrg is recovering , from an attack of tonsilitis. Mr. and Mrs. Don Lloyd rj)3 Utile son of Klamath Falls visit iod the Charlie Young home dur ' Ing the week end on their way to Portland. I Mr. and Mrs. Earl Manley have returned from Portland. Mr. ; Manley Is working at the Tiller sawmill. I Mr. and Mrs. Buster Barnes ! have moved into the house re 1 eently occupied by the Dick : Steele family. j Mr. and Mrs. Guy McGee re ; turned Mrs. Mary Sagaberd to ' her home In Gardiner Saturday. I Dorothy Fairchild of Azalea he f pan work at the Bridge tavern tills week. Mrs. Norman Ashcraft returned ihe first of the week from Ash land where she has been visiting her motler who has been very' ill. I 1 The night crew at the local t sawmill has been laid off tempor arily while adjustments and im-1 piovernents arc being made. Myrtle Creek MYRTLE CREEK. Feb. 12. J Daryl Buell, ton of Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Buell, left for Richmond, Calif., the first of the week, where he has employment, j Mm. Ada Crawford In assisting ; with the work at the Eddy stand at Coos Junction. I Harold March, who is teach-' Inir school at Tiller, was a week-1 end visitor here. He reports his Italian 'Victory' ........ . - L . ' :- ' ' J Italia n occupation of Skit BarnuU (pre erected, commemorating Italian "Liberation of Libya From I'.Ryp lo:i T'.rannv." A driver nf the Australian Official PliotoRinplU.: Units - - rnp ins:rli;tion or. this stone after Biiiish debated Ilallan forces. ; parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. March I are expected home from southern j California, about the middle of i February. I Tl,n I or!,,,,,-,.,),: hnllrliniY j tt;n ton weighing scales and stock ! fH-ns. SOUth Of tOWn Oil the Pad- j tie highway. I I Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Portouw and daughter, Yvonne, of Portland, 1 . :" ' Bay's parents, on the Albert Mar- IT'S HERE America's Most Beautiful America's Most Useable REFRIGERATOR The New 1941 SEIMWM See all models on display in our store WM. CALHOUN'S RADIO MUSIC STORE 225 N. Jackson St. THIRTEEN Stone Left in Plight! was brief, but "victory" monuments j tin place, have leased ihe Roy Conley farm near Buck Fork, I Glen Gllmoro and Theodore I Wallace, local boys from Camp I MlllTay, Wash., haVO llCOH visit- ing their week. Rev. Eldon Wood, who was call ed to Roseburg recently to preach the funeral of J. J. Thornton, who passed away In Eugene, came here for a visit with his mother, Mrs, Emma Woods, and other relatives. Ho returned die opponent's. Host burq