Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948, September 30, 1942, Page 5, Image 5

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ROSEBURS NEVVS-RfeVIEW, ROSEBURG. OREGON. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30. 1942.
FIVE
OCaECCTrCIDEKlTr
v i - -m mm t niir mm f ms a , iiiii mm f AAr MmA a i i
Rentals
JOR RENT 204-acre farm. 60
ts tillable, balance pasture and
timber. Large dwelling, barn
and chicken house. Good stock
ranch. Phone 218, Fred A.
; GofX, 122 S. Stephens street.
: FOR RENT 3-room furnished
r .x house, electricity. 1 acre of
ground, garage, chicken house,
i : nut dryer. Curry Estate. $10.00
f month. Available In 2 weeks.
.... Owner home Sundays.
.fAfSOLINE pumps for rent at
dissociated station. Coos June
Ttlon. Call 537, McDermott.
FURNISHED APARTMENTS
424 Fioed, corner Mill. Inquire
Roscburg hotel.
FURNISHED ground floor apt.
. Newlv DSDcrcd. Firelace.
Adults, 645-J.
SLEEPING ROOM. Steam heat.
'Sell building, 122 S. Jackson.
FURNISHED HOUSE, $8.00.
-.Braughton, Miller's Addition.
. UOHLHAGEN APARTMENTS
.Strictly modern. Phone 550.
!joi
iRTHSIDE APARTMENTS.
Modern. Phone 802-R.
fe
ARTMENTS, Close
In. 302
West Washington.
RENT Modern apartment.
lotel Valley.
LEEPING rooms.
707 West
dosher street
Autos
WANTED TO BUY
Late model cars, trucks or pick
ups. Cash prices. Advise mod
el, type, condition of tires, etc.
Kelly Owens
235 So. Commercial
Salem, Oregon
f WANTED 25 USED CARS
V CASH AT ONCE
NO DELAY
TOP WHOLESALE PRICE FOR
; YOU CAR
LOCKWORj MOTORS
h
V WANTED 11
' 1941 model,
or 2-ton truck,
any make, 160"
wheolbase prefen-ed. Roscburg
Lumber Co.
NTED '37 or '38 model car.
x 33B, Sutherlln, Oregon.
' ' Dentistry
" DR. NERBAS
Fluorescent teeth in plastic
1 Old Dlatcs made like new.
JO years success In partial or full
:ywilLure icpmceiNC-iii same uay.
:.'.uil.rac-uuu try i UL'a 11 i-uuuem.
t Gas wnen acsirea.
V UncnnM PMii Phnns 488
UD RYDER
tGfteAt gizzards,
I Pe-Pi' i Ti-WkT
KfeAULY A
CAMEL?
(5feAI.LT A yr V SOME. HELV - VKftSY J HITCH AKOUND V" B.k W .A
J.jjf. , I ..... ,. I ..Ill
ALLEY OOP Taking No Chances By V. T. Hamlin
1 t GREAT GALLOPIM' GOSH I IT'S A GOOD THING t WIWOKL SjilSkrrl 5TOt)jp'DyJOORC,EK. 1'
( PIDW'T KNOW EEMy HAP THAT1 NEVErVoR METHEV JDnVT J (OJR LEERicTigNASM T I AFTER" MEP 5
. V KAANY MONKEYS OM HE (2. .(tdoKSUCH LLOW UPTHE R J WAS "TOO ( SHB THOU6HTN TPfrA R SF, Jja lTIOKUVOU
SIDE...THEY MUST BEHEAVIkJ A BEATIN' APMTAGEmBUT J I GREAT SHE I OOP HAP HER )9P?, ) SKJi? lOvV HO HEB
jj lg
I FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS Warnnig Signal By Merrill Blosser
Cub's simply. DEE VINE.' I was ? ( Afisaid f " ...J fHwiMoioHE doallIwhem I first saw hia. fvbu'o beher
1 GEE, AND MDU DIDMT EVEN V A F PAID T3 ! ! Tb ? f IF I HAD TWAX SOU N JUST I A TtMY BELL SEEMED TO . NOT LET
f SAY A WORD THE r-a-TnT7yiiiri m.'Tdfe WHY? A SPOKEW, FIFTEEN MlMUTES ? TlNKLE7 INSIDE MB J FRECKLES
For Sale Miscellaneous
FOR SALE Canning tomatoes.
Pick them yourself. 50c per
bushel. Bring containers. Cleo
Anderson, 1 mile north of Mel
rose store.
FOR SALE Fordson tractor, in
good shape, with plow, or will
trade for sheep or cows. Morn
ingstar, at Oakland.
FOR SALE 1 all-steel baby
buggy. Good condition. Pearl A.
Lawson, Riddle, Oregon.
NEARLY NEW, large, "Alexander
Smith floor plan rug, 12x21
feet. Call 380.
FOR SALE Mirror, desk, 2
lamps, other small articles.
1125 E. 3rd street.
FOR SALE New
trailer, $200.00.
Camp View.
14-foot
Clyde
house
Gish,
PRUNES for sale.
Louis Bauer,
Melrose road. .
Wonted
WANTED Room and board fot
2 high school girls In private
home. Box 1331, c-o News-Review.
WANTED Good 30-30 or 30 Rem
ington rifle, or other calibre if
you have ammunition. Give
make, model, condition and
price. P. O. Box 95, Canyon
vllle, Oregon.
WANTED Prune drying trays,
2 by 3 feet. State condition,
kind, price. Arb Stearns, Oak
land. WANTED Good electric wash
ing machine. Phone 11F5.
CASH for filberts.
Oakland.
Allin Tuthill,
Trade
EXCHANGE Business income
property in Medford. Establish
ed 16 years, under lease to re
liable company. Buildings all
concrete block, In first class
condition. Income above $1200
net per year. Want well im
proved acreage or ranch. Write
Box 64, Chcmult, Oregon.
Personal
I will Jiot be responsible for any
debts contracted by anyone
" other than myself after Sep
tember 14. J. W. McDonald,
Sutherlln, Ore.
Miscellaneous
NO HUNTING or trespassing on
my property. Ralph B. Bigc
low, Melrose Star route, Rosc
burg, Ore.
V ltrSNrTAFIELT Wf, , fGlVE THE END OF fk V ( 1 GOTW CLE,
) jzfli rouse give me , j i ( the Rppe a half- j II vuta his way, Red )
NO trespassing or. hunting at any
time on our property. Kruse
Bros. . :
Livestock
TEAM of bay work horses,
weight 1500 pounds, 6 and 7
years old. Perfect match, well
broke, gentle. Price, with good
harness, $250.00 cash. Call 1120
N. Jackson after 6:00 p. m.
WANTED Well broke, tame,
saddle horse. Suitable for wo
men or children. Give descrip
tion and price. Wm. A. White,
Sutherlln.
FOR SALE One young sow with
pigs, $40.00, 3 nice woancrs.
pigs, $-10,000, 3 nice wcancis.
Oscar Weeks, Myrtle Creek.
YEARLING boar Hampshire
fifty dollars. Weaners, seven
and eight dollars. J. H. Witt
meyer, Yoncalla.
ATTENTION We remove dead
and worthless stock free. Call
collect 52 F-12 or 338. Rose
burg By-Products.
FOR SALE 1 to 100 big, healthy
breeding ewes from 1 to 6 years
old. J. S. Bussell, Clendalo,
Oregon.
FOR SALE Two 10-monthoId
7'8 milking Shorthorn bulls.
Alma Hatfield.
FOR SALE Pack mule. G. W.
Cooper, Melrose.
WANTED 2 to 3 fresh cows.
Phone 3-F-22.
Real Estate
FOR SALE Largo dwelling.
Could be arranged for apart
ments. Lot 160x175 feet. 008
W. Oak street. This property
is close in, good soil and is of
fered at very low price for
quick sale. For particulars call
218.
Other residences, acreage and
farms to suit your needs.
Everything in Real Estalc and
Insurance. Fred A. Golf, 122
S. Stephens, phone 218.
FOR SALE Suburban home, 5
rooms, modern, bath, electri
city, cily water, six acres. Or
chard, garden, outbuildings',
shade trees. Sacrifice price,
$3,000. Terms. G. W. Young and
Son, 205 W. Cass. Phone 417.
FOR SALE Small farm, .some
stock and furnished house.
$750.00 for my equity.' 4 miles
from Roscburg on Looking
glass road. L. C. White.
FOR SALE Stock ranch. 340
acres, 9 miles W. of Oakland.
Easy terms. E. L. Settle, Oak
land. A Strange Catch
Help Wanted
WANTED Prune pickers. House
to live in. Bring bedding. Ed
gar Solle, 3 miles south of
Umpqua, west side of river.
PIN SETTERS WANTED Male
or female. Guaranteed wages.
Roscburg Bowling Alley.
WANTED CapaDIe lady : for
light housework and care of
baby. Phone 651-J. '
MESSENGER Boy, Rirl or man.
Ago 16 or more, bicycle. Post
master, Roscburg.
GIRL WANTED at Cy's Sand
wich Shop at once.
PRUNE PICKERS
once. Lindbloom.
wanted at
Lost and Found
LOST Gasoline delivery hose be
tween Consolidated warehouse
and Douglas county warehouse.
Please leave at General Petro
leum service station, Oak and
Stephens. Reward.
LOST Brown initialed billfold.
Finder take one third money
and please return to News-Review.
LOST Pair henna colored kid
gloves. Finder please return to
News-Review.
LOST Billy goat, tag number 68
in ear. Phone 3 F-12.
LOST Sunday, Brown
beads. Phone 798.
Rosary
Business Opportunities
FOR LEASE Service station in
best of location with a well es
tablished trade. Call at corner
Cass and Stephens streets from
S:t)0 to' 6:00. After 6:00 call
753-L.
Fuel
' PHONE 408
Green Slab Wood
ROSEBURG LUMBER CO.
IVOOD for sale. Phone 15F3.
Work Wanted
WANTED Poles to yard. Have
cat. Box 3328, care News-Review.
Poultry
CHOICE live fryers, .10c pound.,
Inquire ' Drive In Market, J
Norlhside.
GENERAL SAW FILING
Howard Case beer, 443 S Steph
PIANO TUNING
Arundel. Repairs, Demoth. 189-L
FLUE CLEANING
Furnaces vacuum cleaned fan
cleaning. Call 84 1. J. C Bew
ley.
FURNITURE REPAIRING
F. L. Miles, 430 N. Stephens.
Around the County
Sutherlln
SUTHERLIN. Sept. 30 Mrs.
Hugh Wahl returned Sunday
from a few days trip to Gaston
and. Portland where she visited
relatives and attended to business.
Mr. and Mrs. Doral Dauben
speck spent the week-end here
from Portland. While here they
visited friends and relatives and
looked after business affairs.
P. J. Davis spent a large part
of last week at the home of his
(laughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Alton Hebard, at Umpqua.
Mr. and Mrs. Merle England
and son, of Walton, Oregon, spent
the weekend at the Ray Hoyt
home east of town.
Jerry DcMuth visited here at
the home of his mother, Mrs. An
nabelle DeMuth, the first of the
week. He is employed In the ship
yards in Portland.
Mrs. Brlttain Slack and Mrs.
Edgar Slack relumed Saturday
from Texas where thye spent the
past month visiting with their
son and husband, respectively,
who Is in the army air force.
Mrs. Helmut Tllchc, who taught
In the fifth and sixth grade room
hero last year, has returned this
year to teach the. sevenths and
eighth grades. '
Mrs. Ray Scarbrough and da
ughter, Ruby, of Portland arriv
ed Sunday for a visit at the home
of the former's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. H. W. Snook. Ruby became
111 Monday and was taken to the
hospital in Eugene where she Is
For newspaper deliveries
after 5:30
Please Call
157-Y
Bv Fred Harman
RA&IO SERVICING
Hargls Radio Service. Phone 82?
Radio Doctor. 906 N. Stephen
Land Radio Service. Phot
LOCKSMITH
Pacific Key Serv. Phone 348
REFRIGERATION
Chet Hamm. Phone 715.
confined with rheumatic fever.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bfatton
and family are moving to the
home they recently purchased,
cast ol town.
Mr. and Mrs. Dee Atturbury
and son, Gordon, returned home
Monday from a two weeks vaca
tion spent at San Diego, Oakland
and Berkeley where they visited
relatives.
Dr. and Mrs. I. A. Dunlap are
building a new garage and wood
shed at their home on Calapooia
street. A. Metzker Is the carpen
ter. Mrs. Clyde Holman and sons.
Russcl and Jimmy, returned Sat
urday from Ashland where the
former has been receiving medi
cal treatment. She Is much Im
proved in health since her re
turn.
Mrs. Alice McCormack Is spend
ing a few days here looking after
business interests and visiting
relatives and friends, She has
been In Portland at tho home of
her son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Grant McCormack.
Riddle
Eugene Carpenter, who Is with
the army unit stationed at Spo
kane, Wash., arrived here Tues
day and will spend a 15-day fur
lough visiting with his mother,
Wrs. Joe Huftllc, and with
friends.
Mrs. Roscoe Ball and Infant
son, Jack Lee, were brought by
ambulance from Mercy hospital,
Roseburg, Friday morning and
are being cared for at tho Elbert
Ball homo. The Infant was born
at Mercy hospital Monday morn
ing. The Riddle school is Scheduled
to open Monday, Oct. S. Prof.
John D. Edwards Is principal,
Mrs. Ernest Riddle and Miss Ed
na Davis, high school assistants;
Mrs. Dorothy Pulley of Tilla
mook will teach the 7thi and 8th
grades; Bertha BUindcll the 4th,
5th and 6th, and Waneta Wallace
the 1st, 2nd and 3rd grades'.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Beauchamp
of Seattle are spending several
days here visiting at the home
of Mrs. Beauchamp's sister, Mrs.
N. S. Cornutt. ,
Mi-, and Mrs. Leland Hurter
and sons, Allen and Grant, have
moved to Myrtle Creek where
Mr. Haj-ler will teach in the
school this winter.
Mrs. Lizzie Crow, who has been
quite ill, is still improving. Mrs.
A. O. Speer and Mrs. Everett
Meagher arc assisting in her
care.
Relatives of Zanc Becker, Fred
Ramsey and Wesley McCullah, lo
cal boys who wore taken prison
ers at Wake Island, were made
happy by receiving letters from
them Saturday morning. The let
ters were written last June from
a war prisoners' camp at Shang
hai, and reported they were in
good health.
Azalea
. L. S. Johns and E. L. Johns at
tended to business in Myrtle
Creek Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Tanner
returned to their home here
Monday after spending several
weeks at Spanaway, Washington,
visiting their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Marlon
Smith. En route home they visit
ed wilh relatives at Salem, Sweet
Home and Springfield.
Mr. and Mrs. N. Ilarrell and
Mis. Everett Walton were in
Roseburg on business Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Fisher were
Canyonville business callers
Monday.
Mrs. Henry Speaker was In
Roseburg Thursday where she re
ceived medical care.
Yoncalla
YONCALLA. Sept. 20.- Mr.
ano Mrs. Fred Selton and daught
er, Ch.j-nvilne, spent Sunday with
friends at Winchester Buy.
Ijiwnna Edes of Culp Creek re
turned home Monday after spend
ing several days here visiting her
grandparents.
Mrs. Belle Rupprecht and da
ughter, Marcille, of Portland visit
ed friends hero Friday and trans
acted business.
, India turns out 8,000,000 pieces
of army clothing a month, In ad
dition to fleets of small war ves
sels and 'quantities of ordnance
parts and other military equip
ment. ,
Carrier-Based
Plarfes Needed to
.Flier Asserts
WASHINGTON. Sent. , 30
(AP) Lieutenant Commander
John S. Thach, thrice decorated
for his exploits as leader of a
squadron of navy fighter planes
in me racmc, declared yesterday
that only carrier-based alrpower
can ciear tne way for invasion
and defeat of Japan.
Horizontal bombers, ' whether
operated by the army or navy,
cannot do this lob nor can they
siop any torce ot enemy warships
directed against American object
ives, he said.
He declared that "not one ma
jor ship In this war has been
sunk by horizontal bombing," and
when asked whether that includ
ed the Haruna, Jap battleship
which the army reported sunk by
a flying fortress in the Philip
pines, he repeated his assertion.
"But with a couple of dozen air-
lorce units," Thach continued,
"and with enough marines to
carry out landings, I'm convinced
we can cut a path across the Pa
cificand cut it quickly right to
Japan. And, we can make it
stick."
Thach, who fought In the battle
of Midway, told a press confer
ence at the navy department that
carrier-based, dive bombers and
torpedo planes, with, carrier-based
fighter protectlpn, had dealt the
decisive blows which routed the
enemy and produced America's
foremost victory of the war.
Allied Air Raids
tfeakeil Balkans'
Link With Axis
By GLENN BABB
An optimistic but anonymous
Yugoslav, official' in London 'has
likened, today's frenzied situation
In the Balkans to that of 1918 on
the eve of the . collapse of the
satellite members of the Hohen-zollern-Hapsburg
axis. That au
tumn Turkey, Bulgaria and Austria-Hungary
one' by. one -raised
the white flag and the German
surrender followed quickly.
But hopes built on any Imagin
ed parrallel between that Septem
ber and this almost certainly will
prove Illusory. Undoubtedly Hit
ler, like tho Kaiser, is having
trouble keeping his lesser allies
ot the southeast up to the mark.
There can be little doubt that It
requires the strongest kind ot
pressure to keep the Rumanians
and Hungarians fighting side by
side against the red army, not to
mention the Italians. But the
parallel ends about there. In 1918
the British already had conquer
ed large sections of the Turkish
empire; Bulgaria had been invad
ed by the French and Serbs. Tho
polyglot armies of the Austro
Hungarian empire were simply
molting away.
Today tho threat of Invasion
is far away from Hungary and
Rumania. The armies they have
contributed to. the Russian cam
paign are fighting from 500 to
1,000 miles from home and tho
promises that they are to sharq
in the spoils ot conquest, or at
Ioast have favored places in the
Hitlerlan new order, have tho ap-
IS YOUR CHILD A
tlOSE PICKED?
It mmr be a liffn n( bowel wormat And
thoM roundworm!! ran rntiM rrnl trouble I
Other warnintre Are! unejur fttomnch, ner
vouitneM, itchinx Iwrta. IT you even eUHnect
roundworms, net Jnyne'e Vermlftiire todar I
JAYNK'8 te Amerlm'e leading proprietary
worm tnoliafno ; uenl by milliona for over a
century. Arte rently, yrt drive out round
worm!. Demand JAYNE'8 VKHMIFUGB.
NOTICE
City Subscribers
Our city collector is helping the prune
industry this year.
THE BARGAIN OFFER
is now in full swing and, as we are
short of help, we earnestly request
you to cooperate with us by calling
at the office or mailing your check
for your bargain subscription.
And it is again a special bargain
this year at $6.00 delivered by car
rier in the city.
An early payment will be appreciated
by the office force.
pearen'ce of fairly sound currency.
Then, too, the ties with whicn the
nazl conqueror grapples bis satel
lites to his cause are of far tough
er fiber than those of 1918, far
more ruthless terrorism, greater
thoroughness, of political control,
the all-prevadlng fear invoked by
the gestapo.
Alliance Getting Shaky
. But signs are appearing that
the one-sided alliance is suffer
ing increased stresses. Fear wag
the primary force that brought
the Balkan states into the com
bination, fear and greed. Now
fear is being exerted from the
other side and far away the war
has been brought home to Bucha
rest, Budapest, Sofia and Zagreb
by the long-range bomber, Amer
ican, British, Russian.
United States Liberators are
known to have, raided Rumania
last June and there are apparent
ly well-founded reports that the
same far-ranging machines had
much to do with the recent spread
of air raid panic through the axis
capitals of the Balkins. If these
reports are substantiated and
their truth brought home to the
peoples of the Balkins the moral
MARKET
REPORTS
LIVESTOCK
PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 29
(AP) tU. S. Dept. Agr.) CAT
TLE: Market about steady; few
medium steers 11.00-12.00, com
mon grades down to 9.00 with.
cutters down to 7.50; common to
low medium beef heifers 8.00
10.25, some held higher; cahncr
and cutter cows mostly 5,00-6.00,
fat. dairy type cows 6.S0-7.Q0 with
heavy Holsteins to, 7.50, medium
beet cowa . 7.75-.8.50; , co'mmpn to'
medium bulls 8.00-10.25; good to
choice vealers 14.00-15.00. .
'HOGS: Market active; mostly.
10 below Monday's average, top
15 off; good to choice 175-215 lbs.
14.65-75, few 14,85, . medium
grades 14.50 down; 230-290 lbs
mostly 14.00; light lights . 13.65-
14.00; gopd sows 300-550 lbs 12.75-
13.25; good to choice feeder pigs
14.00-15.00. , 1 ,
SiHEEP: Market about steady
but very slow on cull and com.,
mon ewes and lambs; few. good
spring lambs 11.50, feeders 9,00
50, light cull lambs downward to
6.00, good shorn lambs 10,25, com?,
mpn yearlings 7.00; toad feeder,
ewes 111 lbs 3.00, good slaughter
ewes salable 4.00-4.50, culls dowp
to 1.00.
PRODUCE
PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 30.-.
(AP) These are the prices re
tailers pay wholesalers, except
where otherwise noted:
BUTTER, Pflnts, A grade, 51
514c In parchment wrappers, 52
521c In cartons; B grade, 50-50.0,
in parchment wrappers, 51-51ic lit
cartons.
EGGS Price' to producers: A
large, 45c; B large, 40c; A me
dium, 40c; B medium, 36c dozen.
Reside to retailers, '3-4c higher for
cases; cartons, 5c .higher.
DRESSED TURKEYS Sell
Ing price: New. crop, 37-38c lb. '
All other produce prices steady,
unchanged.
HEMORRHOIDS (Piles)
Hernia (Rupture). Fisswt or Frstoft
eh (Uisrdon twpaJr rWr
inn inoinoy tuning a
power. Poi 30 yoirt w bv I
aoooMfnlir tiMtod Uo.fi
arla af DMfitafot lhM all- 1
11)1, (It boipllai opf4 I
tloo. tffo ooalUaaiMt. No '
IOM ol tlm .torn work. Call 11
or saalnation or mmd for
VXIK doaotiptlv Booklet
Opm fvanMtji, Mon.,WJ trl, 7 fe 0J6
Dr. C.J. DEAN CLINIC
Phytic! m mud Bargn
tf. S Cor. X Bunt it da and- Grand Ava,
TalpHoB KAat3918, Portland Oraaoa
R2