ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURG, OREGON, MONDAY, JULY IV, 1943. ". ' " ' I I - ii I Granges Active Despite War Duty, Report to Pomona Douglas county granges are re maining alert and active dosllo Die overtime farm work, Fred A. Goff, county deputy reported at the meeting of Douglas County Pomona grange, whic h met Sat urday with Kiversdalo grange. Goff urged the various granges tu endeavor to bring into mem bership the many new residents locating in farm an as anil to ir.ake particular eflorl to ac quaint young people with the work ol the grange, An extension program for Douglas, Josephine and Coos counties, having as Its leading feature the youth movement, Is being arranged by state grange officers in cooperation with local grange membership Goff report ed to the members of Pomona grange. AH members will be contacted, especially young peo ple, with a view of assisting in community welfare and borne building. Activities Narrated Reporting the work of the county agricultural committee, of which he Is chairman, Goff re ported that the committee has been active In price, transporta tion, labor and marketing prob lems. He told of Installation of seed cleaning and shipping facil ities at the Kosehurg supply build ing, and stated that the organ ization Is expanding Its services slowly but efficiently. With regard to the agricultur al situation, he reported tiiat lamb marketing Is well under way. Poultry and eggs are at high peak, but returns are only overage, due to high feed costs. The pest hunt, he said, is lagging because of the Increased work on farms. Riversdale grange is the only one maintaining pest hunt reports. Dinner and Program The Pomona grange meeting was conducted by W. O. Patter son, master. The morning hours were given over to the business session with a basket dinner being enioved at noon under the direc tion of Mrs. Hessie Tiplon, chair man of the home economics com mittee of Pomona grange. The lecturer's program during the afternoon was presented by Mrs. Elsie Spaekman, Pomona lecturer, and Included group singing, led by Mrs. Arlene My ers, accompanied by Mrs. Hen Chilson at the piano; roll call, "The Pour Kreedoir.s." as roll call topic; address by Klmer MeClure, state deputy and overseer of the Oregon state grange, and read ings by Susie Richards and Elsie Spaekman. Doris and Priscilla Salven were received as new members and were given the obligation by Mrs. Alice Goff. Plans for the stale wide canning contest, sponsored by the stale grange and White Satin Sugar company, were dis cussed. Final details were left to a later meeting. An invitation was extended to the lionneville Power administration to conduct "I've Come to Shorten the War for You" III ' I Decline of Stocks 0? Merchandise in 5f6.es Foreseen of aircraft blasted at Catania and Randazzo, key communications center across Mount Etna from Catania. Across the strait from these objectives Halifaxes and Ameri can l.ilM iators hurled tons of ex plosives upon Reggio Calabria's rail and irt facilities early Sunday. Slocks of merchandise in retail st ora will decline steadily dur ing the next six months, In the opinion of D. E. Carr, owner manager of the Carr Vari-ty stores at Roseburg, Reedspori, North Bond and Random Mr. Carr returned Sunday from a trip to market centers at Poniard, Seattle, Chicago, New York, New Orleans, Ijjs Angeles and San f ran .isco. Stores have been maintained Mrs. Mabel B. Bilttler iimiiii;', int.- iit.si icw nionins on B c pre-war slocks held by Jobbers. ras On in KOSeDUrg ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, July 19 (AP) The Rome radio said today that many residences were left aflame from the bombing of Rome but made no assertion that any dam age had been done to church, cul tural or historical structures. Ill . 4 I 9 CTFAM Wr-T J0L. ft 1 ' ITHAT BILLOWS FORTH P jfJSj IN CLOUDS FROM I VtfvS&C V ,- VOLCANOES IHUjI lJr IS NOT STEAM AT ALL, 1 V.ry Km j Tiff BFO. LT9 PAT. OFF. jJ (W 6EES W4JNJ iA CANNOT FLV A&AINST fl I II lll-WJJI Ii I 1 1 III l") sroAe, hsaos M'UM fSnsO III II IL ''A.LJfllJLLJL A UviNwroFLV, 5rw()NiY0"1 l&r-.rr AMD I MAD A ( -- . CltST EDITIONS ARE THE LAT THINS, AS FAR AS BOOK COLLECTORS ARE CONCERNED, "Slyj Alt Ofeivw?, VeVir& . 7-IS) COf'R. I94J BV NCA SEIIVICE. INC. NEXT: Flying on the 'icani Is nothing new. 'Ike' Greets Canadians in Sicily RUSSELL'S Typewriter Service Office Machine Service and Supplies 335 N. Jackson Phone 320 GEO. W. DIMMICK AGENCY REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 125 Cass Street. Phono 484 farms stock ranches timber lands Taxpayers Attention The Annual meeting of the Douglas County Taxpayers' League will bo held at tho Circuit Court Room, Court House, at 10:00 o'clock a. m. Wednesday July 21st 1943, for the purpose of consider ing the 1943 budget, the election of officers and such other business as may proper ly come before the meeting. Douglas County Taxpayers' League H. P. Rice, President. .1 t . 3- ' ' t.FI lUilm 7;.i.ip) Ocnr-rnl like) Dvli:ht Elsenhower, commander nt Allied forces In Norlli Allien. Is shown I'lceliii;: LV.iudnn olll.-er on wlnly. Kisrnhowrr con veyed eunplimeiil to c.'ulwuli.-ii e:t ni:.ml lluiuiuh explain J. K. Moore Ulmd ti.i.li ilrjin. Olii. ial U. Army SibiKi! Corps Hudio-Teleplioio. Meat cutter wanted. Inquire llenninger's No. 2 ar lndustil.il survey of IVuiglas iiuinly, and a committee was ap liolnled lo represent the grange in ciHeieraliug with the power administration In gathering sur vey data. First DeMolay Member Killed By Traffic Guard KANSAS CITY. July 1!) I API Louis ;. Lower, II, first mem Iter of ie Molay. masonic organ isation for young men, was fatal ly shot yesterday when he chal lenged the authority of a man at tempting to direct traffic at the busy Union station plaa. IVieciive InsjM'etor Kdward .1. Larson said Clyde Souders. -I'.t. whom he identified as a war plant guard and former police clerk, is iH'ing held In jail and will he tak en before the prosecutor today. No charges have been filetl. Ijirson said Souders told police he had fired at Lower's arm hen he thought Lower was reaching for a weapon. The detective In spector said Corp. Harold John ston of SI. Paul and several oili er witnesses agreed on this ac ! count of the Slaving: Lower, manager of the niuniei pal auditorium and one on the wrecker's of Tom Pernio rgast's democratic machine, stopped his car at a traffic light. Souders. in his guard's uniform, motioned to backup and stop at the curb. Lower alighted, asking Souders by w hat authority he w as directing traffic. He reached to ward Soulier's badge and Sou ders fired. The bullet struck Low cr in the chest. Larson said the war plant guard admit led he'd had two or three highballs at a niece's wed ding reception. Sgt. duties Welch, head of the homicide di vision, said Souders was drunk when taken into custody. Lower, inducted into the Order ol IV Molay March il, 1H1!. was the first member to be initiated Into the organization founded by Frank S. Uind of Kansas City. He later liccame I .a nd's assistant in administering affairs of the expanding order. Nazis Reeling Before Reds' Counter-Drive (Continued from page 1) heavy losses in the nazi armored and air divisions, tho Russians said. They announced they had knocked out 78 tanks and 137 planes on Saturday and said an incomplete check showed 20 more tanks destroyed yesterday to bring German losses to the stag gering total of approximately 3,500 tanks and 2,000 planes in the last two weeks. Russian communiques have in dicated during the last two days that Red army troops were ad vancing steadily if somewhat slower despile adverse weather conditions . Their reports of the fighting showed that the Germans were nipping at the soviet flanks and melting back in the face ofi determined Red army mechaniz-1 ed attack. i a.r states. These surpluses are Hearing exhaustion. Kictoric-; still engaged in production of consumer merchandise are tar be liind on orders and are nM" supply only i fraction of til" d T.'iml. lie anticipates that th" pinch on cr.nsumi'i s will becom no ticeable ii- ii'ie Christmas. lie reports that he fou.vl nav el accomodations somewhat crowded throughout the midwest ir,d cast, but on the Pacific coa.-.t l!ie condition was muc. worse, with trains, busses an! other means of transportation far more tciftcfited than in othe; sections of the country. Allies Bomb Rome After Destruction of Naples (Continued from page 1) NAZI BASES OVER WIDE AREA BOMBED FROM AIR LONTX-.N, July 19. (AP)- A strong force of allied planes was reported heading across the Eng lish channel this afternoon in the direction of Calais and Ilmi-logne. f.aruer, the air ministry an tually in .be shai -v of v'aiican city The pope's residence is only about five miles from the big Rome railway freight yards where bombs were planted,' and the Roman forum is even closer, about three miles. Naples Devastated The war's initial attack on Rome followed closely the great est aerial assault ever carried out in the Mediterranean theater a daylight raid by more than 500 1 allied bombers Saturday on Naples, Italy's largest port and most Important base for sending supplies and reinforcements to Kicilv. Wave after wave of bombers, principally American, poured nun-1 dreds of tons of explosives on I Naples, after a night attack on I the same objective by block-1 buster-carrying Wellingtons of j the RAF. Although the terrific pounding which started in the pre dawn hours was continued until late afternoon, most of the daylight ' bombing was packed into less j than two hours, lilockbusters ind 1,000 pound bombs were Mrs. Mabel Vera Buttler, 5G, died Saturday in Roseburg follow ing a prolonged illness. She was born February 7, 1887, at W'al-den, San Bernardino county, Calif., and was married to Lester J. Buttler at Santa Barbara, Calif., February 10, 1903. She came to Oregon in 1931, making her home at Grants Pass, moving to Rose burg in April, 1940. Mr. Buttler passed away In May, 1941. Surviving are four daughters and seven sons: Mrs. Vera Gen try, Ventura, Calif.; Mrs. Alice Mitchell, Honolulu, T. H.: Mrs. Mary Ward and Rosie Buttler both of Roseburg; James Buttler, Ventura, Calif.; Sylvester Buttler, Klamath Falls; George Buttler, who is a prisoner of war in Ja pan; Benjamin Buttler, U. S. ar my in South Pacific; Gilbert and Earl Buttler both of Roseburg, and Private Johnathan Buttler of Camo William, Wisconsin. Also surviving are twelve grandchil dren and three great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be held in the chapel of the Douglas Funeral home Wednesday morning at 10:30 o'clock, Rev. T. C. Hannon of the Nazarene church officiat ing. Interment will follow in Masonic cemetery. William D. Shelton, Infant, Passes Away Italy Exhorted to Resist; Dismal Future Pictured BERN, July 19 (API Declar ing that Italy would be dismem bered, her people enslaved and her treasures looted If she yield ed, Carlo Scora, new secretary of the fascist party, broadcast from Rome last night a frantic appeal Xor last-ditch resistance to the allies. The speech, obviously a reply to the Roosevelt-Churchill uncon ditional surrender demand which last week was conveyed to the Italian people by radio and leaf lets dropped from planes, ac knowledged, however, that the plight of Italy is desperate. Italy, Scorza said, is "as never before in mortal danger," pictur ing her as "little group of men" standing out against the two rich est powers in the world who, he asserted, are "most avid to gorge and wishing to destroy her ter ritorial and political unity and abolish her rights." "The Italians know that this is a war of continents," he said. "The Italians know that this is a war of race, with the British and Americans as the vanguards of the inferior hordes." Gloomy Picture Painted Although he made no direct reference to the allied ultimatum he held that only through con tinued resistance could the Ital ian nation survive. Recounting the nation's gains under 23 years of fascist rule he painted a slark picture of the fate in store for Italy in surrender. "Resist! Resist! Resist! Hecx horted. "If the enemy should be victorious, what fate would be fall us? The nation would be broken up; the people would be reduced to a mass of serfs and most of them would fall under the Russian whip. The stronger would be sent to toll In the Ural mines und In the steppes; the less strong would raise flowers for1-. the ladies or would sketch cera mics for English baronets. The sacked museum, the schools sub jected to the whims of the con querors; the idle arsenals, the tiorts deserted of our ships; the closed factories, the abandoned fields would bear witness." Oregon Convict Slain, Prison Guard Wounded (Continued from page 1) stole an automobile owned bv Chief of Police Harry Niles. He was apprehended and was serv ing out his original term. Doolin was received at the pri son from Clackamas county in November, 1942, to serve a 25 year term under the habitual criminal law. Fines Imposed on Six In Justice Court Robert Walter Hausman was continued in custody here today following failure to pay a fine ot $10 after pleading guilty to a charge of being drunk on a public street, Justice of the Peace Thom as Hartfiel reported. Other fines imposed in the justice court fol lowing pleas of guilty to the reJ spective charges were announced by Judge Hartfiel as follows: Richard Feakes, $10, ovetiength load and $50 overload; Samuel L. Hebard, $10, failure to stop at a railroad crossing; Robert W. Ow ens, $15, overload; George W. Short, $10, failure to stop at a railroad crossing; Sylvester W. Coughran, $10, axle overload. no-har.RAp-i and erX? yaA m ! "PVC" 0'" fighlers destroyed eight enemy I airfields and industrial areas! ' ""fl, ,ITTJ lirerafl and damaged two enemy vessels in attacks last night on nazi airport facilities in France and shipping off the Dutch coast. Swift mosquito planes on in truder patrols over northwest lo spreading a carpet of which sent smoke rising height of 12.000 feet. Flying Fortresses led the way ill tho daylight portion of the devastating assault, followed by William Delbert Shelton, two months old son of Mr. and Mrs. Delhcrt B. Shelton of Myrtle Creek, died suddenly Sunday ! morning. He was born at Rose burg, May 14, 1913. Surviving, besides his parents, ! are two brothers and a sister, I Donald, Beverley, and Phillip Shelton, all of Myrtle Creek. He i is also survived by his grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hal-1 bert, or Santa Clara, Calif., and Mrs. Margaret Shelton, Umpqua, Oregon. Funeral services will be held i ! ,ilimn, I Miriu iiiil'i infill m iu uiri: Jiuu, Ai ranRomcnts arc in charge of tho Douglas Funor;i1 home. j iBEARp M 1 WHEEL ALIGNIHC I 1JL 1 AXLE TRAMC 1 H SERVICE STEPHENS AUTO CO. 323 N. Main St. Phone 352 TOW CAR SERVICE GENERAL REPAIRS We are specialists in axle and frame alignment and wheel balancing LET US HELP YOU GET MAXIMUM PERFORMANCE FROM YOUR CAR AND TIRES Germany and enemy-occupied tor- Mitchell and Marauder bombers ritory attacked and damaged ten I and American Liberators, locomotives and bombed railway I The allied air forces also struck targets near Dieppe. j ;' mainland airfields of Italy at Two enemy fighters were . Monte Corvino and Pomigliano knocked down as Typhoon bomb-1 Saturday night, dropping explo ers with fighter escort blasted I sives in strines across runwavs mil buildings, it was announced. the Abbeville airfield in France and Iwo others were destroyed bv Mustangs on patrol off the Dutch coast, the announcement said. An additional four fighter planes were reported shot down in an attack on an enemy convoy hy coastal command Heaulight- ers supported by Spitfires and Typhoons. Hits were registered on two units of the convoy. Fight British planes failed to return from tho Sunday opera tions. Other Blows Dealt In similar raids Saturday night, British fighter planes swept over France. Holland and Bel gium, ripping up railway targets and airfields and attacking ship ping wilh the loss of one plane. The Berlin radio also reported nuisance flights" over Germany Saturday night bv allied planes, i The Paris radio, in a broadcast ! recorded hy Reuters, reported to day lhat a great fin was racing in the French city of Rouen and d. image already ran into millions of francs. It did not give the cause of the fire. A. E. Benson, Veteron of Spanish War, Passes In direct support of the Ibitish Kighth army driving up the Sicilian cast coast, other fleets ' r -WE'RE PAINTING tj I THE MOST EXPEN I SIVE HOMES WITH f lUMINAjl" "I CAN UNOEH.l . . JBfeL. STAND WHY IT I ' , y 'S SO BEAUTIFUL" tm$m V I Albeit K. Benson. Spanish American war veteran and resi dent ol Portland, died at the Vol- rails hospital last Saturday He was born in Massachusetts. Octo ber 2. lSTtt. Surviving is a sister. Mrs. A. B. Smith, of Jennings Lodge, Ore. Funeral services were hold at the Veterans cemetery this after noon. Arrangements were in charge of the Douglas Funeral home. Emil G. Helander cf Reedsport Passes Away Ftnil Gustavo Helander. iW, resi- dent of Roodsnort. died at the, county hospital Sunday afternoon. I He was born in Finland. April 3, 1SSS. 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