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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1943)
, SIX R05EBURS. NEWSeVtEW.'RdSifeURS.'ORtSON. TUESDAY, 'SEPTEMBER 21, 1941 Seals to Battle Rainiers in Finals Of League Playoff RAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 21 (API It's San Francisco versus Seattle In the linals of the play off of the Pacific Coast league. That was decided yesterday as San Francisco's Seals, overcom ing a two-game lead by Portland, won their fourth straight con test from the Beavers to capture the semi-finalr. series. Seattle, winner of the 10-11 and 1342 playoffs, chinned the I.os Angeles Angels, HM.'I champions, out of the scramble for extra money with four consecutive vic tories. Officials of the two finalists arranged to play the entire series here on this schedule: Single games Thursday, Friday and Sat urday of this week, and a dou bleheader Sunday. If necessary, another twin bill will be staged next Monday.; San Francisco came close to losing its final game with Port land but succeeded in topping the Beavers, 6 to 5, In a baseball thriller. The trouble started in the eighth inning when Kpperiy. Seals pitcher, blew up with a 6 to 0 lead. Southpaw Seats took over after three runs had scored He walked the first batter lo fill the bases. Third Baseman Dawes doubled lo drive In two more runs. Righthander Joyce, replac ing Seals, Intentionally walked one baiter and forced Hie next one to ground out to end the ral ly. Seattle and San Francisco will share a $7500 playoff stake. The winner gets $5000, and the loser, $2500. Los Angeles and Portland each received $1250 as semi-fin-nlists. The Angels also picked up an addition al $2500 as the pen nant winner. TEAM STANDINGS City Team W 1. Pel Fullerton Candy Co 3 0 1(100 U. S. Army 3 ' 1""" Umpuua Cleaners 2 1 .(HIS Standard Oil 2 1 .OTi Umpu.ua Chiefs 1 2 .:'! Nordllngs 1 2 .Xa Model Bakery 0 .'1 .000 Debs Market 0 3 .000 Games Tuesday Night Fullerton Candy Co. 3, Model Bakery 0; Umpiiia Cleaners 2. Umpqua Chiefs 1; U. S. Army 3. Debs Market 0; Gilkeson Station 2, Nori'lings 1. Remarks High Individual game score: U. Vanderburg. 212. High Individual series score: Freadman, 538. Gilkeson Station: Gilkeson HI 115 00 370 H. Rice .. Ml 13S 1(11 -110 K. Laurence ..HI 131 Hi!) A 17 B. Moore 158 182 1-13 IH3 A. Rice 1113 11!) 158 -170 Totals 7-17 7-18 721 221(1 Nordllngs: A. Zenor 10S 135 17!) .122 Ren Young ... 120 1-18 171 -13!) RUSSELL'S Typewriter Service Office Machine Service and Supplies 335 N. Jackson Phone 320 GEO. W. DIMMICK AGENCY REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 12" Cass Street, Phono 484-L timber lan.ls farm, stock --a iches Nordllngs .... 88 101 111 3031 Jackson 111 105 127 313 Baughman ...181 172 113 -lOH ! Totals (ill Wil 731 2000; Umpqua Chiefs: : G. W. Pliillipsl37 127 102 420 1 Boise 150 125 103 4-14 Baker KM 127 117 378 (',. R. Phillips 141 135 103 412 Welbniin .. . 110 Hit; 13-1 4(i Totals 717 080 7.311 2130 Umpqua Cleaners: j Glen. 151 I'll 142 4'iO , McDonald .. .108 127 12(i 3(11 Parkinson .. .182 132 125 43!) i Uruton 130 1!ll 18!) 51!) j Can- 140 135 110 421 Totals 72(1 "82 722 223(1 1 Debs Market: j Lindsley 153 141 182 470 Thomas !I2 13(1 147 371 i Poley 125 80 127 338 1 Kenton Kill 100 135 431 ! Freadman .. .105 17(1 107 538! Totals' (ill G.'i!) 788 20(11 : U. S. Army: Beaver 143 112 140 43! I.t. (Hotback 128 152 15!) 43!) Hudson 157 148 M3 4118 Vanderburg 132 Ki'l 212 513 Gallanes 1112 170 17!) 511 Totals 722 781 85!) 2302 Model Bakery: King 155 153 140 448 Welletier 101 118 121 400 Hanncman .. .12(1 135 15!) 420 lliney 123 Ki.'l 178 401 Klliotf 13(1 1 1(1 155 438 Totals 701 715 753 210!) Fullerlon Candy Co.: Pol ler 107 187 178 527 Nciss l.-)7 123 158 418 Griffrie 140 120 209 475 Plyser 144 131 140 415 Beck 181 1!I0 100 531 Totals 775 74(1 8-15 230(1 Slaughter of Japanese At Lost Bases Heavy (Continued from page 1) such n relreat, now have contact ed these fugitives. And allied sol diers moving behind them from I.ae also have, caught up with I hem. Today's communique told of ef fective air raids on enemy air in stallations at Finschhafen, only 00 miles up the Huon peninsula from Lao, at Cape Gloucester, (loss Dampier strait on New Britain, 120 miles from I.ae, and of exlensive fighter activity in tne north New Britain coastal area of Kltnhe bay, roughly half way along the route to the choic est target on mat Island the big air and shipping stronghold of llabaul. Australian-manned Beau lighters poured 20.000 rounds of ammunition inlo an airdrome, supply dumps, anil-aircraft posi tions and surface craft Sunday at Kimbe bay. Tliis Is perhaps the first lime these fighters have at) pcared in such an el fee-live rob in I his area. WASHINGTON, Sept. 21 -(API Japanese planes raiding Ameri can positions on Guadalcanal In the Solomons caused slight dam age and minor casualties, I he na vy reported touay. The raid, the I bird in a week upon Guadalcan al, apparently was of the nui sance variety and probably was carried out by bombing planes on a reconnaissance mission. Cigarette Machines Facing Roseburg Ban (Continued from page 11 city license paying a fee of $3 each per year. There are 1(1 oper ating at the present time, accord ing to the city's records. Lasl niglil's mid-tnonlhly meet ing of the council was given over exclusively to the cigarette ma chine discussion. It was announced thai a spe cial meeting may be required in Ihe near future lo pass upon a pending application for a connec tion to tin- city sewer system for a proposed public housing project contemplated on a site outside th(! city limits. Venice Bombarded by American Air Fleet (Continued from pace 1) George W. Burt, Poultryman of Happy Valley, Dies George W. Burl, (17, one of Douglas count's leading poultry men, died al Mercy hospital Mun dav following a short illness. Born at Pompey Hill, New York, June 2. 187(1, he was taken lo Kngland as an infant, but the lamily returned to New York when he was two years of age. His mother died when he was eight years of age and his fa ther passed away a year later. He was reared as a son in the l.ancio Robinson home, and at the age of 17 years moved lo Cali fornia. He came to Oregon in 1007 and settled at Hippy Valley, where he Marled Ihe first commercial poultry flock in Ihe Roseburg area and one of the first in the county. He pioneered in the or ganization of the poultry indus try and was a charter member of the Pacific Cooperative Poul try Producers association. In recent years he had operat ed Ihe Happy Valley hatchery, the largest exclusive White leg horn commercial hatchery in southern Oregon. He was a member of the Bap tist church and of the I. O. O. F. and Rcbekah lodges. Surviving are. the widow, Mar garet Burt; a daughter, Agnes B. Wilcox, Oakland, Ore.; two sons, Sgt. William K. Burt, Army air forces, Coffeyville, Kan., and Merrill P. Burt, Roseburg; two grandchildren; a sister, Mrs. Dwighl Carlcy, Manlius, N. Y., and I wo brothers, John ' Burt, Miyeltoville, N. Y., and Harry Burt, Syracuse, N. Y. Funeral services will be con ducted by the Rev. M. H. Roach al the Roseburg Undertaking company parlors at 2 p. m. Fri day and will be concluded by the Odd Fellows lodge at the I. O. O. F. cemetery. 2nd Front Coming at Right Time Churchill (Continued from page 1) the Mediterranean campaign Is not "a substituic for a direct at tack across the channel on Ihe Germans in France and the low countries" that he has never re garded It as such. "On the contrary," he said, "the opening of this new front in the Mediterranean was always Intended to be an essential pre liminary lo the main attack upon Germany and her ring ot subju gated and satellite states." He disclosed, however, that he and President Roosevelt set Italy's elimination from the war as their principal objective when they met in Washington last May and added that no one "would have expected it to have been so lapidly achieved." Saying that the almost total destruction of German war cen ters was continuing on a great scale, Churchill disclosed that the percentage of plane losses to Ihe RAF in the first eight months of 1!43 was less than the same pe riod last year and that the mo rale of the crews was consequent ly higher. He announced also that during the four months ending Sept. 18 not a single merchant vessel was lost by enemy action In the north Atlantic and that enemy U-boats had not sunk one allied ship any where In the world during the first two weeks of September. Churchill added, however, that German U-boats had become, ac tive aealn and that one convoy was being attacked at the pres ent time. Life Termer Gives Skin to Save Girl PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 21 (API "Gee, she's a swell kid." He kept repeating that, and grinning at the memory, when I they led him back to eastern uen- Caulfield, who gave his skin to save a little girl's life, but num ber 5370, under life sentence for killing a policeman. The girl, 1C year-old Judy Ros en, is doing well, they said at Mt. Sinai hospital, though It will be months before she recovers from the chest and arm burns thut made a skin graft necessary. She knew that when she told Caulfield yesterday that she miss ed her mother's cooking. "Yes," the 33-year-old convict agreed, "there is no place like home." They liked each other on sight. Later he gave her a clay mod cling set and some toys bought with his earnings as a clerk in the prison hospital. "Any littl? girl that has her grit and determination is all right with me,"Cauli!eld declared as he climbed into the automobile that was to lake him back to the prison where he spent 14 years. I Major Drives About To Begin Marshall (Continued rrom page 1) Hons have been under way in Great Britain and the Pacific. The Mediterranean success will release great naval . forces for the war against Japan, he said, and this means advance planning lor bases from which the ships can operate. "We are similarly engaged In planning regarding other forces, particularly air," he said, "and it will probablv Interest you as much as it will discourage the Japanese to learn that our most difficult problem Is to find suf ficient bases from which lo op erate the vast forces which are to be poured inlo the Pacific for Umpqua Dairy Products Are at Your Grocers Cottage CheeseCream Buttermilk Butter Raw or Pasteurized Milk Ice Cream Bottled Orange the rearrangement of the affairs of the son of heaven with his military clique. "But I would add that these matters are not the affair of a moment, the result of a cam paign of propaganda, or of tem porary enthusiams or special Interests. "We must proceed In the most -businesslike manner possible to make this war so terrible to the enemy, so overwhelming in char acter, that never again can a small group of dictators find a sufficient following to destroy the peaceful security of a clvlll's-v ed world." I ) REPAIR SERVICE Bring your tractor and implement repair jobs to us. We have experi enced mechanics to do the work. - . Also all kind of blacksmithing. Back the Attack-Buy War Bonds DOUGLAS COUNTY Farm Bureau Co-Operative Exchange ROSEBURG, OREGON I Police Reserves: Regular meeting nights Wednesday, 7:30 p. m, Polico First Aid Class Sept. 22nd All urged lo be present. 1st Sgt. Geo, Chapman Italy's great port of Genoa. Swedish dispatches from Mar seille said French fighters from North Africa seied Alnccio, the capilal, alter a sharp battle with Ihe Germans and declared the nais were retreating to the east ern shores of the island. Corsica is a department of Met ropolitan France, about 1M miles I long and 52 iniics wide. VITAL STATISTICS M ' i MARRIAGE LICENSES I HKItTlVCI KKKi: .toscpn '. Louis llerttu-ci and Norma Na dine Kerr, both residents oi Kosi'lmrg. Hl'l.l. IIAI.LGAHTIl Klmcr Kllsworth Hull and Addie Hall jNU'th. both residents ot Cottace ( I rove NOTICE We ere temporarily discontinu ing delivery service due to short age of help. UMPQUA CLEANERS 12 Stalin and the prime minister himself. l. The allies are prepared to place large armies in Italy and to deploy a weighty and active fighling front against the enemy on whatever line he chooses, to resist and to maintain againsl him with increasing weight and vigor if need lo through the tail and winter. 5. A French army of 300,000 lo 100.000 Is being steadily organiz ed and the battleship Richlieu will soon lake its place in the French fleet. Speaking of the prospect of a Rnnscvelt-Churchlll-Slnlin conrer ince, the prime minister said: "No meeting during this war could carry with it so much sig nificance for the future of the world as a meeting between the beads of the three governments lor without close, cordial and lasting association between soviet Russia and their great allies, we might find ourselves at the end of the war only to have entered upon a period ol deepening confu sion." "Bungling" Charge Denied The prime minister spoke out sharply against those who had accussed the allied leadership of bungling in I'aly. The date on which the Italian invasion had originally been iilanned. he told the house, was Sept. 1", but it was moved up "as the result of decisions taken before the fall of Mussolini, and what has taken place in any case would have happened In Italy at (he earliest possible moment." "The Italian surrender was a windfall," he said, "hut It had nothing to do with Ihe date of harvesting the orchard." Churchill's calm deserlntlon of the minute and exact planning that had gone Inlo the Italian campaign it was an answer to j cl itics in the same forum where j be had met and mastered so many previous criticisms-presented the picture of an allied hand in Italy far harder than had been previously know n. II Duco Escape Explained We did not insist upon having Mussolini handed over lo us be forehand, lie said, for the simple reason that It would have tinned off the Germans of liadoglio's plan lo make peace at a moment when "the Italians were In the position of having still lo appear as allies of Germany." Too. his disclosure that precise measures had been taken to keep Mussolini in allied hands -measures extending to orders for the former premier's execution if nec essary suggested something far removed from the sentimental approach to ihe dure which some had accused the allies of making. I'remler I'.ndoglio's govern ment. ( tuirrtuil exniaineo. nan trade preparations to hold Mus solini but were not prepared against the one method Hitler ittempted snd brought off "a heavy parachute descent at that particular point (Gran Sassnl." "They had one card . up their sleeves." he added calmly. "The c.iriblnlerl guards had orders to shoot Mussolini If any attempt was made to rescue him but they failed in their dutv." Churchill told commons that I TMi W..k USE! RATION STAMPS j '-a mm . . ., a.. tfSRWiWy AXIS PAY DAY V.4P W;M Back Ihe Attack With Bonds! ' Are We Square With Them? H0! Not until we've settled out score with Ihe Axis! And we've got plenty lo pay back in AMMUNITION hat will shool the Axis right inlo a stale of uncon ditional surrender. Each one of us has to make up that pay check in War Bonds. That means extra war bonds not what we a already buying but those plus EXTRA Bonds! let's do it this month this very day let's dig up, scrape up, and enlist, every dollar we can and BUT BONDS! It's time to pay them back with interest! SPARKLING WATER Bai7.. MOLASSES 18 oz glass PEANUT BUTTER KRAFT MIRACLE WHIP 15C 13C 56C 26C CRESCENT MUSTARD 14c Pint Jar RIPE OLIVES Lindsay Ex Lge Pint SNOWFLAKE CRACKERS Nabisco 2, b HI- HO CRACKERS 1 lb pkg 25C 36C 23C Your Satisfaction Guaranteed on Every Purchase BEEF ROAST, Grade A lMt (9 points) lb A V BONELESS STEW MEAT 1L (9 points) lb AOV FRESH GROUND BEEF 1Q (7 points) lb AoC SHORT RIBS OF BEEF A (6 points) lb COUNTY STYLE SAUSAGE HP (6 points) lb A 35 SKINLESS WEINERS 4Aft (4 points) lb A" GROUND VEAL 14 (8 points) lb J1C LUNCH MEATS, assorted m m A (4 points) lb 55V BACON JOWLS ft A (3 points) lb A-ZC COFFEE Edwards Whole Roast Lb 27C Prices Subject to Avail able Stocks i 1 COFFEE 20C Airway Whole Roast Lb Safeway Produce KITCHEN CRAFT FLOUR RED ARROW FLOUR PANCAKE FLOUR ROLLED OATS FARINA ALL BRAN Kellogg 16 ox pkg POST TOASTIES SOYABEANS VUlCrAD Heinx Cider vliiLUMri Harvest Blossom 10 lb 3 lb package 3 lb cello pkg 2 lb pkg ider Quart bottle 10 lb bag.... 59C 49 lb sack .. 1.77 49C 17C 15C 18C IOC 23C 19C You'll get better fruits and vegetables at Safeway every time dr all your money back. Sold by the pound to sav you money! week avoid the last min ute rush". TOMATO JCE, Sunny Dawn (6 pts) 46 oz can .... BABY FOODS Clapp Strained (1 pt) can J PORK & BEANS tA. Van Camp (21 pts) 29 oz 9lV4 CUT BEANS Blue Lake r (8 points) No. 303 can CORN Mission Stcl (16 points) No. 2 can JJ" ASPARAGUS Sunny Skies JfJ Green (14 pts) No 2 J3 SPINACH Gardenside (19 pts) No 25 can WW CARROTS All Gold Diced Am (6 pts) No. 303 glass P PEAS Gardenside (18 pts) No 2 can IV PRUNES Red Tag Fey gL (7 pts) No 2$ can iW PEARS Green Tag f (21 pts) No 23 can PEACHES Lady Elberta Ao (27 pts) No 23 can 7 PRUNES, Dried -(8 points) 2 lb pkg TUNA FLAKES Flakies f0Jf (5 red points) No 23 can. .. G MARGARINE Dalewood AA (4 red noints) Lb pkg J6C SHORTENING Snowdrift m (12 Red) 3 lb jar AC w-f ' 'A. ' ''' I Potatoes u. s. no. 2, so ibs 86c WatermeloiUocaub 4c Cantaloupe Dillard, lb 2C TOmatOCSLocal No. l, bushel 1.00 Peaches Hales, Elbertas, crate X. 79 GrapeS Tokays, lb 15 C C:bbage Fresh. b 3c Sweet Potatoes V..?!: '15c' Gar what you PAX fOK ' "- '5 TM$ AO. ST!S ft,TH MC tm( oNi;e I tso-masoiv ' I JUiCf K ;tr ANY IN W tfV . - y V iKixks Tm art . A.0 ME MAO Only ONf KINO Of ORAKifS Iff f TMCT IOOAEO NICE AMeuu.AN0A oo. fN cosrq,i.re 10T I tHOuilt IH 0 8 Juicr ' A I II Mm ( Take a Paid Full-Time Job. As more and more men and women are being withdrawn by the Armed Forces from civilian life the need increases for women to take paying, full-time or part-time jobs in essential civilian industry. Any women not in the production line or in uniform should be filling a job of supplying the vital needs of our community by working in a store, communications ottice or other serving position, j Apply to Tour Safeway: or to U. S. Employment Service tor Good Poying Opportunities ne mao sd ot ims MSSt OSANOfS IMiS AWHM.1C NEuiE. lMf uM0 j FINE, ftuT ImE Kf rtAS J MAKlXY ANY JdlCC t ;a:5 ow. iffi-. I SOMf TCSITROAV TOO, ANO TMlT JU$T HfAvy IVifM JuiCf f AT vSCUTMfM py MHJmT... AN 3 OF CJuS ir$ IX KVC-tiMT O AN 0ANiJ THAT SHOWS hO moCh juiCE Tt 1$ in IT e. HAE MOSt PuJ AN0 tf5S M JF THAT SOu.sM lipE The rtAr TO 6T OCANS! THINS. HI Ky SAFfWAV At Safeway, You Pay For Exactly What You Get! Tricing produce by the pound I been a Safeway habit for years. Here, you select the individual items you want, pay for them by weight, and know you've gotten what you paid for! SAFEWAY These Prices Good AU Wtekt l T