SIX R05EBURS NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURS. OREGON. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1943 2 Legion Posts Install Officers Officers of L'miii;i post of the American L;'t;iou mid of the Oak lanil Sullierlin post wi'ie I nsl a 1 1 -rrl :U a joi ill tni ( ! i rif" hi-iil lasl nie.ht at Oakland. V. J. Micclli, slate department vice-command-er served as inslallini; officer. Officers of the Oakland-Sill h erlin post are Wendell Traill, commander: I.loyd Thompson, first vice-commander: Dale Har vey, veteran of World war II, ju r.ior vice-commander; Jack Mar is, adjutant; Sherman Smith, fi nance ollicer; Herman Larscn, chaplain; i-:dwin Stearns, histo rian; Virnil ricuard, .si're.eanl-tit-arms. Umpua posts's new officers ere Kiwin Short, commander; Hoy O. Yoimf;, first vicecotn mander; Arthur Millard, Junior vice-commander; Karl (.'. Plum met', adjutant; K. K. Post, chap lain; (.'Union (Jorlliy, serjeant-at-arms. . UmpouH posl has been chal lenged by hi? auxiliary lo a mem bership drive, which will he con cluded Armistice day. Command er Short reporls. The loser will IV required to furnish 11 Iced for the winners. Koy O. Yuune, is post membership chairman. Yankees Win Third Game Of Series, 6 to 2 (Continued from page 1) ni. many hits, aided hv the two' errors. Brale, the Cardinal mill er, was benched after .Johnson tripled with the bases loaded. Krist, who relieved him on the mound, allowed Gordon a single Unit scored the fourth run, and Lirechcn took over the pitching duty. He allowed two singles, one ol which hit Gordon as he ran, automatically retiring him, and the second driving home the fillh tally. This ended Ihe scot Inn of the came Ihe final hein;; ti lo 2. 13 Winter Vegetables Due for Price Rollback WASHINGTON, Oct. 7 'API - 'A maximum ceiling program intended to roll back consumer prices on l.'l winter vegetables probably will be announced next week. Originally scheduled for presen tation this week, certain details of Ihe program have not been completed. The list will Include such es sential items as tomatoes, peas, snap beans, spinach and beets. Nazi Defense Stiffens In Struggle in Italy (Continued from page 1) MRS. CHAS. A. DRAND TEACHER OF SINGING Studio 4, Masonic Bldg. Phono 695-J-l Oregon War Bond Total $37 Million Over Goal PORTLAND, Oct. 7 (API -'Ihe slale war bond total from the Third War loan campaii;n leached $MI,3.'12,I7:! today. The Hoal was Slul,000.(XK). HE ASKED FOR IT NEW YORK Martin Murphy strode into a telegraph office. One hand Ihrust menacingly inlo a coat pocket, lie approached a clerk and handed him a note reading: "Call the cops or I will have to shoot you. I don't warn your money. I Just want a jail sen ter.ee of about 10 years." The clerk obliged. When police arrived, Murphy explained he couldn't endure Ihe family argu merits at his homo and wanted peace and quiet- in a cell. Po lice charged him with disorder lv conduct. SAWDUST FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY CALL 651-Y Venice at Mestre, five miles to the northwest. Warehouses and en"lne shoos were struck. It was another blow at the tenuous Oor- :man communications serving the ! haltlelields of southern Italy. other targets nearer the combat ones were attacked and six Gor man planes were destroyed ai Ihe cost of three. Middle east bombers, support ing the Dritish garrison on Coo, al lacked Rhodes and Crete. Air fields on both islands wore pounded along with a German camp near Kattavia on Rhodes and the harbor of Syren north of Crete. Hrltish submarines sank six German ships and damaged two In the Mediterranean. German defenses had Increas ed appreciably in Italy and both allied armies were engaged in slugging, matches necessary to re duce enemy strength. Other wtir developments included: Yugoslavia Two German divi sions were spread thin along the Adriatic coast of Yugoslavia Daniel do Luce of the Associated Press reported from the head quarters of the partisan army of Gen. nto. At one time after Italy's surrender, the partisans captured Kiumo, Susak, Zara and Split. The Germans retook the ports and presently conlrol most lowns and cities, while the parti sans hold great chunks of the country. Spain- Trouble was brewing Inside Spain for Franco, the newspaper El Espanol of Ma flrirl suggested despite censor ship. "There exists in Spain con spiracles against El Caudillo, which favor a regime of free for- all shooting," the newspaper said Air war- German raiders scat tered a few bombs in England and touched off an alarm in Lon don. Swift V. S. Marauder bomb ers were said to be forcing the enemy lo wllhdarw air bases deeper into Europe. A; hi j SPECIAL EVANGELISTIC MEETINGS with MAJOR A. G. SLOUS EVANGELIST Continuing every night Octo ber 7th to 10th, 7.45 p. m. Come and Bring your Friends THE SALVATION ARMY 327 West Cass Street. Upstairs Captain Norma Koon 4f 1 ' in BREAD Keep the children, and the entire family, in energetic condition by serving plenty of PAT TERSON'S vitamin-rich bread. It's tasty and full of important food elements that help keep them healthy. At Your Grocers PATTERSON'S Finer Flavor Pay for Dependents Of Service Men Upped (Continued from page 1) which the military affairs com mittee expected to report out to day. The law now provides for $!i0 to a wife, $12 to the first child and $10 Tor each additional child. In view of Ihe apparent will ingness of most members of congress to he genero'lts with soldiers and sailors ---especially heads of established families there wair little to indicate that the house would consider the new senate figure loo high. Provisions of Substitute Tlw senate measure was pass ed after rejection. -18 to 2(i, or a final proposal by Senator Wheeler to prohibit further fa ther drafting. In its final form the hill sent to the house would: 1. Deny federal employment to ablebodied, draft-ago non-lathers whose "indlspensability" can not he certified to congress within HO days after the bills' enact ment. 2. Require evidence of the in dispensability of workers in war nlanls be submitted to draft boards for all occupational defer nienls of non-fathers of draft age. 3. Direct establishment of a medical commission lone army, one navy, three civilian doctors I to determine if physical require ments can he lowered to permit induclion of some of the more than 3,(X)0,)00 men now in class IF. I. Require draft boards to pro vide for pre Induction physical examinations for fathers whose induction appears Imminent, if they demand them. The exam inations, to bo made at induction centers, would be used to certi fy a father's physical condition and would be binding on the boards. So broad were the provisions that Senators Taft and Reed call ed Ihe bill a victory for Wheeler, leader of the bloc opposing in duction of fathers. Reed said that "only the cour age, the genius and the persist rim' of the senator from Mon tana has made this result possi ble." Labor Wnsto Charged A large number of letters were placed in the congressional rec ord by Senator Wheeler In his fight to prevent the drafting of married men. One of them, from J. A. Starr. Portland, said if war plan work ers would put their shoulders to the "wheel and do a real day's work they could run the plant Many Never Suspect Cause Off Backaches Thrt OU Trutmmt Oltfn Bcingi Hipp J Rdifl Uhvn dt-r.lrr of kidnt-y (toctiiia wrnul. Mlonuui matter to n main in our blood, it tiii'tnrfgingbki-li. rliumticpiog, lf puu. U ol pt-p Hlt.t rmrgv. I'tllBf up ctiglill. galling. mt1mt-M UUiltr tbc ), tii.!a.-hra and diinti-aa. V'rvunt or araiity aaaaaf.-a ith marling and burning tomo litueg ahoaa tti.'r is aiinirthing wrong with your kidnr-va or bladdar. llon't traitl As your druggist tor Poan'i TiOs. uatst siipo-mIuIIv bv millions for ovrr 40 rars. Tlirv give happv rt-lut and will tirlp tot I., milrs ol Li'inrv tiibra flusb out n.va.m ous waato trow your blood, lift IXaa't 1'iila. on about one-half of the person nel." i Waste was high in money and man-hours "but with cost-plus, who cares?" tne letter continued. Also included was an excerpt from a soldier's letter lo Stair, which said, "the army has so many rnen they don't know what to do with them. 1 used to say shipyards were inefficient and wasteful, but this army takes the prize. There are millions of man hours wasted that could be used in defense plants." U. S. Warships Blast Japs on Wake Island (Continued from page 1) Pacific Fruit-Produce Company Head Dies SEATTLE, Oct. 7. -- IAP) George Youell, 73, president of the Pacific Kruit & Producer Co., which he organized at Tacoma many years ago, died yesterday after a long illness. Mrs. Youell, two sons, John of Portland, and Thomas of Seattle, and a daughter, Mrs. James O, Gallagher, survive. In the U. S. there are more lhan 350,000 Indians; they speak fi5 languages. ley on New Guinea to get with in 50 miles of the enemy's coast al base of Madang. That base's defense oulpost at Bogadjim was cjven a 3!) ton pounding with bombs from units ol the fifth airforee. In the Solomons, where the Japanese are trying to get out of the central New Georgia group, other allied planes pounc ed on enemy shipping around liougainville and Choiseul.) NEW DELHI, Oct. -(API-Admiral Lord Louis Mountbatlon, allied commander-in-chief in southeast Asia, arrived today by plane to take over his new post. Original leader of Britain's famed commandos and a cousin of King George VI, Mountbatten Is the first British officer to be placed In supreme command of allied forces in an entire theater of war. II. S. Secrtearv of War Stim- son has asserted that the south east Asia command does not ov erlap that of Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur, commander-in-chief in the southwest Pacific. Briton Repeats Vow For Finish War on Nazis, Japs LONDON, Oct. fi - ( AP) Agreeing with U. S. Navy Secre tary frank Knox that the Paci fic war holds second place In ihe minds of Britons, Herbert Mor rison, British home secretary, said today that this was only na tural because of the nearness of Ihe European conflict. He reit erated British determination to fight the war In full force until s You Overcome FALSE TEETH Looseness and Worry Nn longer be annoyed in- reel ill al (use bri-ausi- of lunse u'nhbly false, leolh. FASTKKTH. un Impruved alka line l nnn-aclil) powder, sprinkled on voiir plaics holds them firmer so they feel more eomtortable. Soothlno and :-oollni: lo yums made sore by exoesslve arid moulh. Avoid embi-Hssment caused by loosp plates, (let KASTKKTH '- -o '"v (hue store. both Germany and Japan are do- feated. 1 "After all. It was not the Japs j who bombed London," Morrison I said in a discussion of possible I sources of misunderstanding of I British-American war problems. I Harold D. Emerson, 32, asso ciate project steward of the Tule lake war relocation center for Japanese, was killed in a colli sion between his automobile and a freight train five miles south of Klamath falls. NOTICE We havt purchased the Deer Creek Dairy. Any bottles or caps with the name Deer Creek are now owned by Umpqua Dairy and contain Umpqua Milk Back the Attack Buy War Bonds Helpi DUE TO SHORTAGE OF HELP We will no longer be able to continue residential col lection of bills. Please pay your account al 1203 North Jackson Street Statements will be mailed every three months. ROSEBURG GARBAGE DISPOSAL UliU AND THEY UJOTJ WHERE TO COME FOR FOOD VALUES! YOU'LL SAVE BY BUYING HERE, AND WHAT YOU SAVE YOU CAN PUT TOWARD ANOTHER BOND v: FRUITS and YCuCIAdLlj KLAMMATH SNOW WHITE CAULIFLOWER Fine for Baking Head 39c 50 pound Sk. RAA U. S. No. 2 V 1 g 1 w uannn. encn ac ZUCHINI, pound 5e Beets, bunch9$ hubbard. PoUnd 3C F GOLDEN WEST COFFEE 1 lb m AUNT-POLLYS SOUP MIX ALL FLAVORS 3 Pkg....25 CRACKERS SODA, Box 2 lb 25c GRAHAM, Box 2 lb 35c UMPQUA FLOUR Hard uhlai sS 50 lb. sack 1.75 TRY OUR 4J& MFW mm w w Hair Styles Shampoo and Wave $1.00 Oil Shampoo and wave $1.25 Beauty Salon Mezianine Floor Mart No. 1 CANNED GOODS Tomatoes, No. 2i can, 2 for ... . lit Libbys Peas, No. 2 can, 2 for . . . . 35c Yellow Peas, No. 303, 2 for U String Beans, No. 303, 2 for ... 29c Pineapple, No. 21 can 33C Corn, whole kernel, No. 2 can 2-290 Corn, cream style, No. 303,. . .2-27C Grapefruit Juice, 46 oz. can . . . .33$ Libbys Tomato Juice, No. 1 tall 3-29C Knights Tomato Juice, No. 1 tall 3-3 5 C QUALITY MEATS Grade A Steer Beef BEEF ROAST, pound 32c Q GROUND BEEF, pound 25c ffl S'RLOIN STEAK, pound 39c O TBONESTEAK, pound 39c 8 MINCEDHAM, pound 29c FRANKFURTERS, pound.... 35c PORK STEAK, pound 35c A rn rn n rvn GMT STORE NO. 1 TELEPHONE 522 'IT S SMART TO BE THRIFTY" STORE NO. 2 TELEPHONE 39