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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1944)
ROSEfiURG NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURG, OREGON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1944. TRUES 1 Ne ws Attend to Business Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Brumbach ol Dlxon ville were business visitors in Roseburg yesterday. Reported III Bennie From dahl, employee of the Marshall Wells store, is reported to be ill at his home In Roseburg. Working In Sutherlln Mrs. Irene Ferber, who has been em ployed In the selective service of fice In Roseburg, Is now engaged as a bookkeeper at the new fed eral housing project office In Sutherlin. Serving Internship Philip M. Rummel, son of Mrs. H. W. Rum mel of Dillard, is now serving a nine months Internship at Good Samaritan hospital in Portland. He has his commission in the medical reserve- and expects to go into active duty as soon as he completes his internship. Philip was graduated from Roseburp high school in 1935, attended Willamette university at Salem and was graduated from U. of O. medical school in December, 1943. Good Meals-Home Cooking NORTHSIDE CAFE 570 North Jackson Open 5:30 to 8 p. m. UMPQUA SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION Real Estate Loans Phone 87 GEO. W. DIMMICK AGENCY REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 125 Cass Street, Phone 484-L farms stock ranches timbe lands RUSSELL'S x Typewriter Service Office Maohlne Service . an( Supplies ' 335 N. Jackson Phone 320 IMOW PLAYING MNIMAH ' .Most tHiauJ in the Watt! LU 1 THE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE presents Rev. and Mrs. Orville Kleven and Son in a GOSPEL MISSION Special Music on the VIBRA HARP AND SOLOVOX each night January 18th to January 31st Rev. Leonard Hannon, pastor. In Town Mrs. Alvin Tipton was in Roseburg from Dixonville Wednesday shopping. from Melrose John Galla of Melrose was transacting business in Roseburg Wednesday. Shopping Here Mrs. Albert Cellers of Glide was shopping in Roseburg Wednesday. From Oakland W. A. Davis was a business visitor In Rose burg Wednesday from Oakland. From Garden Valley Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Douglas of Garden val ley were shopping in Roseburg Wednesday. H. E. C. to Meet The Rivers dale grange Home Economic club will meet at a noon luncheon Friday at the home of Mrs. Bert Kruse. Back From Eugene Mrs. T. B. Virden has returned . to her home in Roseburg, following a visit with her daughter, Miss Eu genia, who is in the Waves and who spent her leave in Eugene. Meeting Announced The Can yonville Study club will hold its January meeting next Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Guy McGee. The evening's pro gram will be in charge of Miss Bess Clough. Meeting Canceled Due to so much illness at Benson, the P.-T. A. meeting of the school planned for next Monday, January 17, has been canceled according to an an nouncement made today by the president, Mrs. Albert Kronke. , Spends Day in Sutherlin H. C. Berg, vice-chairman and head of the payroll committee for the War Bond sales drive, spent Tues day in Sutherlin setting up the payroll savings plan at various mills in the community. Here On Furlough Lt. and Mrs. Sterling E. Jordan of Phoe nix, Arizona, have arrived in Roseburg to visit Lt. Jordan's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Jor dan, on Harvard avenue. Lt. Jor dan is a flying instructor at Luke field, Phoenix. Visiting At Ritchie Home Staff Sergeant Jack Trew has ar rived in Roseburg from Camp Hale, Colorado, to visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Rit chie of Garden Valley before leaving for his home in Detroit, Michigan, to visit his parents. Visits Mother Edward Boyer, who has been engaged in the ship building industry in the Pacific northwest, has been spending the last several days in Roseburg visit ing his mother, Mrs. Blanche Boyer, before leaving for San Francisco to engage in national defense work. Leave for Los Angeles Father William Coughlan, of St. Joseph's Catholic church in Roseburg, ac companied by Father Valerian O' Leary, of Uklah, Calif., have left for Los Angeles on business. Fath er Coughlan expects to be gone two weeks. Father Flnnlan Car roll is in charge of St. Joseph's during his absence. Leaves for East David Smith left today for San Francisco, Los Angeles and New Orleans, en route to Cincinnati, Ohio, to re sume his studies at the Cincin nati Conservatory of Music, fol lowing his vacation in Roseburg visiting his mother, Mrs. David Smith, Sr., employee at the Vet erans Administration facility. Da vid, a student of piano, has won a number of national recognitions for his work. 1 ST- Ranger Station, Mill ;i : ' .': :' ; t v , J" & J L x W iiMiirnirrfriri--i1':a?"-1-' :-va.3'-i-H,i--4it tttMmiimreMi-iii-irMriwiiiMwgit By PAUL JENKINS Pictured above is a portion of the United States forest service ranger station at Tiller, about twenty-five miles east of Canyon ville. Lying at the Junction of Elk creek with the South Ump qua river, it is headquarters for the southern district of the Ump qua National forest. Avery Berry is district ranger, with his offices and home at the station. On the slope beyond the river are the mill and residence build ings of the Jackson Lumber com Head Music Program at Mission Here ' -1 -; - C. H. Richards. , Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Richards, Cincinnati, Ohio, pictured above, will have charge of the musical program and young people's work In connection with the preaching mission starting at the First Christian church In Roseburg Sunday. Mr. Richards and the Rev. Len B. Fishback, pastor of the Roseburg church, were associated in evangelical work in South Africa from 1928 to 1930. Mr. and Mrs. Richards are composers of many hymns a,nd choruses and recently compiled a hymn book which will be used through the mission. The Rev. William R. Balrd, former pastor of'the Roseburg church, now the pastor at Modesto, Calif., will be the evangelist. Yoncalla Visitor iSam Garner of Yoncalla was transacting busi ness in Roseburg Wednesday. In Roseburg R. L. Harmon of Garden Valley was In Roseburg on business Wednesday. Garden Valley Visitors Mr. and Mrs. John Sinclair of Garden Valley were in Roseburg Wednes day on business. Camas Valley Visitors Mr. and Mrs. Otis Clayton of Camas Valley were in Roseburg shop ping Wednesday. Myrtle Creek Visitor Grant Smith of Mvrtle Creek was in i Roseburg Wednesday attending to business. F. S. Club To Meet The F. S. club will meet January 25 at the home of Miss Marie Martens at 1032 North Jackson street. I Visits Yoncalla Mrs. E. A. Post, Red Cross Douglas county ! executive secretary, attended to j business in Yoncalla Wednesday. VITAL STATISTICS BORN GOODMAN To Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Goodman, Glide, at Mercy hospital, Wednesday, January 12, I a son, John Cleve; weight six j pounds twelve ounces. NOW PLAYING INDIAN THEATRE Site Dot Tiller Landscape pany, inoperative during the win ter months. To the. left is the Mary Furlong bridge acrosp the South Umpqua river. A forest service crew In charge of Floyd Smith is constructing a culvert and fill across Ash creek, just above the Coffee Pot side camp near South Umpqua falls. When completed It will allow for the building of a section of road which will eliminate a particu larly difficult turn In the present road at that place. The culvert will be of concrete. Mrs. C. H. Richards. Style to Boot (VSQM Corps photo from NBA) Pfc. Paul Gable, Walnut Port, Pa., tries on new leather combat boot, developed by the Army Quartermaster Corps at Wash ington, to replace the para trooper boot and the ihoe-and-lpgging combination worn by ground forces. Lacing In con veniionoi manner, the boot has p wide two-buckle cuff top In which trousers are tucked. Trcffic Law Breakers Pay $75 in Fines Here Fines totalling $75 were collect ed In the Roseburg Justice court today Judge Thomas Hartflel re , ported. The fines Hartflel said were as follows: Edward Baxter, j $25, no vehicle license; Theodore R. Mayfleld, $10, void license plates; Emmltt A. Bishop, $30, jpeedlng; Earl M. Karllnger, $10, overwidth truck load. f j ' :y"' y V r' e 62 feet long, 12 feet wide and 12 feet high, inside measurements. The bed is finished now, and con crete is being poured for the side walls and the ceiling, which will be arched. . It constitutes a new type of construction for the fed eral forests. . The South Umpqua highway is hard-surfaced now to Camp Com fort, 29 miles upriver from Tiller, and the end of the road. It is suitable for heavy year-around traffic, barring presence of the too heavy fall of snow. NEWS or ou MENw WOMEN IN UNIFORM Word has been received that Corporal Ralph Loomis of the United States marine tank corps is stationed at Bougainville, Em press Augusta bay. His wife, the former Eileen LaRaut, and son, Ralph, Jr., reside in Roseburg on Jackson street. Cpl. Loomis re ports that he has seen Franklin Wickham and Ray Morgan, both of Roseburg, recently. Herbert L. Northcraft, son of William H. Northcraft, Brockway, recently commissioned as a sec ond lieutenant in the army air forces, has been assigned to Cha nute field, 111., as a meteorologist. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Forrest have received word- from their son, Private Charles, r orrest, tnat he has been sent to Camp Abbott, Bijnd, Ore., for basic training in the army. ., . SUTHERLIN ' Pfc. Monte Rowntree, grandson of Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Graham, of Sutherlin and a former high school student, has graduated as an airplane me chanic from the B-24 Liberator bomber mechanics school unit of the army air forces command at Keesler field, Biloxl, Miss. SUTHERLIN Marshall G. Pa razoo, 20, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Parazoo of Sutherlin, has entered the .army air center at Nashville, Tenn. He is a graduate of Sutherlin high school and has spent most of his life here. Lieutenant Elmer Dent, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Dent of Rose burg, now is stationed at Fort Ord, California, where he is In training with an army field artil lery unit. His wife and son, Barry, reside In Roseburg. According to word received, Staff . Sergeant . Francis Watzig, son of Mrs .Hedwig Watzig, of Roseburg, has been transferred from North Africa to Italy. He spent a year in Africa. With the U. S. air forces, he reports that he has enjoyed the olives and oranges In Italy and recently se cured apples, which he states Is a real treat there for the Ameri cans. Charles W. Clark, son of Mrs. C. W. Clark of Roseburg, Is now stationed with the U. S. army air forces at Santa Ana, Calif., ac cording to word received here. He was graduated from Roseburg high school last spring. Floyd Felt, son-in-law of Mr. and Mrs. Max Myers of Rose burg, has arrived In Africa, ac cording to word re'eeived here. His wife Is the former Alice Myers of Roseburg. Many Never Suspect Cause Of Backaches ThU OW Tretbnent Often Brinf i Huppy R1Uf When diordr of kklnfy function rx-rmllf poioutm matiftr to rrruuin in your blood, It utiy nut mmRinit bnckncha, rheumatic paini, lf ptliu, Iom of pep nd enorgy, getting up Bigbu, rwelling. puffinM under thn yim, headache and dliiincM, Frequent or eoaniy MMagee with martin- and burning mm iicpM howe there ft eomethlog wrung with your kidney or bladder. Don't waitt Aak your dragirlit tor Doan't Pillf, uaed tueeeMiuIly by million for ov?r 40 year. They give happy relief and "will hp the 16 mit of kidaey tube fluab out polaoo out waate from your blood. Get Uoau'c j'llla, Lone Scout Plan For Non-Troop Areas to Be Tried Douglas county has been pick ed as the first county in the states of Oregon, . Washington, 1 Idaho and Montana to try out : the Lone Scout plan of the Boy Scout organization which makes B. C. Elliott, district scout chair-; man., "The Lone -Scout plan," said Elliott, "is a type of Boy Scolt , organization which makes it possible for individual boys in more Isolated communities to en joy the fun of being a scout. Leadership has been secured for this organization which is known as a Lone Scout Tribe". Carl F. Spaulding of Roseburg has consented to serve as scout master pf the Tribe. Mr. Spauld ing has had several years of ex perience in Boy Scout work as a , member of the National Scout council and as the treasurer of the Mid-Columbia Deschutes Area council at The Dalles, Oregon. The Tribe will be sponsored by the Douglas District Scout com mittee, which has general super vision under the Wallamet Area council of all Boy Scout work in the county. Any boy in the county twelve years of age or -over may now be a scout by joining this Tribe. Due to travel conditions most of the work of the Tribe will be carried on by correspondence, but efforts will be made as soon as several boys from one community unite to separate these and form a neighborhood patrol or troop for them under local leadership. K. A. Wells, scout executive, points out that the Tribe is Intended for boys in communities where no Scout troop exists. Troops are now, organized in Drain, Yoncal la, Sutherlin, Roseburg, Melrose, Camas Valley, Myrtle Creek and Glcndale. Boys interested in becomine; members of the Tribe or In secur ing further information on how they may become a Boy Scout through this plan should write to Mr. Carl F. Spaulding, Box 453, Roseburg. U. S. Income Tax Blanks Sent Out; Early Filing Urged J. W. Maloney, collector of in .ternal revenue, announces that he has begun to mall copies of the 19 individual income and victory tax return to the estimat ed 450,000 federal income taxpay ers in the District of Oregon, i. ; , Collector Maloney said: "Al though these returns are not re quired by law to be filed until March 3.5th, I cannot urge too strongly that everyone prepare and file his return as. early . an possible." , ', , "There are," he said, "two ma jor points that are vital for. everyone to understand. First:, many pcrsans will owe a sub stantial tax and should start im mediately to find out how much they will owe and to make plans for meeting the obligation. I must emphasize this as a simple matter of fairness to those tax payers who may have overlooked this phase of the changeover to the pay-as-you-go system. "Second, although many tax payers will find that they are substantially paid up on their 1943 taxes some of them, in fact, being entitled to refunds it Is still necessary for them to file a return." Collector Maloney explained that under the pay-as-you-go sys tem, all current tax payments through withholding from wapes or by means of payments on "de clarations of estimated tax" are only approximate. Therefore, It Is necessary to file a return at the close of'the year to determine Special nonce ABOUT COLDS Miseries with home-proved Viehs VapoRubthst ACTS2WAYS AT ONCE.. It FtNCTfUTEt to upper bronchial tubes with soothing medicinal vapors. It ttlMULMU cheat and back surfaces like a wurmlng poultice. And what's more. It keeps rtgHt on working for hours veo while you eleepl Just rub throat, chest and back with good old Vlclu VapoHub at bedtime. VupoRub goes to work Instantly to relieve coughing spasms, ease muscular aoreneu or tightness. It invites restful, comforting sleep. And often by morning most of the misery is Jone. Try VapoRub's speolal way action tonic Ml When a cold strl':ea, be sure you use time tested Vlclu VapoHub. Top Honors To State's 4-H Home Beauty Winner PHYLLIS FOSTER, 18, of Cot tage Grove, Oregon, state en trant in the 1943 nationwide 4-H home grounds beautification con test, has been selected as one of eight national winners. Her reward is an all-expense trip to the 22nd National 4-H Club Congress in Chi cago, provided by Mrs. Chsrles R. Walgreen, Chicago horticultural en thusiast. ... In club work six years, she completed 24 home beiutiBca- tion tasks, which included helping clean up driveway, laying out a gar den plot, planting shrubs and trees, putting up a lattice fence and gates. adding lawn furniture, setting out grape vines, building a rock garden and lily bed, wishing well, rock wall, flower bed, grape arbor, and an outdoor fire place. . . . The girl values her home grounds beautifica tion work at $213.50. Phyllis served as assistant and junior leader ona year each. k (MM QLD0GF00D G1 Vtrttealbod. AT CITy HALLl Irate sign from an annoyed New York City pet shop owner appeared in protest to Mayor La Guardia's order to stop sale of dog food containing horsa . meat. thn nvnrt nmnunt of each Der- son's tax liability and to deter mine whether he underpaid or overpaid his taxes. I h I 't'iW' Your first Spring drew .. . I r fJ-'il ' &. ' and your favorite I Strikingly f ' ' f il i i4 lovely, lurprisingly practical .. . ! I Miii f i ,or you" wear " ,h whols N ! 'J-5-v! 11 1 Spring and Summer I Softly I 4fM''i I draped one-and two-piece ityles j Mf ...in black or novy. All ' I I lilet ' ' ' 'nc'u"n8 ha" ,'Ies ' pi 1 . 4.90 LmJ Ij $,l y.ut Spring .rll nw...yu n f pay lelw en Wacll metilhly soymant plan. JNlontgomery West Gasoline Situation Serious, OPA Advice PORTLAND, Jan. 13. (AP) The Pacific coast gasoline situa tion Is serious and tires for pas senger cars are as hard to get now as at any time since the war. So said Leo F. Centner of the OPA at Los Angeles on his ar rival hero. He had nothing to say about persistent rumors that gasoline rations would be reduc ed. But tire production, he said, has not increased according to original estimates ENDS TODAY Red Slcelton "PANAMA HATTIE" and "MEXICAN SPITFIRE'S ELEPHANT" STARTS TOMORROW MYSTERY WITH A CHUCKLE! Dick Foran "PRAIRIE THUNDER" W Hill JUIIN J m folium r i ttt lifmund umA 4-. .. H tout SJTjJ- - 61 totta J liCr : a lows! 1 f i and IJBgffH