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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1944)
SIX R0SEBUR6 NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURG, OREGON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1944. Wildlife Program From Reedsport Given Study Here Tlie Umpqua Vallny chamber of commpree directors have under 1 consideration a proposal for eon-! servatlon of wildlife and wildlife ' resources sponsored by the Reeds- port chamber of commerce, it was reported today. The program is ' expected to be of reat value in preserving the wildlife resources, It is stated. Details of the pro gram are to be worked out coop eratively, according to present plans. The directors at their meeting Tuesday adopted a resolution op posing further increases in social security and unemployment taxes and directed that copies of the resolution be furnished the Ore gon congressional delegation. Secretary Harold J. Hickerson was authorized to attend a state postwar planning meeting to be held at Eugene, February 7 and 8. The secretary also was autho rized to devote a part of his time to assisting the Reedsport cham ber of commerce. Tentative plans for the annual membership banquet and meeting were discussed, but the definite date is being left open and will depend upon the availability of a speaker. Yankees Lose 64 Planes In Raid on Nazi Cities ' (Continued from page 1) rt-nft centers, the Americans at tacked other targets but the of ficial announcement did not iden tify them. Swedish reports, however, said one wing of the American aerial task force swung over the Berlin suhurbs without attacking and continued on to other objectives If true, this was the first time American bombers had been over the German capital . Nazis Use Rocket Guns Returning airmen said that ground rocket guns, throwing up explosives "as big as a house," were used by the na.ls as well as their rocket firing fighters In a ripunerntc effort to turn the American formations. "I've never seen anything like It durlne mv 15 missions," one navigator said In dosciibhie the three-hour battle over uscners leben, the home of the No. 1 Pocke-Wulf fluhter factory. At times as many as 28 na.l fighters wheeled into solid forma tions to attack single Flying For tresses, peeling off and roaring headon at the big bomners in such desperation that collisions were barely averted. Raids Value Emphasized The mighty raid, directed inainst three desperately-guarded . aircraft assembly plants In the heart of the relch, was also link ed to the forthcoming Invn-"'"'- bv Gen. Henry H. Arnold, chief of the U. S. army air forces. "Were It not for continuing at tacks against the production ca pacities of German aircraft fac tories," he told a press confer ence In Wichita, Kan., "nazl ef forts to double their fighter strength might have succeeded, with the result that the cltlllcul ties which must be overcome by allied air attacks and also by amphibious landing forces would be Incalculably Increased. His views were generally ac cepted here, and the Daily Ex press declared the attack "null cates the United States bomber force based in Britain has reach ed a new strength whicn may al so equal the RAF's thousand , plane (bomber) raids." Gen. Arnold said- American losses were about five per cent, n that basis, the armada con sisted of possibly planes bombers and fighters. In addition, smashing of the lactorles means that hundreds of projected German fighters never will be manufactured, Gen. Ar nold said. He declared the assault rocked the Germans "back on their heels" and production at the three plants has been wiped out for months, "hut we dare not let up." Eager For Another Round New American bombers were ahvady on the runways today to replace the 59 lost In Tuesday's spectacular raid on central Ger many, and filers who took part In that great three-hour battle were eager to get on with the campaign against the nazls. "We have plenty of replace ments we can take a whole lot more In war losses than we suf fered Tuesday," an Eighth alr orce spokesman said. The returned airmen summed up the flaming three-hour battle against swarms of nni rocket Oregon Nevada California Fast Freight Inc. DAILY SERVICE TO AND FROM PORTLAND AND SAN FRANCISCO 810 So. Stephens St. Telephone 4 IS ( ' iTKl GEOtOGISTS ( ) JF-'W Sl V BELIEVE THAT THE DROPPING) ( V?VX Jf II ( gOVlGS- INTO JAPANS I LJ XsJr 7OwlH . WILL SET OFF A CHAIN ' f OP NIPPONESE I COWI. 1W BV WEA StRVICf '. IMC. W jJWTtBlw-JIl!??! MEN LOST IN OUT OF THE WAV PLACES OF THE EARTH DIE OP STARVATION BECAUSE THEY DO NOT KNOW WHICH WILD PLANTS ARE EDIBLE, OR HOW TO PREPARE THEM. NEXT: Nature's 'Twin - fir) IV. S. Noay Plioto From NEA) An impressive study is this marksman drawing a bead with his "twin fifties" from the deck ol a PT bout, a craft which has been a thurn in the side pf the Japs in scores of South Pacific operations. fighters and rocket ground guns In these matter-of-fact words: "We won, didn't we?" Congress Gets Second Budget for 100 Billion (Continued from page 1) Europe "earlier than assumed." the president declared the time Is at hand not only for wartime re adjustments but for preparations for peace. "Demobilization begin long be fore hostilities end," he added in setting forth seven problems he said require a "positive" not "negative" approach to assure the soldier, the worker, the business man and the farmer "against economic chaos." Problems speci fied are contract termination, surplus proHM-ty disposal, Indus trial reconversion, manpower de mobilization and reemployment, public works planning, vetemns legislation and social security, and International readjustment. The budget sets aside 90 of the 100 billion dollars for "war activi ties," but Mr. Roosevelt said that in addition to his thin distinction between "war" and "non-war spending, still another classifica tion "aftermalh-of-war was emerging. In this category he nl.ieed three-fourths of the $3,750,000,- 000 Item for Interest on the na tional debt, more than half the anticipated $1,252,000,000 outlay for veterans, and a larco portion of the $1,?!)9.000,000 contemplat- ed as the cost of refunds, prl , marlly excess profits and other war-time taxes. Outlay Needs Declining Excluding such costs, Mr. Roosevelt said, the total of 'other" governmental activities would continue the "steady de cline which has been maintained since 1939." The $2,953,000,000 estimate for those purposes, he added, Is barely half the comparable total of S5.S97.000.000 expended 14 Th! END OF A BALL OF4TRIN& IS IN THE MIDDLE, "-Siy RICHARD B. EDWARDS, blockbusters. Fifties' In 1939. It is $571,000,000 below the revised estimates for the current fiscal year." The president Included In hii message reqilests for immediate impropriations of $17,000,OlK),(K)ii, of which $7,000,000,000 would be for war purposes, leaving $53, 000,000.000 for war purposes to be appropriated later. He said the aggregate of new approprio llons for the year probably would not exceed $70,000,000,000, com pared with $100,000,000,000 ap propriated during fiscal 19-11. Remaining funds to finance the $100,000,000,000 program would come from requests to reappro prlato unobligated funds previ ously allotted. Reds Expand Campaign Beyond Priper Marshes (Continued from page 1) Second Ukrainian army, driving for a Junction wUh Vaiutin's group, scored adltlonal suc cesses against the enemy In the Korovograd salient. Vinnitsa, Important center on the strategic Klev-Zherinka rail way leading into the Odessa-Warsaw trunk line, Is 200 miles south of Mozyr, while Klrovograd, where the Germans suffered one of their worst defeats of the pres ent offensive, lies 300 miles south east of the White Russian stiong hold. Belaya Tserkov Is midway between the two sectors. The Russian eomunlque said that more than 5.000 Germans were killed and 1-1-1 nazl tanks wrecked In while more villages fell Russians. the past 2-1 hours, than 80 towns and to the advancing New Allied Fleet at Gibraltar Is Reported LONDON, Jan. 13. (AP) A DNB broadcast from Berlin today said that among new arrivals at Gibraltar were C2 more allied merchant men, the British bat-! tleship Warsplte, two French and two British torpedo boats, 10 cor vettes and one submarine. DRIVE OUT DniUEl Roundworm! enn EJU llkb cnuM rnl trouni lioiide ymi or jrtmr .1.11.1 I U'.t.k ... Wnrnlng altrniii 0 fldiretinfr. "pioky" appetite. Itchy not or nt. If you even aunitert roundworm, gt Jayne'i Vermifutr tcUvl JAYNKS it Amrlfi Imdlnu proprietary worm mrdU rin; ut by million for ovr a crntiiry. Act ffntly. yet driven wit roundworm. IU sum ywu vl JAVNt S VfcKMU UCKI Dad's Day Linked With North Bend, ! R. H. S. Grid Game j i LEAGUE STANDINGS j W L Pet. Klamath Falls 3 1 .750 : Medford 2 1 .667 1 Roseburg 2 2 .500 i Ashland 1 2 ' .333 i Grants Pass 0 2 .000. Saturday will be Dad's day at i Roseburg Senior high school, I when fathers of the players com-1 posing the Indian basketball squad will be the school's honor guests at the game between Rose burg and North Bend. The dads wll! Join with the players of the two squads at a dinner at the school cafeteria at 5:30 o'clock. They also wli! be ad mitted to the dressing room be fore the game and between I halves, and will occupy a special reserved section in the gymna sium during the contest. Saturday's game will start at 8 o'clock. The North Bend team Is in much the same position as the Indian squad, being short on preseason competition. All of me games scneauiea aunng tne ninoay season were canceiea Dy North Bend, due to the preva lence of influenza in the Coos Bay area. North Bend has not played a league game so far this season. Coach Hod Turner reports he has been experimenting with a new lineup, which' promises wel and will trv the new arrange ment of nlavers to start Satur day night's game. Cummlnes, who has been nlav Ing in a guard position, will be shifted to forward to team with Loomis. Anderson will remain at the center soot, and Krell and WHev win be th" stnrtlniT guards. The Klamath Falls victory over ysHlnnd this week has re arran"ed the nv)e- of cunneti tien In the Southern Oregon league, placing the Pelicans at the ton of the list. Rosehurc. with one more game plaved than imv other team In the league, stands at an even .500 per cent. Rosehurg's next league games will be plaved Jin. 21 and 22. when the Indians meet Ashland on the local court. Tule Lake's Japanese Vote to End Strike 'Continued from page 1) flclals said today armv control over the Japanese relocation cen ter at Tide Lake, Calif., would continue as long as the War Relo cation authority desires It. , "The army's mission will re main the same until such time as the WRA feels the situation has returned to normal and their of ficers can handle it," said MaJ. Fupene V), MuMlns, public rela tions officer at Ninth service com mand headquarters. There is no present Indication of when that situation will de velop, Mullins said, and hence it would be Impossible to predict how long army control will con tinue. "The army was called in by the WRA," he added, "and will leave only at the WRA's request." U. S. Casualties of War Now Almost 140,000 WASHINGTON, Jan. 13 (AP) American casualties since the start of the war now total more than 139.800. The army losses total 105,229 and those of the navv, marine and coast guard 34,523. Secretary of War Stimson, in reporting the army casualties from the start of the war to December 23, said the figure rep resented l,83t killed, 38.916 wounded. 24.007 mlsslno. and 25.- 415 prisoners of war. I FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass 'any wearers of false Ipoih have suf 'fl roal embiirrassnvn Ihtjuiso thplr te flroppctl. sllpprd or wiitiblpd at I Hit? wt-oiiK time. !") not Ihe "tn r of this hiitmenlnii to you. .lust Inkle n little FASTKKTM. the nlha p num-arid t powitiH. nn vmir plnies. liN fttlse tc-th more flrmlv. so ihev more r-omforiiittlc. IVes not sour, ivks "plate odor" utenlure htonth). i V STKKT!l ill nny iIiuk store. BOMB RINGS ARE MADE OF PAPER There's a critical shortage of WASTE PAPER AWE i BUNDLE WEEK 9AVC SOME BOY'S LIFE U. S. Victory Waste Paper Campaign Haste Do you buy desperately, hurriedly, grabbing -at the nearest can with the number of points that fits those you have left? Taken anything at the last minute just to spend your pre cious allotment of stamps? Watch the stamp expiration dates, and avoid BUDGET YOUR POINTS 77a Beef Roasts, Steer B'f. Ib 29C Ground Beef, lb. 25C Lunch Meats, Asst. Ib. . 39C M Frankfurters, lb. 35C Pork Sausage, Ib. 39C Short Ribs, meaty, Ib. . . . 23C ESBS v v Sauer Kraut, qt. . . . . . Mi J nUlPirMftC F.e(. fill I IVUIWI Salmon (sliced), Ib. FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Lettuce, large solid heads 2 for 25c Celery, large green bch. 1Z Cabbage, solid heads, lb. .... . lz Beets, locals, 2 bch. ......... 19C Carrots, locals, 2 bch. 15C Lemons, Sunkist, Ig. size., doz. 35C Havel Oranges, Sunkist. 252s doz. 29c, 150s 49c, 100s 69 UHRATiONED FOODS Fishers Pancake Flour, 9.8 Ib sk 63C Kelfoggs Corn Flakes, 11 oz. 2-19C Cream of Wheat, 28 oz. pkg. .. Z3C Albers Rolled Oats, 9 Ib. sk.... 53c Calumet Baking Powder, 1 1b cn 17c H. 0. Oats, pk. or reg., Ig. pkg. 25c Egg Noodles, 14 oz. pkg. .... 19C EM TELEPHONE 522 STORE NO. 1 Makes Waste - In Points, too! AND AVOID LAST MINUTE SPENDING; GET FULL SELECTION! 15C IOC 49C 3fnr W IVI ll IT'S SMART m mm the last minute dash by spending your cou pons as you go along -not hoarding, not wasting, but buying when you can get the foods you heed and can use. It will help you to make the best use of your share of war time foods. T 50 Ibskl.89 SAVE USED FATS FOR GUNPOWDER Bring thtm here! I styled is a sure I aMPaSTcauT 1 imi BEAUTY SALON Phone 522 for an oppolntment. Menanine Floor, Mart No. 1 STAPLES Mortons Sugar Cure, 91b can . . 98c Mortons Sausage Seasoning Ig 25c Sweet Pickles, qt. jar ........ 49c Honey, 51b. tan.. 1,39 Sugar, 10 lb.sk 63e Milk, tall cans, 3 for . . 29c Starch, corn or gloss, 1 1b pkg 2-15C Oval Sardines, Ig. can ........ 17c Tillamook Cheese, lb. .... ... . 39c P. A. or Velvet. 1 lb. pkg 69c Albers Farina, 28 oz. pkg 19 c Light Globes, 25s, 40s, 60s, each IGc A. & H. Soda, 1 1b. pkg., 3 for ... 25c Worcestershire Sau. 5 oz. bot. 15c TO BE THRIFTY" VALUE AND THE BIGGEST i in i Here's the Ration Stamp Set Up Now Valid: Brown Stamps R, S, T, and U expire January 29. Green Stamps D, E, F expire January 20. Sugar Stamp 29 expires January 15. Look Younger! You'll feel younger and look more lovely if your riair is individually for you. "A new permanent remedy for low morale on the home front. STORE NO. 2 TELEPHONE 39