SIX KPSEBURS REWS.REVTeW, RPSEBURS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1944. I : n--.. rJ its HI VI t f II UilU IVL'U (,UiUI MICA COATED ROLL ROOFING in 45-55-65 pound weight RED AND GREEN SLATE COATED 90 pounds per roll Buy Where You Own The Profits DOUGLAS COUNTY Farm Bureau Co-OperatiVe Exchange Playoff Won by Seals on Wierdest Piav of Season haustcd, to rtjort today for ques tioning by District Attorney n. A. Canaday. Morse Urges Non-Partisan American Tanks Roil Through Siegfried Gap (Continued from page 1) w n n a i a j hi ccshuuun ui uie irutf, ai- War Policy, Peace Making though the garrison of 15,000 nazis is anout twice as large as that 01 Calais. (Continued from page 1) J OS AN'OFI ES, Oct. 4. AP)' " ; : : - For the slvth time In as mnnvi 1:1 '""'""n and mM the same ROSEBURG. OREGON ' tries I-os Aneeles has lost the j t'ovcr nm-'s c if j plavoff Merits i wrno'i'r first division teams of the I ; i - - i I i Const league. The Seals heat them last night, i '1 lo on what perhaps v as Ihr I wierdest plav ff t!ic entire year i in ;ul l.-nscliall I'guy cordomI Homecoming Celebration INDIAN THEATRE Thursday, Ocf. 5, 7:30 p.m. Ail Douglas County Help Peck the Indian Theatre to Capacity. GIVE GUY A GRAND WELCOME Pd. Adv. Friends of Cordon Committee Los Am'Hes rccpntlv won tho! Donn-mt for tho s-'rorul year ini a row and San Fih nci ro now js taken tho playoff twice run ning. Last night's seventh enmp of (Hp ffml serins w:k rif-ided In 'he fifth innln. Here's what hnpnoned- Stnlnbaeher and Suhr of San Fninelsro led off wit ft uinirlne fiiintint thi.n hnntorl to I advanee the runners. Los Angeles Pfeher Cornelias nounced on the MM. made a perfect throw to 'bird hase for what should have heen an easv form out. Gr-'v's T'imble Costly. Hut Stan Gr;y, in covering th" base, trinned, fell and ball went bounding into the far reaehec of left field. Steinhnch or pmrd. Sithr scored. Kven 'nfini who hunted, ernvepd the olntp. Yet his bunt didn't po hP'f wav to the nltcher's mound. t"istaks pfain which she madi atte- the World war," the wnr;t'r Hped JisHiinv.tlon of re nonsihi'lt(es of world citizen sbfn and the remionsibllltv of making certain "that our victory in (t'ls war is a complete and fin al victory, not onlv over our cn- rn'es hut also over war itself." Joit r.nntrol Favored Mr. Morse made p.in that he does not propose niacins the irmed services of the United Stans under the control of any national government, but rather favors action in concert with oth er nations in enforcing the peace (ode, with a final check bv con cress on anv military commit ments and unon the use of Amer ican militarv forces. The candidate snen a husv dav W Rosehur?, addressing the Rose burnt Kiwanis Huh at its noon lunHipon entinp meetini? with voters at MvrMe CrvnU sneaking' the'10 ,hp Penublican Women's club1 ,,t.''::,:'' t,:- rpr vni warhead 'II I , ,,111 .1 II ill dinner rpeniini' .it fi:'i0 n. m., do ii.o.ino his radio address at 8 o'clock, anil sneaking to a Par On the Dutch front, British troops repulsed a German attack north of Niimcgen, and allied forces at Overloon to the south east cut down half of the fjer mans who mounted an assault there. In Belgium slow advances were scored northeast of Ant werp. In Italy U. S. Fifth army forces drove forward on a 20-mile front, founding through rough resist ance, Yank infantry smashed to within 15 miles of the outskirts of Bologna. There still was no official al- I lied word of landings In Crete, 1 hut an Algiers radio report said half the nazi occupation forces I on the Greek island had been killed, wounded or captured by invading allied troops. Soviet Flood Pours Closer to Belgrade (Continued from page 1) m. ; Peacetime Tax Reduction The Angels tried hard to save Hugh school at 8:30 p. h" ir;ir" in the ninth. Thev! Inailnd th. VmctB ti-Pti no n..i Then Gray strode to the plate. Mere was a rnaneo to redeem i n i himself. He let a third strike Promised by GOV. Dewey "o nv manager ,weenev enar-e- (Continued from page 1 -i wpini nil- j, in, ui Willi t.'mire Poran .and was chased io ih c'ubhouse. The veti'tan Tohnny Moore batted for Catcher j Sarni and lif'ed a foul that Rl"''irielder Hooner snared. Wlnnint? oitcher for the Seals was Harrell, who allowed only six hits. Al Smith, Candidate for President in 1928, Dies (Continued from pnge 1) SCHRICKER AUCTION Friday, October 6, 1944 HIGHWAY 99 NORTH AT LARGE NEW BUILDING STARTING AT 11:00 PROMPT FURNITURE Will sell bedsteads, stoves, heaters, all kinds of furniture and tools. HORSES You can always find a good work horse at this sale. If you have any you no longer need, there is always someone looking tor a good work or saddle horse. CATTLE We selt bulls, veals, canner and cutter cows. You can always find good milch cows here. Special for this sale a truck load of white-faced calves. Bring in your livestock, we have a lot of good buyers. Ask those who have attended some of our sales In the past. We have sold better than 200 head of livestock at the last two sales. It takes volume to keep buyers coming. The management takes pride in getting you market price for any livestock. MACHINERY We believe we have one of the best places in the county to sell machinery. 5 on all livestock. 10 on all miscellaneous articles. You'll receive an itemized statement for anything you sell. Yic Schricker Owner and Manager SCHRICKER, MASK, AND "HARRY" SMITH, Auctioneers. Hazel Schricker and Jackie Mask. Clerks UMPQUA TURKEY FAT MAKES FAT TURKEYS With the increased cost of killing turkeys this year (OPA has set the charge at 2.8c per lb.), save some profit for your self by finishing your birds on Umpqua Turkey Fat: MASH 3.10 PELLETS 3.17 DOUGLAS COUNTY ELQUU MILL "t't In nnijtlcc in recent years d'-vntlne h'ms-e'f ini!tn,-if to man naernt nf tli" Fmnlrc R'a'e hiiilriina nnd nK'in'T In bond driv es anfl other elvle activities. A nrnminnnl f-thnlic ?mlth J knew he was d'-'nt? "and was "ivl"n! an ih- time." said the I iev. .Tn'n ITeatv. his nasior, who "'s nresent when death came five months lo the day from the rfcith nf his wife, Catherine Iiunn Smith. A few ninnies after he died M' nnd Vf's A-ihiir Smith. ; "in ei"l d ii'"hier ip i-uv: Mr. anil Mt-c; Francis .1. Oiiillinan. a 'on :'' 1 "vl d;ii:hl'T. and Mrs i Finilv Warner, a daughter, an iv 1 "(I :il the hnsnilal. . Lonn in Politics i Smith, known for his hrown i dei liv, ci.i;ir and ever-nrrsrnl smile rose from humble sur '"undines on Manhattan's east side to a nlace whe-e he nev" H';s on! nf the public eve. He j had liitle formal education. , He was flefi;ipd for the nred . denrv in lO'JH bv lleibert Hoover i Althouj'h he carried onlv eieh' states, he received -11.2 per ecu j 'if the total vole. ft., ('il(i-(.( m. Ijj,.; nl the ae-e F of 22 as a clerk and suhnoen: .i.rver for t 11 e commissioner of : iin-ors. In l'HVt he vis elected a j state asserrblvman He served 2 ; vears al Allvnv N. Y.. hecomill" i l-ninc"'ic le'iiler of the asein hl- in mil ami sneaker in l'ttrt After servill" as sheriff in Vev York coimlv, he hec.ime 1 nresidi'll' of the hoard of alder nv-n. no'lini' a tremendous voic Tammanv hall i-mi him for "nv "i no-- in i"IS and he "on d"fe-o 111" Cnv diaries S 'hilman He j offered hi first nolitie-il dcfi-,1 ; !.! vears later when Nathan I, ' MOl.-r W 'S elected to the cover- em-shin but Smi'h came hack ill o" and hi'al Miller ; His other guhernalo'-i.-il -ielo : -;"s were civrr the laic Hrig Cen I 'fln-ii lot--. I'oiisevelt. ,lr., mill Oi! ; lien I., Mills. j As the democratic presidential ! "omince in I'.I'.'S. he made his I "1st "id last campaign tor pub lie office. Mihoicdi Smith 'v is elected hv "at poiiular dcninnsliations llooier r..c.'ied 21 .'I!I2.I!HI voles m his I.0k;.-I'I.'V Km- the first , time I'l " iiresidciuial election since Ihe Civ1! war. the democrat ie "solid south" "as broken, four stales going lo Hoover. Mvrrle Creek Hunter Killed by Mistake (Continued from page 11 thrusting for the Trans-Balkan railway over which some 50,000 Germans in the lower Balkans still may try to escape. nt.Teaeher rroun at the Junior Hungary Held By Threats I iiuimot a miik'h kiw worse steadily as the Red armv beat .throuph northern Transylvania ismashine the Mureshul river line and capturing hie west bank town of Reghln. I The war -weary Hungarians are ! known to have been seeking 'through a variety of diplomatic "But Ihe taxes we are paving channels to arrange an armistice todav are not iust for war," he ',ut the Germans are said to have added. "Thev also go to pav for threatend to raze Budapest and the waste and extravagance or resort to every violent means of Ihe snrawllng bureaucracy built 'reprisal If Hunrarv deserted like no bv the new deal in these last Romania and Finland. 12 years." I Cleaning up the north Baltic, a Business Easing Planned Russian army yesterday captured Individual tax rates, which take Estonian island of Hllu "at least ?.T ccnls out of everv ""- oi iwo major isiaiiu ilng on the collapse of resistance wilhln Warsaw In their campaign to drive a wedge between the al lies, said today that Moscow had welcomed the Polish disaster be cause it regarded the patriot up rising as the responsibility of the Polish exile government in Lon don. "The British government, for its part," said a Berlin broadcast, "has now completely abandoned its Polish guests and regards their liquidation as complete." The agency said Warsaw should prove a lesson to all those "still inclined to lend cars to the tunes of agitation played by the west ern plutocracies and by Ihe Krem lin." Exile Govt. Scored The communist London Daily Worker, meanwhile, bluntly as- isertcd that "in the case of War s"w, the world has witnessed not only a terrible military error but also a foul political intrigue aim ed at the solidarity of the united nations in which the lives of the insurgents were mere pawns in the game." It accused London Polish mili tary headquarters of pouring forth "a stream of anti-sovlel propaganda aimed to convey the impression that the red army had left Warsaw in the lurch and maintained that the "danger to allied unity will not be removed until the Polish government in London, a center of mischief and evil intrigue, is finally wound up." taxable dollar after credit for de oendents," would "slow uo our -ecoverv after the war" if thev were continued, he argued. He sa'd also that special wartime taxes on business almost amount ed to "confiscation" and must be lowered when peace comes. Remarking that "it has reach ed a point where everv time a woman powders her face rhere I is a tax of 20 per rent on Ihe I nowder," he proposed the even- tual elimination of all excise lev ies except those on alcoholic bov-' crages, tobacco and gasoline. ! The nominee called for a com plete overhauliniT of present rev J enue slalulcs. Insisting that a j basic and "generally stable" tax 1 law should he written that could ' be adiusted from lime to time anil lhat a national policy he es ' t.iblislied "directed toward achlev ! ing lull employment end a rising ' national income." ! The lax laws were so complex, he continued, that even the ex nerts could not figure them out, citiii" a section of the revenue act dealing with eninloyee's pen sion plans, i ne tax law s, ne add ed. had been changed 13 times in 12 years. bastions commanding the ap proaches to the Gulf of Finland and the Gulf of Riga. A commun iciue last night said a full German nfantrv division was routed In ! capture of Hiiu. I The island of Saare (Osel), di rectly to the south, remains in Ihe hands of the Germans. I Naids Spread Propaganda I German nronaeandists. canital- Galehouse vs. Cooper in Today's Series Opener ST. LOUIS, O-t. 4.-(AP The St. Louis Browns watched Mort Cooper, the Cardinals' ace, duel with Denny Galchouse, a vet curve ball artist who didn't win his first game until July 20, in today's opener of the first All-St. Louis' world series. Betting on today's game was 1 to 2 and on the series 2 to 5 with the Redbirds favored. Mrs. M. A. Kirkendall Passes Away at Coquille Mrs. M. A. Kirkendall of Co quille, formerly of Camas Valley, died Tuesday. The funeral will be held at the Camas Valley church at 2 p. m. Friday and she will be burled at the Martlndale cemetery at Camas Valley. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT THE SOUTH END CAFE 916 S.Stephens St. "The Little Cook House In The Auto Court" DR. S. W. AASEN VETERINARIAN Office and Small Animal Hospital Located at address formerly occupied by DR. NICHOLAS Phone 463 426 Beacon St. Residence 71 6-J Roseburg, Ore. State Hires Butter Scout In Institutions' Need BOSTON, Oct. 4. (API Ma jor George J. Cronin. state pur chasing agent, has hired a spe cial butter scout in an attempt to obtain enough butter for 25.000 inmates of institutions. Cronin said the state advertised bids for butter in carload lots without receiving a reply. EVERYBODY DANCE WEDNESDAY NIGHT is everybody's night to Howl and Sing and Dance at the EAGLES BALLROOM DANCING EVERY SATURDAY ALSO tt 1 Tf-.r-.n.i.-miF.-iavaay Yankees at Bay in Last Chinese Area Air Base (Continued from page 1) thev had heen making a drive in a steen rourh canyon. Uav had been placed on a stand, and e.ich ! of the other hunters had been as signed to n course which would d'-lve deer to the stand Khiki Clothinn Misleads I Fulton ncenrillne to the report. I sfr-'ved from IlK- assi'Mied course and reached a thicket where he " us forced to crawl on hands and k"ees Being dressed in khaki clothing, he was reported mistak en for a deer hv Gav as he crawled thrnueh Ihe brn-h al Ihe ed-e of the clearing where the stand w i situated The hulle air'arentlv sevced the l," i'e ai'terv ip the upper leg and Fulton died about an hour1 and a half after the accident, j while being carried out by his companions. Dr Verne Adams of Mvrlle Creek was summoned bv a mem ber of the nurtv who rao-d .ahead the Tiller raneer station, but Kulten was dead hv the time the hvlcian met the part v. Coroner Stearns and Sheriff barter wer" called to he scene bv Averv Berry, district forest raneer nl Tnler After ohtalnl'if statements from memlierc nT the Party, who were In a"''cement concerning the facts of the accl- oem. ine onicers instructed tne i aaa hunters, who were completely ex. I crators were shot down. MacArthur said, "destruction nf this target curtails drastically and immediately the enemy s capa- cuv io wage air anil naval war and to move essential cargo." In keeping with the recent sur mising sorties of solitary navy planes over the southern' Philip Pines, a single Liberator knock ed out a coastal vessel, seven sea planes, three bombers and a fly ing boat at Zamboanga. Cholera Hits Refugees American combat planes were reported taking off or landing on the crowded I.iuchow land iti" strips at lite rate of about one a minute. Japanese bombers at lack Ihe base every night. Cholera broke out among thou sands of refugees pouring through the town in flight from advancing Japanese columns. Loss of I.iuchow might effect the stream of some 211.000 tuns of military supplies that Presi dent Roosevelt reported were be ing flown into China each nionili. Decisive Battle Forecast Adni. Suilsugu, former commander-in-chief of the combined Japanese fleets, was minted hv Tokyo radio as saying the forth coming battle for the Philippines "will he of such a far-reaching nature as to decide the general war situation." Tokyo reported American bomb ers have made nightlv raids since last Saturday on Canton, hi" Japanese coastal base In southern China. A Chungking spokesman said a ministry of conscript ion would he established soon to speed up drafting men for China's armies, i PRUDENTIAL LIFE INSURANCE H. C. BERG, 8peclal Agent. Savings A Loan Building Phone 87 Proud of the CITIZEN SOLDIERS at our Avon Refinery PMTJT ' We're ' g " o i Mr The FACTS about DOVER Listen to COLONEL "TED" HOPKINS Over KRNR Tonight at 9:15 p. m. IM A.lv. tins va!k,r (They're setting records for making SOO-Octane Aviation Gasoline for ovr fighting forces) Yes, Associated is proud of the men and women who have worked so loyally and unremittingly at our great Avon refinery, njrning out record quantities ot 100-octane aviation gasoline, special fuels and lubricants for the armed forces. We're proud, too, of the others patriotically bending every effort to speed completion of our giant new catalytic cracking plant world's largest Fluid Type Catalytic Cracker unit which will vastly increase our aviation fuel production still lurcher. OUTPUT UP MORE THAN FIFTEEN-FOLD Avon's 100-octane output was large in 1940, for Associated even then was pioneering commercial volume production of this super-fuel. Since Pearl Harbor, it has been doubled, redoubled and doubled again bv immediate all out conversion, plus tireless efforts of the good soldiers in laboratory, draft ing room and production line. Before this year's end, the new "Cat Cracker" will bring production to more than fifteen-fold the 1940 level. And it will pour out additional thousands of barrels daily of the amazing new super aviation gasoline when the Army calls for it. Our hats are off to the Citizen Soldiers who have stayed on the job at Avon and at our other refineries who are finishing the job of helping our fighting forces finish the enemy. Workers in refineries and other war plants are not the only Citizen Soldiers. You, and millions like you, contribute mightily to victory in dozens of civilian activities, a few of which are listed heu-. Let us all be Citizen Soldiers all the way. Let's stay on the job and finish the job! Are You Doing ALL You Con as a CITIZEN SOLDIER? Regular Blood Donor . . . . Q Red Cross Worker Active Nurse or Nurse's Aide Conserving Esscniial Materials . Member A.W.V.S., Canteen, U.S.O. Victory Gardener, Harvest Helper Salvaging Metal, Paper, Fats . . Caring for and Sharing Car . . Doing NO Unnecessary Driving Observing Ceiling Prices . . . Avoiding Black Markets . . . Buying War Bonds to the limit Contributing 10 War Fund . . GASOLINE POWERS THE ATTACK -DON'T WASTE A DROP FREE FOOTBALL SCHEDULE AT ASSOCIATED DEALERS Listen to Associated football Sportcasts 19 th Year TIDE WATER ASSOCIATED OIL COMPANY