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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1949)
.... . . L, (7,;,-,. j 'tUV "M7 wii.t i. ww. k ' v v. WSJ Tttephaiot B-29s COLLIDE HEADON Alr Force B-29 Superfortress Ues twisted and crumpled on marshy Macdon- 1 . old Island near Stockton, Calif, after It collided bead-on with another B-29 during a routine "round . robin" training flight to California from Spokane, Wash. The second B-29 crashed two miles away on Rlndge Tract and burled Itself in 16 feet of slimy delta mud. Ten of the 21 airmen aboard the two plane . . ore known dead, seven are missing and four parachuted to safety. Bonneville's Present Prices Continued For 5 Years PORTLAND (JP) Bonneville poweryadmlnistration will con tinue charging $17.50 a kilowatt year t!o;its present customers for the next live years. . , , . ''In 1954," Paul J. Raver, Bonne ville administrator, told the Bon- 1 12!l "Individualized Floors -- of. Beautiliry." t j it INLAID ' LINOLEUM 4c CarpetinK' Hubber Tile ' it Asphalt Tile -fr Formica Topi . Venetian Blinds 'FREE ESTIMATES ' ' FLOOR COVERING .224 W(; Oak . , Phone 348 heville regional advisory council, "we expect to have to Increase the rate . . . but not more than $5 a kilowatt year." ' Raver explained that the pres ent rate lowest wholesale pow er rate In the nation would oover . costs until the new dams are completed. The $17.50 tariff is being ex tended on all present contracts. Raver said, however, that new customers might possibly face higher charges, should an operat ing deficit develop during the five years. , Earlier, Raver warned that private utilities could not be promised as much guaranteed power next year, and that they might get no guaranteed power at all the following year. See NORGE Before You Buy $5 per Month Rebuild Repair Repaint Add years of service to your Washing Machine. Material 'and Workmanship : Guaranteed. ' I .. -: . Easy payments as low as $5 r; 'per month. i Phone 805 ' BERGH'S '- Appliance Service 1200 S. Stephens . See NORGE Before You Buy 18 Of 20 Fliers Rescued At Sea HAMILTON, Bermuda, Nov. 21 : WBeefsteak, families, insur ance and "move over and give me a little room" That's what survivors of the ditched' B-29 said they thought about during 79 "miserable" hours-on two six-man life rafts in heavy- Atlantic swells north of OIL TO BURN For prompt courteous meter ed deliveries of high quality stove and burner oil ' CALL 152 MYERS OIL CO. Distributors of Hancock Petroleum Products For. - Douglas County Grounded Flier Attempts To Kill Wife And Himself WICHITA, Kas., Nov. 21 UP) Police reported an air force offi cer, upset over being grounded because of the air force cutback program, attempted to kill his wife yesterday. ' Detective Carl Spriggs slad Lieut. Arthur E. Chatham, 32, also threatened to kill himself and his four-year-old daughter. Police quoted Mrs. Chatham as saying her husband was "in love" with flying and had suggested a murder-suicide plan as a solu tion to their problems. Chat ham has been in the air force since 1941. Ha was in charge of reserve flight training in the Wichita area. Mrs. Chatham said her hus band had been notified Saturday that he was being relieved of ac tive duty in the organized reserve and was being grounded as part of the cutback program. ; The air force letter gave him 60 days to re-enlist in the regu lar army, she said. Spriggs said the lieutenant fir ed three times at his wife as she peered around a doorway into a room where he sat with their daughter, Irene. He finally sur rendered his gun after talking the situation over with the detec tive and a friend. ... , No charges have been filed. Chatham was flown to Kansas City, Kas., and placed in the Fairfax field base hospital for observation. V. S, -railroads had $125,000. In vested in road and equipment per mile of line in 1948. William Penn's father wrote the first code of tactics for the British Navy. Bermuda. The 19 survivors four of them on stretchers arrived here yes terday aboard the Canadian de stroyer Haida. The ship picked them up Saturday afternoon aft er a U.S. air force B-17 sighted them about 400 miles northeast of Bermuda. Two of the 20-man crew drown ed before they could get through the heavy swells to the two life rafts. One of the 18 survivors was suffering considerably from shock. . WITH THESE THANKSGIVING Fiimpkin 1,1 VIS Diamond A Large Can Fancy Pitted Tall Can 7c 27c Umpqua Freeze, qt. '. . . 35c Dole's No. 2 Can Pineapple . . .35c Ball Point Pens .. . 29c Rinso, pkg.. . . 25c 1 Walnuts, lb. . . 23c Popcorn, 2 lbs. . 31c 1 Eating Chocolate, lb. . .45c , ' Light or Dark Fruit Cake ... 69c ; I ST They Taste Better WITH . BEST FOODS 'MAYONNAISE It's Really Fresh! mm Bandon No. 1 New Crop Navel 3 lbs. 29c Prices Effective Tuesday and Wednesday ob Franks Srocery r j (..!.... CDrr rri ivcpv bl... na ' U.S. Urged To Use Force To Liberate Consul In China WASHINGTON, Nov. 21 UB Fresh demands that the United States use force against the Chi nese communists drew only an official silence at the State de partment today. . The demands are promoted hv the imprisonment at Mudken of an American Consul, Angus Ward. He and four members of his staff have been held since October 24, on charges of having beaten a Chinese employe. - Yesterday, Senator Knowland (R.Calif) said in a Formosa news conference that he had radioed President Truman,, demanding a blockade of the Chinese commu nist coast if the Reds fail quickly to release Ward. Knowland is touring the Orient. - There was no official comment here in reply. Last week State department officials. indicated in formally that they doubted a U.S. blockade would bring the com munists to terms. They said the Chinese Nationalists already have cut off imports to Commu nist China fairly effectively. George N. Craig, national com mander of the American Legion, also called for forcible action. He said in a weekend statement that United . States stands "ridiculed before the world," and added: "The American . Legion calls upon the government to serve no tice oh Communist . leadrs In China that Consul Geheral Ward arid his associates must be re leased unharmed by an early spe cified date, or armed forces will be dispatched to obtain their release." Entire Orient Field For MacArthur Recommended SEATTLE UP) An Arizona publisher recommends the ap pointment of Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur as an American high com missioner for the entire Orient. William R. Mathews, publisher of the Tucson Daily Star, made the suggestion in an interview here. He credited General MacArthur with a "magnificent" job in Ja pan. He interviewed the general there last August. "We face a long, cold war In the Orient," he declared. "We Parents Want Record In Boy's Name Corrected LOS ANGELES. OP) ' There's a slight mistake on the otrth certificate or David uary Tanner, two, his mother said, and she asked superior court to order a correction. David's last name, says the mother, lsn t Tanner, it s Blitz, In her petition Mrs. Helen Blitz, 29, told this story: - - Sue married uaiiv'u o. -Tanner, 31, in May, 1938, and won an an nulment Sept. 29, 1948, on the ground that Tanner had proved incapable of showing her any affection. , On Oct 11, 1948, she married Harry B. Blitz, 30, seaman first class, In Kodiak, Alaska. Mr. and Mrs. Blitz concede that the child, born July 27, 1947, was registered as David Gary Tanner but they insist that he really was fathered by Blitz. Do not attempt to work soil that adheres to the tillage tools. must draw a line there against the communists, just as we did in Europe, and support that line even at the risk of giing to war, just as we did in Berlin." CACT TO THE KMts? I VIA SANTIAM HIGHWAY TRAILVVAY5 v ,v-r ROUTE Troilwoyi Bus Depot 121 N. Stephens ' Phone 1528 Mon., Nov. 21, 1949 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. -.mm AT LESS COST v to MR, MERCHANT Did you know that we have the Metro Newspaper so that we may help you prepare more effective advertising at less cost, Our skilled staff is able to make available to you the attention compelling il ' lustrations, timely advertising ideas, and copy hunches for which this nationally famous ser vice is noted. Metro. Newspaper Service en dows your advertising in this newspaper with more pulling power. It is yours to use and it costs nothing extra. , Ask any of our Repreienfafvt. EVERYTHING YOU NEED FOR A GOOD AD it youri for th atking now that wt havt Metro Nwipopr Strvtcti dramatic attention compttltrs, mtrctan dif iUuttraiions, hand lettered head ing, ideat, copy tvggettiont. Whitn you' buy space) in thit newspaper you alto obtain free access to Metro Newspaper Service. UMPQUA DAIRY announces UMPQUA-FREEZE' A BRAND NEW PRODUCT 'II :'Gv , iv,-- :, -x . :v ... U- It's New! 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