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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 8, 1950)
Autos & Mtr. Cycles 27 Better Buys . at Barcus 1MI PACKARD SUPER CONVER TIBLE, Beautiful light blue color, with new light top. ntw white wall Ures. R At H, many other axtrai. You mutt this car to appreciate It Only S349S 1040 KAISER TRAVELER. Ideal for that vacation trip, only - IMS 1048 FORD V-8 SUPER DELUXE 8 du. rouM tedin. R 8c H. maroon with whit aid walls 1395 1047 HUDSON SEDAN. R St H, motor completely recondi tioned laos 1930 BU1CK SPECIAL SEDAN, new motor. R At H- 5 new Urea. Very good ,-. 495 1030 FORD TUDOR. R 103T NASH SEDAN 1935 FORD V-8 Tudor - 895 175 Trucks 1947 FORD dump truck. 4 yd. teel box. 8 new H.D. Urea. Ready te haul 1395 1937 INTERNATIONAL with 18 flat bed semi trailer, vacuum brakes, eood tires. Excellent mechanical condition 750 1938 FORD PICKUP EASY TERMS LIBERAL TRADES - BARCUS Your Packard Dealer Highway 98 N. at Garden Valley Rd. Phone 1354 Kaiser Deluxe Sedan. . .Radio, Heater. O D . 1695.00 1040 1048 1047 Willys Station Wagon O.D 1 303,00 Willye Panel. Heater .... 1150.00 Frazer Manhattan Radio. Heater. O. D. . , 1495 00 Ford Club Coupe, Heater. . . . Plymouth Sedan, Radio & Heater U 13.00 Willys Station Waaon. Heater. O. D. .1095.00 Ford Pickup, Heater, new paint 605.00 Ford 8-2 Dr Sedan, Heater. , .405.00 Chevrolet Sedan, Radio it Heater 695.00 Ford Pickup 405.00 Ford Coupe 350.00 Plymouth 2 dr Sedan . '. . .225.00 Dodge Coupe 175.00 Plymouth Couoe. - 90.00 1040 1030 1939 1037 lfl.Tfi 1036 uias &eaan 88. ou Riverside Motors Phone 430-R 1640 N. Stephens Clean, Sharp "46 Hudson Suner Six 4-Dr. sedan. SftflS. Immaru late interior, new rubber, low mile ase. Good Terms. Bv owner. L. J King, call Roseburt 51 or 103-R-l to REASONABLY PRICED GM AC TIRMS CHEVROLET, BU1CK, POMTIAC, CADILLAC TRADE-IN! Hansen's USED CAR CENTER Rose at Oak FOR SALE OR TRADE 47 Mercury, good condition Ph. 1063-L. MORE MONEY for your car. Cash on the spot. Cork rum Motors. Inc., Da Soto. Plymouth, Phone 408. 114 N. Rose St It's No Trick At All When You Use NEWS-REVIEW CLASSIFIED ADS CLASSIFIED RATES 1 ,. ofr wnrd ' ds.vs Phone 1 00, Ask for "Classified" 1 Impounded 28 THE FOLLOWING described dog has been Impounded and if not claimed within 48 hours from date of notice. will be disposed of as provided by law: Red Irish setter, male Geo Weseman Idleyld St. Box 85, City 87505:00 P. M. Personal 30 MISS ANNA STREED, Spencer Corset- lere. will be in Roseburg wed. and Thurs.. Aue- Oth and 10th. Call 010-J for appointment. ALCUHUL1C8 ANONYMOUS. P O. Sox lilt. Notices 31 HAVE SOLD DILLARD STEAK HOUSE. 1 Will not DC wponiion for any bills under that name from this date on. Florence Davis. Marines Will Mobilize All Volunteer Reserves WASHINGTON (AP) The marine cores announced Monday it will mobilize all ot lis wj.wu volunteer reserves. A marine spokesman laid the initial call is going out to approxi mately 50.000 officers and men who will report lor active amy between Aug. 15 and Oct. 31. The marine corps said that it also is calling up additional or. eanized units ot its air reserve. Some air reserve units were sum moned to active duty about three weeks ago. The corps already has called to active duty an its organized ground reserve units. A marine spokesman said no date has been set (or the call to approximately 30.000 volunteer re. serves who will not be included in the first summons. Dillard M r s. Alena Merrifield and daughter, Lois, from Elsinor, Calif., are visiting the former's mother, Mrs. Robert Jackson, ana her brother and sixter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Harryman. and son, Stanley, at their ranch up Kent creek in Dillard. They plan to remain three or four weeks before returning home to Califor nia. I Guests who arrived at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Middle stadt Sunday, July 30, were the latter's father and .mother, Mi, and Mrs. E. W. Fisher, and her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Don Romaine, all from Eu gene, They all recently returned with Garaldine Middlestadt from a 10-day tour of the Yellowstone National park. Enroute home they stopped at Jerome, Idaho, to visit with Mrs. Fisher's brother and sixter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Brun son. Rev. Frank B. Drew left Mon day morning for Tacoma, Wash., te attend the annual Methodist pastor's institute which is to con vene for one week. The Rev. Mr. Drew is motoring north with the Methodist pastors from Myrtle Creek and Grants Pass. Arriving last week from Tulare, Calif., Mr. and Mrs. Sam Boyd and son, Sammy Dale, visited at the Home ot Mrs. Boyd s brother-in-law. and sister Mr. and Mrs. Otis Fish. They decided after visiting several days to stay in Oregon, so they have moved into Winston. Boyd now is employed in the Ford Lumber Co. sawmill. Mr. Echols and son, Buck, also, ot luiare, accumpaniea ine Doyas to Dillard, Echols decided to stay in Myrtle Creek, where he found employment and his son returned home to Tulare. Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Flagler Tuesday evening at their home on Willis creek were Mr. and Mrs. Wm C. Heinbach. Ina Lee and Warren. Covers were placed for Miss Joan Wentworth, houseguest of the Flaglers from Witchita, Kans., and Katie Sue. A fried chicken dinner was served by the hostess. Saturday evening guests at the Wm. C. Heinbach Sr. home for an "old fashioned" ice cream party were Rev. and Mrs. Frank Drew and two daughters, Judith Kay and Laurabeth, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Burgess and Philip and Christine, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Post and Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Her eher. Mr. Hercher entertained the group by showing several movies he had taken. Visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Abner Rice Sr. on Sunday evening, July 30, were Mrs. Elsie Hanna of Los Angeles, Mrs. Myrtle Walker and her mother, Mrs. Eu gene Hixon of Roseburg, Mr. and Mrs. Every Thrush and Mr. Thrush of Camas Valley. Miss Patricia Newman of Pur- cell. Okla.. has returned to Dillard to visit her aunts, Mr. and Mrs. Otis Fish and Mr. and Mrs. "Doc" Kennedy. Miss Newman will be remembered among Dillard high school students as she spent a year here with her aunt prior to the last year in Purcell. New cabinet built-ins in the kitchen of Mrs. Abner Rice are being installed by Rex Wheeler of Winston. On Monday Mr. and Mrs. wneeier and children spent the day at the Rice home. An all-day trip on the North Umpqua with picnic lunch on Sun day was enjoyed by Mr. and Mrs. Wm. C. Heinbach, Ina Lee and Warren. Dillard folk leaving for Victoria, B. C, were Mr. and Mrs. Will ard Laurance and Mrs. Mercy Buell, and Mr. and Mrs. Bert Laurance and two children Pam ela and Nickie. They left Tuesday morning, planning on a few days in Portland, a slop over in Seattle and going on into Canada. LEGAL NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT Th Administratrix of the est.t. ( WILLIAM COMMON. Deceased, hereby fivei notice that the County Court of Dou.l.s county, oreion, has fixed sent' ember R, 1030, at ten o'clock In the forenoon aa the time, and the County Court room In the Court Houe In Itnt burg, Doiiflai County, Oregon, aa the place for hearing objections. If any there he. to the final Account of th Admin istratrix. Dated and ftrat published the Sth day of Aufust. 1M0. OTTn.IT COMMON. Administratrix of the Estate of William Common. Deceased. u, : ... i&mt$sm (NEJ TtlepheMi ORDERLY RETREAT-Mechanised U. S. troops make an orderly retreat as North Korean Reds press their attack in an all-out bid for victory before reinforced American troops can consolidate and counter attack in force. A military spokesman In Washington said "local withdrawals may look bad, but th overall situation is a different matter and It ia Improving." (Defense Department photo.) Increase In Retail Prices Reflect War-Born Boost In Raw Materials By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK (AP) Prices are going up faster at the store level now. The hike in raw materials that lOllowed outbreak of the Ko rean war is working around to the finished product and you can look for many things to be a little high er next time you buy. This week prices are up over last on such things as shoes, un derwear, fuel oil, gasoline, carpets, typewriters lawn seed, percale, and dairy products. These price hikes aren't uni form across the country, nor are they made by every company in the field. But little by little prices go up. And mare of the same appears to be in the making as the manu facturers eye their costs and price lists. "Raw materials and manufactur ing costs are going up," is the way the increases are usually explained. A number of industries can't de cide yet what the price level will finally be at retail as they struggle to adjust along the line. Textiles Confused Textile markets are particularly crnfused just now. Heavy buying last week, at rising prices, took up most of the rest of this year's pro ductive capacity lor many cotton mills. A number of cotton, wool and rayon mills withdraw from the market, refusing to quote prices. In St. Louis, one of the large textile houses raised the price of its 80 by 80 percales by two cents a yard to cents. In New York, some houses went up one to one and a half cents a yard. Sheeting houses reported that last week's sales all but cleaned them out for the rest of the year. American Woolen company stopped quoting prices on worsteds Friday. In the last two months it has raised its price twice. Since many worsted mills are sold up for months ahead, they are expected to stop quoting prices until they see at what level the Australian wool auctions open in September. Higher prices on woolen garments moving to the stores this fall and next spring are widely expected. Fine wool prices have continued to rise because of the world-wide scarcity in recent months. On top of this comes the prospect of heavy demand for uniforms for the ex panding armed forces. The pressure on garment makers is all for rais ing prices. Some even talk of a shortage next year. Many rayon weavers are refusing to take orders are reoort-: ed putting in clauses in t h e con tracts allowing them to raise their prices if the expected additional : hike in rayon yarn prices is forth coming soon. Food Higher Food prices continue to edge high I er. Some of it results from the wave of scare buying which tempo- i rarily reduced supplies. But some j of it now reflects the advance at the farm level. i The agriculture department re ports farm product prices jumped mid-July to a point 6.9 per cent above a year ago. j standard Oil company (Ohio) has raised the price of gasoline by a ' half a cent a gallon in Ohio. Today Royal Typewriter company j is advancing the prices on standard models by about seven per cent. The Brown Shoe comnanv in creased the price of men's shoes an average of 25 cents a pair. Geo. E. Keith company, Brockton, Mass.,: raised price tags on women's dress shoes by an average of 30 cents a pair. Heavyweight underwear is eoine up 20 to 30 cents a garment at I P IS YOUR W YEP IT'S BUSINESS FLAT ON LOOKING UP?V ITS vjy ( back retail, P. H. Hanes knitting com pany reports. Proctor and Gamble's household soaps and vegetable shortening prices are up seven per cent, But a brighter side is seen by the business survey committee of the National Association of Purchasing Agents. It sees a slackening in the "flurry of panic buying." it also be lieves the nation's production capa city is big enough to fill both mili tary and civilian needs wunoui hardship for anyone. Coon Hollow By NEDRA CHAPMAN Mr. and Mrs. MORTON Steph ens attended the Masonic picnic Sunday at Glendale. Mr. and Mrs. John Smith and daughter of Florence, were over night guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ken Wight on foonday. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Drake and boys spent Sunday at Myrtle Creek having dinner at the home of Mrs. Drake s parents Mr. and Mrs. I. C. Robison. They then attended the ball game. Rav Brown of Glendale has been visiting his grandparents, Mr and i Mrs. Morton Stephens the last few , days. i Charles Ray Wight, son of Mr. ; and Mrs. Ken Wight, is leaving ; Wednesday for Albuquerque, N. Mex., where he makes his home i with Mrs. Wight's parents, Mr. ; and Mrs. Carlos Solas. 1 Mrs. Vernon Ward and children j are visiting Mrs. Ward's parents ; in Idaho. i Mr. and Mrs. Harry Baldridge , of Gardiner were weekend guests at the home of their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Chapman. Sunday afternoon they drove with Mr. and Mrs. Bald ridge to Gardiner. They returned ' Monday evening. j Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Coon went to , Eugene Friday evening as guests I of Dr. O. R. Gullion and Mrs. Nita Neal. They had dinner at Mrs. Neal's apartment and went to the Eugene celebration pageant. Fast service on AUTO GLASS REPAIRS Now Is the time to have auto glass repoiri mode. We handle all type of glass ond door hardware. 1 5 years of auto aloss service In Roseburg. DOYLE'S Sales & Service Highway 99 at Garden Valley PHONE 611 When you have seen and tried the DISS TON SAWS, you will ogree that here is quality. Visit CARL J. PEETZ ot your con venience and see his selection of the DISS TONSAWS. You can depend on the pur chases made at CARL J. PEETZ. T&Tt v?' .e City Court Has Busy Day With Batch Of 'Drunks' Judge Ira B. Riddle today re. ported disposition of the following cases, all of which appeared in Municipal court: Drunk all of Roseburg. Jack Davis, 54, paid $30 fine and re leased; Minnie Lea Decker, 69, forfeited $20 ball: Harman Aug ust Muetzel, 57, forfeited $20 bail; William Sherman Slay, 53. for feited $20 bail; Carl Arthur Row land, 25. forfeited $20 bail; Willie Lee Stafford, 48, forfeited $20 bail; Ruth Jeanette Dawe, 32, commit ted to county jail for ten days in lieu of $20 fine. Bobbie Joe Dunbar, 24, Suther lin, committed for ten days in lieu of $20 fine; Wilbur Clark Scott, 26, Sutherlin, forfeited $20 bail; Bud Hixon, 49, Brockway, forfeited $20 bail; Loren Kay naoy, 21, bpnngtield, forfeited 20 bail: Francis Joseph Arens, 34, Medford, forfeited $20 bail; Wil liam Eldon Eads. 34. Milton, com mitted for ten days in lieu of $20 tine; tsua George Cole, 54, San rrancisco, commuted for ten days in lieu of $20 fine. Drunk and disorderly Aran Tetrault, 55, Glide, forfeited $30 bail. Vagrancy Laurence Ferguson Miller, 31, transient, committed for ten days in lieu of $20 fine. FIX UP HOME HOME BUILDERS' Gatat Nylon GARDEN HOSE 50-foot length ' I Unconditionally guranteed for 1 S yeert 5" Rubbtr halt in 50-foot Itngthl up ALUMINUM SPRINKLERS .... 12.95 Extendi out to 2 4 -foot length. Other sprinklers 75c up. Sturdy built STEP LADDERS 4.,.., 4" Other lengths to 12-foot Rural MAIL BOXES 2.35 Aproved by the Postmaster General Long Handle GRASS SCYTHES .... . .ea. 1.05 Galvanized Garbage Cans 10.h.. - 2.50 Polished Brass Knobs Reg. DOOR LATCH SET : Large 3Vi inch Bronze House Numbers Nu-Woy Metal Bound Weather Strip, 20 -ft. rolls Telco Glass Knob Door Passage Set POWER PAINT SPRAYER Sprayit Complete with 13 h.p. motor . . . 55.70 Larger sizes slightly higher Round long bristle WINDOW BRUSHES a.1.90 WINDOW SQUEEGEES . . . . ea. 85c Ideal for light paint and insecticides Bed Shortage In Hospitals Worry WASHINGTON. The house armed services committee is check ing reports that the army is wor reid about a shortage of beds in military hospitals. Chairman Vinson (U-ua sua ne is writing Secretary of Defense Johnson to ask the latter's plans regarding previously undisclosed testimony by Gen. J. Lawton Col lins, chief of staff, that the army needs two additional hospitals. These hospitals would help care for wounded expected from Korea and for those ill and injured in the expanding forces at home. It is understood mat the army would like to aee 1.000 beds added to the 37,000 now available to all three services in military hospitals across the country. ' It was over the stiff opposition of Vinson and the armed services subcommittee that Johnson last spring shut down five military general hospitals as an economy measure intended to save S25,- 000,000. Two of these hospitals, the naval hospital at Long Beach, Calif., and the Oliver General hospital at Aug usta, Ga., have been takta over by the Veterans administration and are no longer available to th armed forces. Directory Omits Name, Man Sues Phono Concern MIAMI, Fla. JP A Miami chicken hatchery has sued South. ern Bell Telephone company for $150,021 damages in circuit court for allegedly omitting its name from the telephone directory. tropical Hatcheries, Inc., said In the suit that most of its business exporting baby chicks to South America has come through ad vertising in the classified section of the phone book. Failure to get It, the suit con tends, has cost the hatchery "large -sums of money" and brought "extreme setbacks in its export business." SLABWOOD in 12-1 6 and 24 In. lengths OLD GROWTH FIR DOUBLE LOADS WESTERN BATTERY SEPARATOR fh.ne (51 YOUR WITH THESE 2.9S 95 set I 16e ea 1 00 1 75 V Burgess Vibro HOUSEHOLD SPRAYER 95 Tuts., Aug. 8, 1950 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 9 Reporter Uses Hoarding Stunt To Learn Reaction ATLANTA UP) -An Atlanta Journal reporter turned hoarder to tap local reaction. As he loaded a supermarket car with sugar, pepper and cigarets, reporter John Keasler said in ad dition to dagger like stares, he received "several frank comments on my probable ancestry, patrio tism and draft status." With a Journal photographer hidden behind the cabbages, keas ler began by grabbing several pounds of black pepper and re marking to a man nearby, "hear this stuff is going to be scarce." "What should be scarce is people like you," answered the male shopper. As he reached for his 11th bag of sugar, a woman snapped, "I think that's terrible with our boys fighting and dying in Korea." At the end of a half-hour every Court Upholds Refusal Of Tavern To Serve Negro PORTLAND. m -Circuit Judge Martin W. Hawkins ruled that no one has a constitutional right to demand service in a pub lic place. He held a tevern operator was within Ms rights in refusing to serve George Seay. a Negro. Seay brought court action, ask ing $5,000 damages, after sale of two quarts of beer he ordered to take out were denied him. SCALES FAIRBANKS MORSE The Scale of Performance) and Quality Platform Scales ... Double Beam or Single Beam 500 lb. 1000 lb. Capacity Counter Scales ... Household Scales ... Even Balance Scales ... Double Beam or Single Beam With er Without Scoop 1 lb. 300 lb. Capacity Motor Truck Scale .. . With or Without Dial JO Ton 40 Ton Capacity DOUGLAS COUNTY Farm Bureau Co-Operative Exchange ROSEBURG, OREGON Phone 98 SUPPLIES Complete Line Of Sherwin-Williams Paints For Inside and Outside Your Home 16-inch Jacobsen 095 Lawn Mowers ..OU Others from 23.50, up WINDOW toMi (Sit ymM y UMPQUA VALLEY A Home-Owned 202 N. Jackson clerk and customer in the market was watching him and three re ported him to the store manager, lipped in advance to the experi ment. Keasler's conclusion: "There's ne use in appealing to hoarders' consciences, because any person who can hoard through an atmos phere like that has no conscience in the first place." 0. & C. Land Sale Dated At Roseburg Aug. 16 Total of S7.745.000 board feet of saw timber on 0. k C. lands will be offered for sale by oral and sealed bids during August, accord ing to Daniel L. Goldy, regional administrator of the bureau o f land management. Twenty seven tractii with a;n estimated value of $929,931. will be placed on the block as follows: Oral auctions at the bureau's dist rict forestry offices, Aug. 14, Sa lem, five tracts with 20,685,000 board feet; Aug. 15, Coos Bay, one tract with 4,015.000; Aug. 16, Roseburg, three tracts with 9,970. 000; Aug. 17, Eugene, six tracts with 11,825,000 and on Aug. 15, sealed bids will be opened for 12 tracts with 21,970,000 board feet at the regional offiee of the bureau at Swan Island. The scaled bids will cover tim ber offered in the iledford, Coos Bay, Salem, Roseburg, and Eu gene districts. II Diamond CRESCENT-TYPE WRENCH 1" 8-inch White Chief STEEL TAPE 6-foot length 1.80 Others from 1.20 up Evans FOLDING RULE l 6-foot length 95e 12-inch HACK SAW BLADES each : 15e Aluminum Alloy CHALK BOY and PLUMB BOB 1.25 Disston D-23 HANDSAWS 26-inch 6.45 others 3.49, up Eagle WATER BAGS 1-gal. size 1.19 SCREENING Square Foot Also all sizes in adjust able window screens. ond Operated Store fho" 73 J- 24 to 36-ineh widths