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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1950)
o e O 0 o O O O 2 Tht News-Review. Robutjt Ort.-y.Iriday, OePlJ, 1990 . fi-a -- ; Local News n Meve Te Apartment Mr. and Te Eugene Mrs. Rusty Stien Mrs. O. G. Collins have moved to herger. Mrs. Ceorlel CrriMkaw and an apartment in the Clark home Mm. Martha Eeldner spent Wed on Winchester street. Mrs. Collins nesday in Eugene on business, was formerly employed in a real estate office. Mr. Collins, v lime-1 T, convention -Mrs. Harry Hat. keeper for Associated Plywood at , flf w jir. e. i,. Tauscher, Mrs. their camp on Little river. i j M Bnyles, Mis. Robert Green 'and Mis. George Crenshaw at- At NeaVu Home Dr and Mrs. tended the meeting of District N. Lloyd Wolford of Goldendale, 2 of the Oregon Federation of Wash . were overnight visitors at Woman's clubs in Albany on the home of Dr. and Mrs. Earl Thursday. Neuru on Fairhaven Monday. I)i". : Wo'.ford a on his way to San Nor(h B,nd Viaitera-Mi. Ed Francisco, where he plans to re- win jjarvev and daughter. Maigo enter acti e naval duty. j AnHi 0( orln u,n visited in j ftokcburf Wednesday and Thurj- Al Beyer Home Mr. and Mrs. day. Jack Murphy of San Francisco are : . spending two weeks at the home j A( oum Ham Mr. and Mrs. of Mrs. Murphy's mother, Mrs. L R Mtrjith of Seattle and .lay Bnyer of Roseburg. Mr. Mur- -( ap, nti Mr, Arthur Kidler and phy is sn announcer wilh radio ! daughter , Arth.a. of Portland, were station KSFO in San Francisco. j rr(.Pnt visitnrs'et the home of Mr. land Mrs. Don Gum, M2 Lane St. Fram Pertland Miss Florence ! Pickart of Portland, diocesan dir ector of Christian Education of the Episcopal church, is making a two day visit in Roseburg. She was luest speaker at the St. George's Mothers c.ul on inursnay. ; Darr.ll C.ry Visit. - Darrell A.l.rited w,m V,Vl. over the weekend. Mrs. Garey. nee Verlie Wheeland. accompanied him on the return trip. The young couple were married in August. They will .nake their home in Ham mond, which is near the base. Profitable Lif-Tim Business Want man, taka aver lecal auti an: NO SILLING, food for S150 weekly t right man with rapid in crease; Operate fram Hame r Of fice; Rsauirel $1300 Cash return able) if yen can meat eur require ments. Phena far eppaintmant ft. W. WEBBER, Hatel Umpque fram 1:00 p.m. te 1:00 p.m. STORE HOURS 8a,m. to8 p.m. Open Evenings NO PARKING PROBLEMS If wt don't havt It, wt'll gt It. $ & H Grttn Stamps with each purchase Douglas Hardware Co. Home of General Paint. 90ft S. Stephen Phone 944-J FRIL-LETS NOODLES 1 nr 29c PILLSBURY Pancake Flour 4", 39c MILK ALL BRANDS 2 Tall O f" co. 25 c QUALITY MEATS Fancy RIB STEAKS Choice VEAL ROAST Fresh r GROUND ROUND Canter Cut PORK CHOPS O j DAR Ta Meat There will he a meeting of -the DAR Monday evening. Oct. lfi. at the home of Mrs. Margaret Page. i uieima hud ro Zuleima club, nutMy of the Nile will .rrt'suppei'm 'suVhe'rlln. Member, , desiring transportation will meet it the Rose hotel it i.ia p m. Heme From Washington Mr. and Mrs. Halsey DeCamp recent returned to their home at mi Pine St., Roseburg. They have been on a two-weeks trip through Wash- ington and Britisn loiumnia SPREC BAIL FORFEITED RaUiijh llnwird Rrannon for' feited $30 bail on charges of drunk ..a j:...i u,,n,.,nal Judse Ira B. Riddle reported Fri- u dav. . VFW Service officer. ,''' vl"il I Sunday it his home in V ancouver. Eipacted Heme nurwarn ; xosenurg nexi luesaay, . . vA'5h Boyles. who is ittendin OSC. is . according ,o Wallace G (ox. com- . meA h y expected to be with his parents, mander of post No. 2468 VrW. , (, f h west Coast plv- Dr. and Mrs. J. M. Boyles, for Ashworth. a five-year lst In- ,nH.lr ,A. . . the weekend SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY. CCTOBER TOMATOES Gerber't BABY FOODS 0 c" IF WHIPPED DRESSING Preferred Stock CATSUP Vita Food DOG FOOD Skippy PEANUT BUTTER Fresh Fruits And Vegetables Hubbard Banana Al SQUASH h.OV2c CELERY lb. 10c GRAPEFRUIT 2 u' 19c Fresh MUSTARD f A GREENS rncht- l7c( ib. 83 ib. 63 yi lb. Il ib 69 - - - 'i. NORTH KOREAN CAPITAL THEIR along road which leads directly 9 M Djf)r wh ,eeom i.j fh, 'tro, d m,d, troop. .ld b i'h naked eye on rid,, in beckground." i kj:l irn ncuui wiii Visit Roseburg vv . . . ,. i J Ashworth , ie '"" f foreign Wars senior vice com fantry division veleran of Worln War If will be guest speaker for the Kiwams club at 12 noon, and sneaker at the Toastmasters club mander. and Gilbert u. fine siaie i - prli,H u. P m. i. m . Vthe versatile Northwest oioduct. banquet hall. He v ill also be heard over station KRNR it 8:15 p.m. and KRXL at 7: p.t 1h .e'xt'()f Ashworth ' message will cover the Oregon "Veterans i will cover the Oregon "Veterans i Bonus ano oiner topics oi iniiTi-si i lm,a1.uusa, .ia. (,n some time, and the shortage has to veterans and the community. 1 Governor nominate Gordon Per-, spread from largely skilled and Ashworth will round out the day ; sons says he is going to clean uo semi skilled workers to cover by attending an open meeting of . Alabama's prison system to elim- nearly all rlassilications. The fact the Veterans of Foreign Wars at I mate brutality to convicts des- that this area is experiencing the the Vets club, 115 W. Washington enhed in the book "Scottsboro largest number of employed per St. This meeting will be open to j Boy." sons for several years is largely anyone who is interested in the wel-j Persons said that criticism bv I responsible. fare of the veterans , Haywood Patterson, M-year-old . There was little change during Gilhert Pike, who has been witn . N,sr0 fugitive and author, was Sememher in the total of claims the department service lor u , vears. will ne avauanie ni V Young's office, m W. l'a St. from 1 to 5 p m. and at the Veterans lounge after P m. for the purpose of assisting any vet eran, or veteran's widow or or phan. LIQUOR REVENUE TOLD fit!.-(a- Tv Ct ila liniinl l-aV. .-mi..r.i ..-j i iv. thro months. rmii-n o-,'" -! (KH from Ihe tax on malt and al coholic bfvrragfs, and $fi.0fil from special liquor privilcRc taxes. 14th A APo 53 18c 14 Oi. 3 25 1 s. 36 A '1. I 'f ' J r GOAL A cavalry patrol firai a leventy.five racollau aun to Pyongyang, North Korean capital. Atlociated Press Pno- I Carl G. Anderson Of Plywood Industry Dies Funeral services for Carl G. An- j iierson, .), memocr 01 ine qua uy rontro ,llperv,sory staff of t h e ! crotiD IMS. In that capacity, he assisted materially in furthering the quality LV ",MV" "m "pt-M Alabama's Next Governor Promi$M Prison Clean-Un r , r uue 1 Know. sain Persons, whose nomination is equivalent to elec- . l)nue2 Mr I vuitori anriatinn iion in urmoiTiuc Aianama. -i ve ( ihe rainv season will soon re been in the prisons myself." iP,se , number of workers em Patterson is one of nine Negroes pnved at loggim and sawmill oper originally held in the Scottshoru a,,ons in the remote areas. case, in wnicn two wniie women accused the Negroe of rapine them aboard a freicht train in 1931. He spent lfi years in prison . n. conviction, and escaped, . ' PIONEER DIES Dora Heckathorn Traylor, 90. resident of Scottsnurg fit years. died Thursday. Surviving are two phone Kleanor Massey at 931 -J or dauehters, Mrs. Myrtle Sawyers,,, he Red Cross office. 832. to en Drain, Grace Levenhaven, En- ro. The classes will run alter Rene; three sons, Thomas of V- pate nichts throuch Oct. 27, total neta: H. R . of Fortuna, Calif., imj an lS hour course. Instructors and E. D. Traylor nf Albany; 14 will he Eugene Northrup and Ron erandchildren and 30 great grand- : ert Harvie. children. Services will he held Sun- j day at 2 p. m. at the Elktnn Chris tian church. Interment will he in the Elktnn cemetery. Stearns mor tuary, Oakland, is in charge. Rock veins st or near the sur face in the Reljian Congo pro dure cihalt. tin. rinr. lead, cad mium, silver, gold and diamonds. Christmas Layaway Plan I IS Biaaaa-aaaaBaasWr -n . ' .rri a ix .'kMri a Th new Tlssot Automatic... pictured abeva... It an outstanding example el the finest watch making craftsmanship. Newly designed, extra flat, gold-filled slim case. 1 1 jewel self winding movement, shock-protected, anti- magnetk $65 i''k k4v4 oe rtssor m m4 (- n se h sssoe 1 ) lev Msxv ctntrp 4r rmninp cwm a fhi, J, ;d ..Npt AP Wir.pnoto.) ' -th Korean Wages Impaired By Car Shortage The month of September had no affect on the employment totals in Douglaft county. However, the earnings of the wot kern w ere ser iously impaired. The lumber in dustry was generally forced to curtail its production schedules be cause of the railroad car short age. This was done by reducing the number of hours of work per Atu . nsi Ik. et..mrnA.. n( A i . . rut weej( ich has bern sain and writ ten about the alleviation of the sanation, but little relief has ac tually been accomplished. A shortage of qualified workers is still in existence. The demand nas been exceeding the supply tor for. unemployment insurance. This nl.i .. . .,. n.i lne ,nd nf lhe war! The starting First Aid Instruction d--: " ' The standard course of instruc- tioo in first aid will hesin Monday 'night. Oct. IB. at 7 o'clock in the , Rrd C ross rooms in the armorv. All women interested are asked to Christmas Layaway Plan SB Jerry Sconce Gets; Lions Club Honor; ' Topics Discussed j Jerry Sconce of Roseburg senior high school was awarded the honor of being chosen backfield man of the week, based on his perform ance in the game last friday night against Med lord The honor was bestowed by the I. ions club, at the weekly meeting Thursday night in the Hotel Umpqua. Sconce's name will be engraved on the: tnns ciiei. There w-re two speakers for the meeting: Ralph Smith, engineer for KRXL, ho talked on Ihe prob lems and process of establishing a new radio station and going on the: air, and Robert Sabin, who spoke on Bill 306. raising the state basic! school support from $'0 to (80 monthly j i Smith traced Ihe development nt the radio station, hirst, he said, it was necessary to determine the area to he served, and the popu lation. Then it was necessary to choose one of five limited local channel frequencies, so, after study, 1240 cycles was-chosen. The power of 250 watts was an auto matic choice for the area to be : covered. ! Establishing a location suitable for the area to be served and one I j to meet both C A A and FCC qualifi-, cations was the next problem. I After that actual construction could begin. After construction came equipment checks, for which only seven days was allowed to complete, and all tests had to be made from 12 midnight to t a. m. Next came proof of performance ' on equipment for audio frequency response, and testing by FCC in spectors. All these processes were j necessary before a license could ! i he applied for. he staled. School Problem Faced The crucial problem of how to educate 36 000 additional children a year in Oregon was brought up i by Sabin. He quoted figures to il 1 lustrate increased births from 12.-i 000 to 36.000 from 1940 to 19V). i whereas in migration increased only 38' i percent. Douglas county's birth increase i from 370 children in 1937 to 1393 ! in 1949 was cited. These are future i school children who are here with out considering population in creases from in-migratinn. They . must be educated, he said. If state aid is not provided as telief, the burden nf education will become increasingly heavy upon property owners, or else the qual i ity of the schools will go down, j said Sabin. While House Rill 30r! j is listed as a property tax levy , measure, the state has other ; sources of revenue usable as a property tax offset. There has not heen a state property tax since i 1940, he said. Slayer Of Wife, Son ! Faces Sanity Inquiry REM.lNGHAM-M'i A woman and her 7 year-old son were found heaten to death in their home here today after a man telephoned no lice that he had "killed my fam ily." Police hooked riaude f.. Filhn 8er, 49-year-old Bellincham pulp -n ..nritr, fnr "murder and in TestiRalion recardins sanity." BR IGHTEN YOUR assi bbs am ar ROLL AWAY CHROME TABLE 2995 Tnp it IR"ir" of limtmrfft pliwir in rifd, hlu or ttn linen, with R" hardwood leaves, throm Ir hive ciueri. We Can't Supply Everything BUT We Do Supply the (EST AT CARSTEN'S L 0 Jfl I : I t LA ft CI NY CHAR6I PACED Curtis Van Standridge, 38. of Kelly's corner is being held in the county jail on $350 bail, i charged with larceny over J35. reported Justice of Peace A. J. Geddes. , Standridge allegedly stole a one-, quarter inch hand drill from W. M. Straight, said Geddes, and was arrested by a deputy sheriff.: Governor Arizona O Spurns $200,000 Bribe PHOENIX. Ariz. (. . Gov. Dan f. Garvey has annoMced he does not intend to press charges against an unidentified individual wM reportedly offered him a $200, ooo bribe. The offer, disclosed hy Garvey Thursday, was advanced on con dition Garvey would appoint the man gambling czar of the stale. Such a position would be open if an initiative measure to legalize gambling is approved at the Nov. 7 general election. Under terms of the bill Ihe governor would appoint a superintendent of a department to supervise and license gambling establishments. Orpha Collins' Story Accepted By Magazine Orpha Collins, local writer, has had an article accepted by "The Alaskan," a magazine published al Haines, Alaska. The article, entitled "The Saga of Soapy," is a story of the gold rush days of '98 in Skagway and the killing of "Soapy" .Smilh. leader of a bunch of gangsters and robbers, who met his death at the hands of Frank Reid, solid citizen and resident of Skagway. Mrs. Collins interviewed two of Roseburg's old timers (sour doughs) on this subject, and from the fact that Judge C. A. Shlbrede, formerly of Roseburg, was in Skag way at that time and handled the nurder case, the authenticity was established for the wrile-up. Mrs. Collins fiirnished pictures for the article, also. HOME jt "l njfU, .n " 7 KEEP TRACTO$0 Tfilt li th colorful chromo dinett m perk up mlnrre in y home. Ma Ice housework a drem. micalite table top lBgh dirt, hwe, frw ckK ink, rm cigarwe burm and alcohol. long werin ety ttvcln pi'an opholwrry b mlor welted to hold in comforrahle contour. Table eiwnd from 30" x 42" to 30" x 32". Ma of march six exciting table and chair colon foe rfte gawt, dtrtetre rou've ever seen. C in tni iet at ' M 1 1 M il f" ! 5 - O William H. lirkholz, Kellogg Worker, Diet William Henry Birkholz. 57, of Kellogg Star Rt., Oakland, died of heart attack A"'1' eating lun'(f) al Ihe Kellogg nwl Thursday about 11 (f) a. m. Deputy Coroner M. B. tminett investigated. t) Birkholz was born in Gladstone. NetO and moved to Bandon in 1935. He came lo Oakland early last sprmk and was walking for NewmaOnd Groshong It Kelloig Surviving are the widotj Anna Birkholz: three children, Mrs. El dora Robinson, Bandon; Harr dora Robinson, Bandon; Harry Birkhols and LeRoy Birkholz, Kel logg. O Funeral services will be an nounced by Stearns' mortuary, Oakland. J5eW Cs,tl 38 rs v a . li" tot I Hit 1 ' i C 11 '0 ninsimtnr f ft Guaranteed by V Goea Hoasekeepinf J o t o O O OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAYS ( ) C j 1 -1 i l i 1 ei N. Jacksoti $ 117 WEST CetXJVST.O HONE 10 " O 0 oo O o G o 0 o o 0 o O