i
i
o o g
The News-Review, Rotatburg, Ore Sat., Oct. 21, 1950
Locals
DfLjpp wilftiot be In tjf office
unui uci. ou.
Mrs. Bingham Hostess It was
incorrectly stated in Thursday
night's paper, that Mrt. E. O. Rand
wai hostess at the shower (or Mist
Barhara Rand.
Mrs. Ernest Bingham of Win
.ton was the hostess Omitted
from the guest list was Mrs. Edna
Kluver.
ivfth A ft f
" .t...
BAIRD To Mr. and Mrs War
ren W. Baird. Sutherlin, a daugh
ter Elaine Louise, Oct. 19; weight
seven pounds eight ounces.
TAPLEY To Mr. and Mrs.
.eland Winfield Tapley. Little
River Rt., Glide, a son, Gary Le -
."e oucnce,,; we,8ht e,,ht pounds
BENNETT - To Mr. and Mrs.
Robert W. Bennett, 343 E. 1st Ave.
N., a (on William Clayton, Oct
19: weight eight pounds eight
ounces.
MILLER To Mr. and Mrs. Lyle
Anthony Miller,
I'live, a unuiiii'i, mai J i.ru,
wrigiu juuiiiib i.u
ounces.
BLISS
Tn Ur and Mn lark
1U nil. ailU HUB.
frank Bliss, 702' S. Pine St., a
daughter, Victoria Kaye. Oct. 19;
weight seven pounds four ounces.
GOTT To Mr. and Mrs. Nor
man Stanley Gott, 109 Chestnut
Ft., a ion, Monte Randall, Oct. 19.;
weight seven pounds two and orie
nt, it ounces.
Tragtdy Ends Party Plans
For Hospitalized Girls
BIG RAPIDS, Mich -J.Vi One
little girl Invited another little girl
to her birthday party a? a hospi-1
tal.
The party will be next Tuesday.
But It's too late now.
Carol l,orene Park, A, who was
invited, died yesterday at Read
City hospital. Born a blue baby,
Carol succumbed to her heart de
fect. The invitation came from Alice
Benson, 7, who Is a patient at Me
costa county convalescent hospital.
Alice has what is feared to be
an incurable spinal ailment.
Alice's nurses had auggested the
Invitation to Carol. They didn't
know that Carol also had gone to a
hospital. And they aren't going to
tell Alice now wnat nas Happened.
"Better late than never" 1a A
aaylnjr which dof not apply to
lire amiurance. Too often late
m4ui never. If you delay ln
applylnf for the proper amount
of ajaur&nce protection you may
ultimately find you have fallen
below the required medical
atandarda. Each day medical
examiners are obliged to turn
down application! for tn mi ranee
from people whoae ne?d for It
ia great Many of thrne disap
pointed people could have qua
lified a year or so earlier but the
development of a health Impair
ment makea them now uninaur
able. Statistically apeaklng, 20. of
men are already uninsurable
when they reach the se of
forty. Keep this figure ln mind.
Don't be too late applying for
your Ufa aaauranre. Call ma
today!
Don Forbes
REPRESENTATIVE
SUN LIFE OF CANADA
Douglas County
State Bank Bldq.
Fh
" 1737
Rti. 998-R
ICAR
IREPAINTING
I p6D AND UP
'triahttH your car's lurfact
-M.l
I new ainf b. ih value eff youra
cer it rtaint4 end tht but in- I
created). Bnna in your car toon rat '
Ie new ptnt fee.
A k. aM ffM h.
nANbbrN
11
. vioror
I Oak & Stephana
f Looking
Ahead
with
I DOM
FORBES
IB
i si. a I J in
a .
v,o. : 1 1
Phona446 ! f
i o i ii'-J
aSSLA o I .
. aiiitsxj . .j
. m&wci'.l:
Roseburg Area
Can Rid Self Of
I Mosquito Menace
! Roseburg and its surrounding
terntorjt c0 get rid of its mos
quitoes 1 the people are willing to
form a mosquito abatement dis
trict an levy a tax with which to
finance the pro-am, said Milton
h. Buehler. u.sect and rodent con
1 !1,lU ,'?r ,h. Oregon State Board
of Health. Buehler addressed the
Roseburg Lions club on the subject
Thursday night.
li '..
, " " I, 7
" '"' """"" ,"7 "J"" !
control measure, unlfni the ad-
ininint? mra a inn la Leon mpiiiri
lo clean, un ind aithr drain r
inriv mnc iintn hrooHino roa
Ha itoott a riitrii-t uhifh
would take in the flight range of
mosquitoes to include the area
north beyond Oakland and south
i D.h..,
! p"'
mosquitoes, he stated. We must
" " "1"'
oiiiuoi paiiv wi v in m aiiiu mail
a mill m an essential part of a
community, stated Buehler. But, he
rial mi. tht nutMniiifn menar fan
iob :Z i ""trolled by spraying the ponds ( TAMPA, Fla. m -A nui
imu lyogwooo i lh ,h p.,,,j ,mni,ni ni nivr sance hurricane which fa ed lo
mixture
I Mosouiloes common In Hondas
! county may cause encephalitis
, . .
isict-l'inx sicKnessi. ror mis reason
the health department is particu
larly interested in this area, he
said. Tie mosquitoes breed about
four times a year, compared to
me "iiooa
mosquitoes of the
Portland area, which breed once a
year, during the flood season.
Buehler discussed the health
hazards of mosquitoes, as carriers
ot encephalitis, possible industrial
L. - . .. . -J ( ,
iiaiaius, aviuuuaij wiriiluiia 1111111
scratching mosquito bites, and the
demoraluing affect of mosquitoes
on the people.
He discussed various means of
control and offered the advice ot
his department and other agencies,
if this area so desires
More Controls
Seen If Prices
Continue Upward
GAINESVILLE, Fla. lP) -The
federal reserve system is ready to
clamp more controls on the na
tion's cash if a headlong trend
towards inflation continues.
The word ci.me last nicht from
one of the federal reserve system's
top bosses, M. S. Srymczak of
Washington, a member of the
board of governors.
'We are prepared to take fur
ther action if inflationary tenden
cies continue," he told the third
annual Southeastern Kcnomic con
ference. "Kor obvious reasons I cannot
tell you anything about our plans
for the future. However, I can Rive
ytu my assurance that we shall
carefully consider the use of any
anti-inflationary weapon in our ar
senal. "Price controls and rationing
tend, at least in first moment ot
their application, to Rive the im
pression that they hurt people less
than strict credit controls and hiph
taxes," Srvmczak said.
"Actually, however, they under
mine the market mechanism.
Pricca cease to have economic
meaning. Money ceases In play its
economic function, and ration
points fixed by the government
tend to become the main motors
of economic activity." i
Ukranian Leader Killed
By Russians, Says Report
FRANKFURT. Germany (,P
Ukranian sources today reported
that I.t. Gen. Taras Tschuprynka,
commander of the Ukranian under
ground army resisting commu
nism, has been killed hy the Rus
sians in battle.
The report was circulated hy the I
llci anian monthly newsnaper "Do ;
Zbrei" which is puhlishctl in Ger
many. It said the news came from
I'kranian iberation council and
the Crkanian Resistance army
whirh is reported still fighting
against the Russians for I'kranian
inrlpenedcnce.
Accordins tn this report, Tschu-
rirynks's headquarters in the vil
nse nf Rilohnrstscha. in the Rus
sian I'kraine near the Polish bor
der, were overrun hv Russian
troops, and Tschuprynka was killed '
in the ficMing.
(ol. Wasyl Kowal has been
named tn succeed Tschuprynka as
commander of the underground
srmy. the I'kranians said.
LAUNDRY
j .
WASHpAVs
f ROMPT.
REASONABLE.
THOROUGH
.. I- Q
e aut
At
ROSEBURG
LAUNDRY
LINEN SUPPLY
III Ueaf. a ttM tlaa
Mf ... H
' I LAUNDRY
!jil?rW
III'
a . -i J
R. R. Peters Dies
Following Illness
Robert Riley Peters, M, well
known resident of Myrtle Creek,
died at his home Oct. 20 following
a prolonged illness.
He was born in California, Aug.
14, 18M, and came to Oregon in
1S76. He moved to Myrtle Creek
from Tillamook about 3S years ago
He was msrried to Olive Buell
Coon at Myrtle Creek on April 5,
1919.
Surviving are his widow and two
step. sons, F. TV Coon and L. A.
Coon, both of Dillard. He is also
survived by a brother, George Pe -
. Karet Bounds, MedforrJ; and a
! number of neDhews and nieces,
Funeral services will be held in
I the
w c,"Lh". Z, .i i
k Sunday, Oct. a, at 2 p m.
Kw I Hnrnrf ntli(ialin0
Creek
With Rev
Concluding services and interment
' ln tn M5'r,1 crek 00F
' cemetery.
Hurricane Fails
""Vi.
! 10 MClTenCIIIZe
Over Florida
live up in auvancp oilimx luilfa
I wiiaerness looay.
The rich Tampa bay resort area,
MM thraa tana1 ujilh nt-tiMa
' - i---....
knockout punch, escaped entirely
The Florida highway patrol aaid
the storm hit inland just north
of Cedar Key, the fishing village
devastated by the Labor day hur
ricane.
Winds were well below the 75
mile an hour minimum for a hurri-
cane. Apparently the once threat
ening blow was breaking up harm-
, .- k. . . 1 .. ... h ......
.iia. ai'aiavrij iiiiiaiincii
I section of swamps and woodland
i some 100 iriles north of Tampa,
For long hours the storm, rated
.
m
3
I at 5 to 90 miles an nour.
pointed slam bang at Tampa, larg-
, -;.u ,l Lir,H aa.i M.ici
lnnn,.l.l.nn initni Than , ln.l
i iu a wesi (uiM
steam and veered north. I Softness Disappears
Meteorologist W. W. Talbott of' ' remember those early heart
the Tempa weather bureau said bieakint days of this campaign
he he ievel a mass of drv air over
ne oeiievea a mass 01 ory air over
this area caused the storm to dis-
integrate.
"Hurricanes can't live
moisture." he explained.
ithoul
University of California
.Loyalty Oath Wrangled
SA FRANCISCO (pi The I
University nf California today was
the center of a new loyally oath
Hicnula
At a tumultuous meeting, of the
University board of reu.-nls ves-1
terday. John Francis Neylan, San '
Francisco attorney, said flatly the
statewide oath ordered by the re
cent session of the legislative "must
he challenged" insofar as It applies
lo the university, I he regents
themselves took the oalh, however.
Neylan is the regent who suc
cessfully led a year long fight to
force university employes to sign
contracts reading '1 am not a
member of the Communist party."
About the time the university'a
II, Olio-odd employes had signed
except for 18 professors contesting
the contract in court and a hand
ful who resigned or were fired
the legislature-passed the new oath
requirement.
The new oalh. which does not
mention communism by name,
must he signed before university
employes are paid, and Nov. 2 is
the deadline. Slate Controller
Thomas Kuchet ruled last week.
Public Urged To Attend
Meeting Of Candidates
The ncncral public la invited to
attend a meeting Wednesday, Oct
2.S at B p m. in the junior high
school library. Candidates for rep
sent a live to the state legislature
from Douglas couny and for the
office of county judge will present
their views on educational prob-
l"m. according to Hooerl I . !antn
vice-principal of Roseburg junior I
high school. Arrangements for the !
meeting are in charge of W. C. I
Smn.hrakr nnnrinal of the C.rren
elemenlary school and president of
the Klementarv Principals a ssocia-
lion for Douglas countv. Sabin is in
charge of publicity.
Arthur Wiswell Dies
At Local Sanitarium
Arthur M. Wisewll, 72, died at ,
2 .10 a in. this morning at the Rose-
hurg Sanitarium. He had been a
Roseburg resident for about 20
vaars
no immediate relatives survive
him. Graveside services at the Ma-
sonic cemetery will be announced i
later. Funeral services, in the care I
" . . .la
of Long and Orr mortuary, will
also be announced later.
SHEEIJ FOR SALE
, i a m ea
? , ' r w sT '
i a, i- - A Maaar-J
Z X. e . J
5 W (WKm I
atT Ma'lAMaW T
o c
Plush Army Life Idea Gone;
American Soldier Learns He's
Entered Service To FigHt
ly DON WHITEHEAD
KOREA (API Let's tall the army recruit right out loud
that ha s joining tha army ts tight.
After wa tall him that, let's assure him that if ha lives long
enough ha'll also gat an education, learn a trade and liva a
reasonably secure life with retirement guaranteed.
Tha Korean war has licked into tha discard tha fancy-cants
promotional idea that tha army
jeruit gets everything but a fight.
This idea blossomed after World
War II, as the best way to Induce
viiiiths to ioin ud. Picture Hosiers
,howed well-fed soldiers traveling
ln S"mI0"' lounging in a nnrary
. readmt good literature, or cheer-
f..n.. . . .1
i iuiij icaiiiuiK uiui,
Now all those things are all right, j fighting. They hav a poine and an
They should be part of our army. assurance that wasn't there two
But the harsh fact is that the in- j months ago.
fanlry exists solely to fight when j They know that lo be an infan
a fight is necessary.. j tryman means you have to fight.
It's pretty clear that in this : They have no illusions about their
world we now live in tht American jobs, or what it meana to be a
army mul be ready to go inio , soldier.
battle on short notice. That means 1 An(j i hoc in tne future no ihar
an llliamiy wiulii la iuukii, wt-u
trained and able to take care of
its-It.
Net Ready Far Korean War
Everybody knows the American
occupation army in Japan wasn't
rcadv for the Korean war. It was
soil, trained for occupation duty
rather than combit.
, ,,rsl ?m.i....
'"f1 ,'ouRh U''n1on 'he
The first Americans in battle
battlefields of China and Manchu
ria. They weren't preparcc" even
for the sounds of combat, which in
themselves are terrifying to the
green fighter.
Most of those youngsters had
come inio the army because that
.
Promotional campaign promised
i everylhing excepi a fignt. And
-"v.. . ... - - -
four-ring show which cost many
,.,. Tk. .. ....... u nnt nr..
paitni inr ail, cunri jiujan.au
i - . it,..
ur mnilljr.
wnen our iroops wrm in rcur.i.
, - ""' "n " (h-n
Always tney were in retreat, men
fighting desperately for lime
bu' ' 'Hin? b,ck.
Hut out ot tnis neanoreaa ana
agony was retined a new American
army. The softness gave way to
hardened skill. Bewilderment
changed to battlefield cunning. The
men learned tn protect themselves
. . .how to meet the enemy on
equal terms.
Inffint ffiirl
m 1 M" 1
Qac FrldflV
I I IUU J
Sandra Marie Willis, infant
daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Benja
min Willis, Roseburg, former resi.
dents ot Riddle, died Oct. 20. She
was born Oct. 19, 1050 in Mercy
hospital, Roseburg. .
Surviving besides her parents are
fwo brothers: Marvin and Ernest,
both of Roseburg: her grandpar
ents, Mrs. Glen Summers, Cath
almet. Wash.; Mr. Rhodes. Med
ford; and Mrs. Dora Willis, Riddle.
Funeral and interment services
will be held Monday. Oct. 23, at
10 a. m. in the Masonic Cemetery
with Father A. S. Tyson officiat
ing. Arrangements are in the
charge of the Roseburg Funeral
home.
Atomic Scientist Said
To Be Enroute To Moscow
Sweden - f -Pi -
STOCKHOLM
Italian born British atom scientist
rnrout. tft MWnw. made a
nne-day visit tn Stockholm Sept. 1,
a competent source here siad to
day. Pontecorvo arrived hy plane
from Rome with his Swedish horn
wife Helena Marianne and his three
children Gil. 12. Tito Nils, , and
. . . n a
' ' . . . ..
Th next day he proceeded with
"! 'm''-v -l""k' " 'n"""
Plan, the source said.
Pontecorvo. 40. became a British
subject after World War II. when
he worked on atomic research in
Canada and England.
While in England he worked on
: the Harwell atomic eoergy re
j search project where Dr. Klaus
Fuchs. German-born atomic scien-
victed of giving atomic secrets to
the Russians.
'Junior High To Begin
Annual Magaxine sale
The Roseburg junior high will
begin its 15th annual magazine
a . m
subscription campaign Thursday,
Oct. 26. announced TrinriDal R. R.
Brand. The students win serve as Destroyers To Greece
agents for about "0 different maga-i
nnes over a period of about 10 j ATHENS. Greece (.Tt An an
davs. Both new subscriptions and i 'hoi native goernment source said
renewals will be taken. 1"1y 'he Vnited States will turn
The school's commission for sel-
ling the magarines w-ill he used ;
io nuance lis ainieuc program ano
for the purchase of other needed
student body equipment. Last year
the Roseburg school ranked second
in sales on the Tarific coast.
REGISTER NOW
for
CERAMICS CLASSES
Greeawara All Kti
o
New tinishas, underrate,
glate, and china painting
included in first tan las
tons. Student Work for We
IRENI AMES'
ARTS & CRAFTS
STUDIO
(Ceramics for Fun)
73a S. Stephens
is an institution whara tha re-
; .
now they are the victors. These
.-.. t... i . i .l.-
Red,' own North Korean capital.
, Pyongyang. This is a battlewise
,rmy now, The m,n jn lke ,n.
.. . . v.
Know in trirka nf lha Irarta nf
soldier has any illusions about his
job. It will be a poor recruiting
campaign which fails to impress
upon him that there may be a
foxlole in his life as well as an
au-expense tour to tne far places
"i me worm.
Don Lee Radio
System Sold To
Akron, O., Bank
LOS ANGKI.ES (.TV-The far
flug west coast Don Lee radio em
pire was sold Friday to the First
National bank of Akron, O. It
brought $12,300,000.
The bank bought it as an invest
ment for the retirement plans for
General Tire and Rubber t o. em
ployes, for which it acta as
trustee.
By going to the record figure, i ei,say on (ire pr.vention, submit
he bank lopped -as required by led ln lhe rfcrBt con,e5t ,pnsorei
law the previous high bid of H
I. Hoffman Radio Corp. bv 10
percent. Previous high for sa e of
niiarnrir km-, a,.
radio network was NBC's dis-
posal of its old Blue network, now
the American Rroadcasting sys
tem, lor 8.000,000.
Sources close to the negotiation
said the Columbia Broadcasting
system joined with the hank in the
deal. But they said CBS is inter
ested only in KTL. the Don Lee
TV station. Columbia is the FCC's
choice to broadcast color televi-
sion.
CBS originally had been ex
pected to bid on the entire net
work, which is the western outlet
for the Mutual Broadcasting
system and owns 19 percent of
Mutual's stock. ,
General tire already owns the
Yankee radio network in New
England
rr.. i- ...l-m.. j ....
me iieiwoiK, wnouy ownra oy
the estate of Thomas S. Lee, was
up for sale in the seconi
iicrtAcal nf Urn VsnlH In a 1
rnnH mainc
,c.0A,mDon
i a. o.nnm.ktia . . . nA
to Cadillac motors last month for
$1,600,000.
Lee, who inherited the radio and
auto business from his father when
the latter died in 1934, pluaied to
his death here last January.
It is beinj? handled by the pub-
Me administrator s office because
laee named as nis soie neir an
uncle, Dwicht Merrill, Seattle lum-j
berman. Under state law, out -of -
state heirs must operate through j
the administrator. I
Dionne Quintuplets Visit
New York; See Sight
NEW YORK V) The Pi -
onne quintuplets, shy but smiling
faced up like veterans before the
pop of photo flash guns as they
got in their ood look at big city
'Shta yesterday
The 16-year-old quints Yvonne.
......... ,
hv nPHaT,P,,,mV1l . NoTri
by 11 classmates from Villas Notre
'Tlh VraU'a. Socman
, iT--. .ir .7.
their host, the celebrated sis
ters sandwiched in sightseeing with j
radio broadcast, a visit to Si. Vin-
cent's hospital, and posed holding
babies at the New York Foundling
hospital. i
In addition, they appeared at
.-ew .or k aineorai nign acnnni
The girls talk little, a bit
pm
! barrassed says their father. Ol
iva Dionne about their" poor F mi
ll ish. On the radio broadcast they
repeated, five times in identical
I voices, "Yes, we are having a won
' derful time.'
United States To Give
over six nesiroyers io t.reece un
der its military aid program.
Four of them are old-type ves-
,nd ,r. ,chwlll ,nb.
transferred bv the end of 1950. The
otn.r tw0 ,r, m00rn ship!l ,nd
h htnded over later, the gov-
ernment source said.
He added-that crews already are
eoroute to America for training be
fore they man the destroyws.
run ULTLnufWLt I KANorlm I A I lUn -.V
LINK BETWEEN CALIFORNIA, OREGON ij I
AND WASHINGTON
-talllll
FIST DAILY DIRECT SERVICE
-T t(errie.V
o
Hudson
t r A J -. .
1951 HUDSON MOTOR CAR COMPANY has four distinctive lines of cars ledjby an entirely new
series tha Hudson Hornet. Tha Hornet is powered by tha new high-eompresiion H-1 45. angina,
the most powerful automobile angina in production. In addition, Hudson hei the Commodore
Custom, Super-Six Custom and Pacemaker Custom series. Hudsons are only five feet high, yet
have full road clearance and mora head room than any other ear due to exeluiive "step-down
design with recessed floor. Hudsons are distributed locally by the Roseburg Hudson Cc
Jerry Spinas, 9,
Wins Contest On
Fire Prevention
I Jerry Spinas, 9. fourth grader
l at Rose school won the three dol-
! lar first rtiaro au-ard inr tho hpf
by the Junior Chamber of Com
merce and the Roseburg Fire de
partment.
Second place winner, S2, was
Gayle Geddes, fifth grader at Rose,
and five runner up winners of SI
cch were Sonya Williams, Nyoma
Bailev. Janet Wolford, fourth grad
ers, and Corienne Coxey and Bon
... , , , ,i
me Sue Itolcomo, tntn graders, an
nl line, ..hnnl
of Rose school.
The majority of the contestants
j were from Rose school. It is hoped
that the other schools will partici-
; pate with the same amount of en
j thusiasm when next year's annual
j contest is sponsored, said Leo Sevy
ot the Jaycee committee.
I The essays are now on display
I at Roy's Men's store.
Jerry's winning essay follows:
"I think everybody snouin try to
nrevem inr.
r ires in our woods
. , ,., ,,,.,. r.,r i.
wild "n'1' "ntl ru'n "r I
,,nd u 5omrirvr kiL'''
people. Every one
! they put out their camp fires
before they leave.
"Everybody should keep their
! attics, basements, and Raraces
' clean. Never leave oily rags, pa-,
i pers, or thincs that will cause!
fires around your home. H you do
it may cost you thousands ot dot
'T orjrn".yioyimreife r 'he M'
of someone you love.
"If we all try we can prevent
nany fires."
Two Missing Patrolmen
In Washington Found
I rvFBFTT i Searchers
: fj , missing state natrolmen
l0n rusl!ed C.recn mountain Friday
"cold, wet and ready to cat any
thing." The two men. Allen Kuest and Jo
seph J. Harvey, however, were in
good condition.
They have been trying to find
jh n np)n tryng tn tlnn i During the year countv fairs
'h'ir '" " the "ruMed Cas-lgot fi43.0. yr $fl.750 to ea'c"
. d mounlam wildereness since countv. $221,098 went into the stale
' W! hW. .''
! ernauser, anotner pairoimen. iounu
them shortly before 11 a. m.
Niederhauser reported the men
had eaten only a few huckleberries
and a bat in the days they were
missing. They shot the hat and tried
to cook it over a campfire.
Niederhauser said the men slept
in . f .... nn. niBh. an(i linrire lrocs
snnnino u Pt RpraiiSP of the W Pt
i.nriorKriich thov uoro ship tn hililrl
a fire only one niht.
Donald Edward Taylor
Held For Lane County
Donald Edward Taylor. 26, of
Camas Valley is being held in the
county jail on a charge of contribu
ting to the delinquency of a minor,
reported Sheriff O. T. Carter. "
Taylor was picked up by a deputy
of the sheriff's oftice on a warrant
from Benton county involving a
minor Monroe girl.
BACON & BACON
WANTED
Walnuts to Dry
Curry Estate
Rt. 2 Box 1030
tMftview
I lt i
cowuivf t
ON U.S
ovkoa
OJ
O ; 0
o
Introduces New Hornet
r-.
I
Vital Statistics
Marriage License
BROWN - BELCHER J
W.
Broun. Oakland, and
Belcher, Eugene.
Ann Leah
Divorce Suits Fifed
HAMPTON Dorothy Laura vs
William Edgar Hampton. Plaintiff
charges cruel and inhuman treat-
ment.
HAWLEY Patricia vs. Lin
coin Hawley. Cruel and inhuman
treatment charsed. Plaintiff asks
restoration of former name.
HEBAHI) William J. vs. Mar
tha Hebard. Cruel and inhuman
, crt iiiiitiii inaiKi-u. iiaiiiiui asas
,,,
t AatanAir mfarAnA
treatment charged. Plaintiff asks
I ...... 3
ot one minor child and offers sup
port money and property settle
ment. SMITH Retty L. vs. James
C. Smith. Cruel and inhuman treat
ment charged.
PARKER Velma vs. L. C.
Parker. Cruel and inhuman treat
ment charged.
Divorce Decrees Granttd
WFGNER Bonnie from Cyrus
R. Wegncr. Property settlement
approved.
HOI.COM R Shirley Lee from
Ira Eugene ' Holcomb. Plaintiff
granted custody of three minor
children and $100 monthly support.
SLOVENSKY Patricia from
Robert Stanley Slovcnsky. Plain
tiff granted restoration of former
name,
FIRMAN
R Firman,
Ida H. from Ralph
Northwestern Turkey
, '
Show To Receive $2400
The Northwestern Turkey show,
sponsored at Roseburg annually
in December, and the Pacific Coast
Turkey Exhibit will each recpive
$2400 as their share of horse and
nog racing receipts for the year
Secretary of State Earl T. Newbry
announced.
Oregnnians aren't betting as
much This year's receipts totalled
$.VM,898. compared wilh WI8.50S
last year. The record was $775,570
in i4.
i icrnanonai t.itestock. wh cii each
received ixyvno, received varvini
amounts.
A Tribute - -TO
OUR WOMEN'S CLUBS !
ThtTne group of our local women who hove or.
oomrH thTK.lves into Clubs, deserve, the un
jtmtfH cpnvnendotioo of all of us! Them ore
bnrige c'uhs. There ore self-improvement elunv
There are clubs whoe charitable work among the
nrrdv efmptiff-?s the finest tro-ts of American
wenminoH. rvat of tbfe are home women,
wmen with fcm.l.es onrf'oH'tHe ca-ei of home
nnoaemfnt. Yet they find time for richly-de-
reH recreafon, os well os charitable octtvines.
Thev are making the most of their huy lives
0n-H ".Cr..ly epp'oud their fem-mne proclivities.
Let's g've tKm generous suppo-t whenever tey
reauef it!
Mffnufactwed and Distributed by
Douglas County Creamery O
stobl.shH 1899
o
o
Phone 340
We Salute Dug!as Countyt)
1
C. H.Meusch Dies
'After Illness
Charles Henry Meusch. 79, well
L-nnan resident of Roseburg. died
nere ,hjs morning following a long
period of ill health. He was born
at California. Mo May 27, 1871.
He has resided in Roseburg for
the past 40 years where he engaged
in saddle-making and leatherwork.
business.
Surviving is a sister. Mrs. Fred
Gross. Washington. Mo., and a
niece, Mrs. Cornelia Eicher, Rose-
Dur,fi
Funeral services will be held in
the chapel of the l.ong & Orr mor
tuary, Tuesday, Oct. 24, at 2 p.m.
following services nere. his Dooy
, .... .... .
W'ill he sent to (alttomia, Mo., for
i milt inlnmhmMl KeciHa hi. U-it.
Alleged Slayer of Bride
Arrested By FBI Agents
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Pl A
young man wanted for the slaying
of his bride 'of two months was
arrested early today hy federal bu
reau of investigation agents and
city police.
He is Jack R. Atkins, 26. the ob
ject of a manhunt through the West
since the haltered body of his wife,
Audrey Hayes Atkins, 24. was found
in the room in which they were
living here last April 28.
Atkins was booked at the county
jr.il at 1:25 a. m. and charged with
murder.
WILBUR CLUB TO MEET
The Wilbur Community club will
hold its regular monthly meeting
at the school house, Friday eve
ning. Oct. 27.
The program committee has ar
ranged for a special program
which will include a speaker who
will talk on the school support bill
?0B. Refreshments will be served
af the close of the meeting.
All parents and friends are cor-
: dially invited to attend the affair,
DRUNK SENTENCED
Municipal Judge Ira R. Riddla
reported Axel Sigfried Stenvall, 43,
Roseburg. charged with drunken
ness, was committed to the city
'. 'A fnr 10 davs '" ll?u of K0 f'"'-
O
Roseburg, Oregon
f
o
Resaburt Jewelers
; ( 2 N. Jocksoei Th. 132?-J (
o
1178
v'L
LAUNDRY . . . LAUNDRY
O
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