oo 2 The Newt-Review, Roseburg, Ore.-. Thuri.. Nov. 2. 1950 Ntw Chief Of folict Nomad At Springfield SPRINGFIELD f.f) Harry W. Howard, with St years of police work experience ha been named chief of police of Springfield. Howard served 2S yeara with the Seattle police department and wai chief of police at Ketchikan, Alaska, from ia to una. Hit appointment filled I vacancy created by the recent firing of Jamea E. Ramey, who wa chief of police for a little more than lour months. The newspaper has been filled Die common man's university. 11IIMII.II .Ulllll ia..liu I.'.. r7Q"" .eV:' ' ., !.,.'. , . ' . - . ' ; ' v ' . ; ' - - i .:.: . ''-r-t ( - y- i ; ; ' 1 ' . ! f-l UMPQUA VALLEY J : 'ft HARDWARE I I 1 1 ! 1 1 )', I ATI I ff lKrv . i L. I Skylit,, Ai ""IIP f tt)of 1r- ttrtiftif or DtKt'l Mtwf to tKo 4mmn4 lot fooaf, poovror-prkoo1 toolf tfco oootoly tooo Ho vorf o hob- Byyraf'l tfotk roolrontontt for litlormiNont wio. OUVMl CTMaV HtM(rlt'10rwlt talk Fnr ipirf Jlt and fact plat farnwif lo Biako limpe, toy. - s - For I orai a ranM. aaW faaac tha tow For all nirvod rwtn, a mtkmw fort, thctVoi, ou. Aiao to films uW en- lv tow For nop ml or rroo-riint aoq Loca News Back From Coast nr. and Mrs. G. C. Finlay anailT. and Mrs. G. V. Wimberly have returned to their homes in Roseburg, following a five-day stay at coast points. .parted Better Mrs. Douglas Wane is reported improving at her home on West Pouglas street, where she has been ill for the last week. At Mercy Hospital Mrs. Crabhe of Rosotmrg has been admitted to Mercy hospital for medical treat mcnt. Temperance Rally There will be a temperance rally at the First Methodist church this evening at 7:30. Local ministers will speak. Grange to Have Social A box supper will be held at the Looking glass Grange Friday. Nov. 3 at o p.m. The public is invited. Goes Te San Oiege Mrs. Ray mond Parslow of Koseburg has left for San Diego to join her husband, who was called into service in the navy in September. Mr. I'arslow, son of Mr. and Mrs. II. C. Parslow of Rosehurg. served in the navy during World War II. He is em ployed by the Pacific telepnone and Telegraph company here. Their home on East Lane street has been rented to an engineer of the Toketee falls project. 0 luA-afJ-l frM1 ttt Mt The regular meeting of Riversdale Grange will be Friday evening at 8.15. n. nuifi Tria Flla M firav. buyer for the ready-to-wear and annrttuoarrt enartmentxo f Mill er a, is leaving Friday for Ixis Ang eles awl ."an rrancisro mamem. She expects to tie gone about ten days. Dunagans Have Daughter Word has been received of the birth of a Uaushter. Vicki. to Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Dunasan of Portland. Mrs. Dunasan is the former Vivian Mil ler of Rosehurg. The baby was born at Halliday Park hospital. Oct. 30. United Workers Moot Mrs. William VanBlarlcnm will be host ess to the I'nited Workers class of the First Christian church on Fri day, Nov. 3, at 1:30. Return From Ranior Mr. and Mrs. N. II. Johnson and Bobby, and Mrs. Myrtle Recker have re turned from a weekend visiting at Rainier with Mr. Johnson's mother, i Mrs. Anna M. Johnson. in umiiiiiiiiwiii minimi i a saw m mm m . -J-) Would-Ba Assassin To Fact Murder Charg Continued From 'Page One) 4 ,V;iv: GIRL OF THE MONTH Barbara Wesf, Roseburq high school senior, was selected September's girl of the month by (ha Girl's league at the school. Barbara is the first girl to ba honored by the girl of the month award. Tha new award was based on her school activities. She was chosen for tha award by a teachers committee. Each month during tha school year, the league will honor a member as a girl of tha month. Barbara is tha daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roland West of Roseburg, Girl Of The Month Award Presented To Barbara West hlffiff) holi aie if HaJ tm rtrwluhiaf howa-1 man. 7 fmlt m I. I k dnHini, ihjrt-rif-towting. carving, aaoa in, (rinding, Bkortuing Cooto fc too, fo mo root Hmrmtt Fowor Tooft J 7 l!M-J7: 202 North Jackson Street Phone 7J C. O. Cracrofr Found Dead In Milwaukie Home Chester O. Cracroft was found dead in his home in Milwaukie, apparently from a heart attack early Tuesday morning, according to information received here from llolman llankins Rilance, funeral directors in Oregon city. Cracroft w'as employed for many years by Crown-Willamette Paper t'n. He was born Jan. 16, 1884, in Hartford, Kas. Surviving are a brother. Howard F. of Oakland; two sisters, Mrs. Rose (Minor) Al len. Portland, and Miss Jessie Cra croft, San Francisco. Services were held today, Nov. 2. at 11 a.m. at the llolman Hankins Rilance funeral home, wilh vault interment in the Ml. View ceme tery, Oregon City. Cracroft was a member of Pent alpha lodce No. 276, AF & AM, Cahlamft, Wash. Coo fixin! Cool iatin'l 1$ BOB FRANKS 311 GROCERY u2fc3Besi c s,.,.., Coconut - 4 oi. 17c remember to vote H'ki,J it NEXT TUESDAY. NOV. 7 Grahams - 2 lbs. 53c BUTTER arid 70c PANCAKE FLOUR SSt, 89' IffiiyifeM SYRUP 5 79c 12 1 95cfl PR EM luecii M..tij oi. c. 45c 53 TIDE lLrTLAVA I Sardines can 9c wi yiVc Fod v2h iQA DREFT ) DUZ Cheese pt. 25c W Crackers29c iSmci s--c SOXYDOL TAMALES grXSS SPAN MSf4 Giont HOMEMADE imi rTc WWA ol each 45c Barbara West, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roland West of Roseburg, achieved a "first" for her record Oct. 27 when she became the first Girl of the Month to ba selected for the award. After wearing tha Girls league jeweled pin for a month, she will present it to October's iirl of the Month when that person is chosen sometime in November. Selected by the members of the Girls league council with the ap proval of a faculty committee, the (iirl of the Monlh is chosen on a basis of character, scholarship, personality and accumulative achievements. An orchid corsage from Umpqua florists was an additional award bestowed upon her at the assembly presentation. The Girls league, a high school service organization, selected four candidates for the honor and the faculty committee picked the Girl of the Month from the four. Some of the accomplishments which earned Barbara her title in clude: library club member i n ninth, grade, class representative in Girls league and Jobs daughter Third Messenger, tenth grade Stu dent body secretary, Tri-lli-Y member and class representative in Girls league, 11th grade; and Job's Daughter Third Messenger and recorder, president of Girls league and Tri Ili-Y member in this, her senior year. Objectives Listed The Girls league is an organiza tion dedicated to the welfare of all girls in the high school. lis policies are guided by a council consisting of Harhara West, presi dent; Dixie Nay, vice-president; Janet Foster, secretary: Jeanne Rapp, treasusor; l.ois McKinney. sergeant at arms; Sandy Owen and Norma John, senior representatives- Rarhara Peterson ami Fa ther Johnson, junior representa tives: Kstelle Beaudet and Janet llargis. sophomore representa tives, and Betty Matthews and I Donna Fromdahl, freshman repre sentatives. The council plans programs for ' the school year and actuates trad- itional social events such as the Christmas ball, etc., for the high ' school student body. v The adviser for the organization I and Dean of girls at senior high, I Miss Klizaheih Randall, points out that the organization is primarily constructive in nature. For ex j ample, an Oct. 19 meeting of the group featured a talk by Mrs. Ei ! leen Schoonover, a representative I of the National Association of I Beauticians, on the advantages and opportunities in beauty culture as a business. tha necessary cooperation so that your mission may be a triumph." It carried .the same aignature. Neither Gorsoline nor the "treas urer" was identified. Story at tha Battle It was evidently trw that Presi dent Truman was "the calmest man in the place" when, awakened by lire shots, he peered out a win dow and saw dead and wounded police and attackers before the official residence. Collazo, coming up Pennsylvania avenue from the east, and Torres ola, strolling from the west, pre sumably had timed themsees to arrive simultaneously in front of Blair House. Collazo passed the east sentry box without attracting the notice of Officer Joseph O. Davidson and Secret Service Agent Floyd Bor ing, who were on duty. He a p proached within ten feet of the entrance canopy. . Private Birdzell stood at that point, his back to Collazo. The Puerto Rican drew hit gun, pulled the trigger. The gun clicked but did not go off, and Birdzell whirled at the sound. Collazo shot him in the knee Birdzell stepped off the curb and backed into Pennsylvania avenue, blazing away. Before he fell in the cartrackc. Davidson and Boring had opened fire nd Collazo made a dash for the front door. The desperate man was already on the steps before he was cut down. He tumbled over, and lay with blood atreaming from his chest. A German-made "PH" pis tol and one empty cartridge clip slipped from his hand. On the western side, in front of the adjoining Blair-Lee mansion, a similar drama was being played j out. Torrescla suddenly opened I fire on Coffelt and Downs, in the opposite sentry box. In the replying fire, nobody knew I for certain whose bullet took ef fect. But Torresola crumpled over a small privet hedge bordering Blair-I.ee House. He lay curled in the hedge cor ner, blood trickling from both ears. He had been shot squarely through the head. His Luger pistol lay in the curve of his body. Mr. Truman, who had taken yesterday's events with unshaken nerves, did not permit them or the secret service to upset his way of life. As usual, he was out in the early morning for a stroll. NINE LIVES LOST Woman Phones For Help-Cat Needed Burial r j .. Hnrn;n0 uh.n Rnse burg was beginning to dig out of the mud and debris left by uaf South Umpqua't unseasonable itrum. and the city hall was the focal point of distress calls, City Recorder Winston Gilchrist sweated out a bad five minutes on the telephone, the conversation; went like this: '. t. . .I'm sorry. Madam, but I U . . ,n ..nrl tn heln VOU .1 I I'm mn-u Miiiim- niilinarllv we i I could send a man to help you but ! our crews are all busy this mor i ning .... Madam, see if you can find someone in your neignooj--hood to help you." Washout? Flooded basement? D mI... .. -im n,-,,? Vnne A llrl V i alley cat had died on someone's troni lawn ana iney wamru me city to send out a crew to bury it. Oregon Flood VlcAns Eligible For RFC loans Continued From Page One) children all alonaDthe route with, out transportation. Mrs. Flay W guson. w ho teaches at Oakland, has . ki- . rariirn tn her tearh. oeen unui . - ---- ------ ing Fear is expressed by Mrs. Rice that persons living at the Tyea lumber camp may be short of food unless am can oe oruuni oj the end of the week. Several families wer forced to evacuate their homes along tha river. "Anv help that can be given us in getting the bridge repaired will be greatly appreciated by the 'for gotten people' on Couger creek and Bullock road," Mrs. Rica concluded. The first newspaper In the I American colonies told its read- ers. "It is designed that the Coun j trey shall be furnished once a I moneth (or if any Glut of Occur i rences happen, oftener.) with an j account of such considerable tnings as nave arrived unto our Notice." At the end of the American Rev olution there were 43 newspaperi in the colonies. ELECT PAUL AIEEL FOR MAYOR ood hove o conservative busfness like administration. Pd rok Adv Ab-l lor Mayo r Com . Gl.n T.ylor. Sr . 230 N. Main No thinking cltliart wants the evils of prohibition te return . . . bootlegging . . . racketeering . . . speak easies ...bribed officials... and phoney brands. ...AGAINST THE PROHIBITION MEASURE ON THE NOVEMBER BALLOT SAVE Everybody is Talking - About Sanford's Candy "IT ISN'T ANY OLD KIND OF CANDY"... I Sanford's Candy is made fresh daily in I their own candy I Kitchen. Sanford's Candy Kitchen at 1M W. Cass Roseburg I -rn . . a .rrn nnrf AS MUCH AS I LOVE MINI! s. L . -4iCSdia-...-.. 3 New Patented feature? look for tho Air Holot In tfco Lift, me, THtr ' octi Knlo foot fratn ood comfortoblo. SioootH, ooo-pioto lootftor Knirtfja oddJ tvpporl. 3 "ant lootKor Arcti rootfX f ivot 9ft'IO NR. re Of corrvcTivv. CHARMING STYLES AND WONDERFUL FIT BESIDES II' r o o o ,o o THREE HOME-OWNED STORES 22 N. Jocttn, Roseburg Sutitrlia Apparel, Sutherlie la, Myrtle CreetT) o with a folding dryer for indoor or outdoor use made of selected fir positive double lock A smoothly sanded T folds compactly for storing 295 395 550 D QJ) l j) 321 N- Jackton St. o o o o o o o o o o0 o 'o rp o