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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1950)
2 Tha News-Reiew, Roseburg, Ort. Men., Reteburg Student Attends Soviet Fighting Collegiate Leaders Meet !D " Jo Sclon. Hosebur". attended : T OVICT IllCreaSeu two-day meeting of Oregon Fed eration of Collegiate Leaders held at Corvallis on Nov. 11 and 12. Scallon, student body president of Southern Oregon College of Educa tion, was one of six delegates re- resenting the school at the meet ing. Other delegates from SOCE at tending the meeting were: Rose mary Ring, Ashland, assistant edi tor of the school paper; Jack Bol ton, Lakeview, vice-president o f the student body; Keith Hanger, Kirby, freshman class president; Bob Kirkpatrick, Creswell, junior class president, and Jim Womack, Bonaza, editor ol tne scnool annual No. 13, 1950 1 Failure To Pay 60-Cent Bill Leads To Disaster E LONDON WP An unofficial British survey of the world's armed forces says Soviet Russia now has 3,000,000 men in the army, 18,000 first line warplanes and a sub' marine fleet of 360 in a expanding navy. ST. LOUIS (IP) Stanley B. Gallat, 25, failed to pay a 60 cent restaurant check yesterday. Police followed him in a 15 mile chase through five suburbs, leav ing a trail of battered cars. The fugitive's car was punctured with 23 police bullets. Before Gallat was subdued in his home, a police car was wrecked. rapidly I five autos sideswiped, six police I men hurt. The survey, "Brassey'i 1IK0 an-1 county hospital treated nual," estimated Russia will have i three broken noses, black eyes, trained manpower reserves of 12 to bruises, cuts and abrasions from 13 million by 1954 and plans to i the tussle. Gallat was charged with exnand her undersea fleet to 1.000 resisting arrest, assault, destruc- subs by the end of next year. . t'n of property and traffic viola Annual Soviet plane production. I tions. DRIVE CAREFULLY . ... ... a. lie vffrv nif civ. uuiei. accorn ng 10 me survey, is u.w t. . y 7. nPL. ar man. k..i.. ;i.. .. i ' i ways well behaved. " said GallaH, v.orkers are made I maims iiiainij iu iiir m-i ui mci- .. . man technicians and the capture lanalaaj ol German material. The annual, published here for 46 years, reported Russia this year has completed two Xi.ooo-ion, 28 knot battleships mounting 16-inch guns and one or two Aircraft car-ri"-i. It saM m"t battleships were under construction. I z UV-A-WAV Xa. 6IPT TODAY Xl BOSSBUKG iJtWtLf BS C.S. I. N. Oristmos Sroppinfl ,n November 1 II s VjHOPPI " 'I.I s "Til's. in &Javs Series Of Fires Takes Lives Of Eight Persons GARRETT, Pa. (!P Eight persons died in a series of fires in western Pennsylvania yesterday six of them children who per ished as flames destroyed a frame house in this little coal mining town. Five of the children were sons and daughters of Harvey Lee, 40, a welder, and his wife, Stella, 37. They were Kay, 15, Darlene, seven, Danny, five. I.averne, three, and Linda Sue, two. The other victim was Clarence Lee, 15, brother of Mrs. Lee, whose family name was the same as that of her husband. Another child, eight-month-o 1 d James Stover, burned to death in his crib in a farm house near Oil City, Pa. The eighth fire victim was Mrs. Alton Phillips, 50, who perished in a fire that destroyed her home at Sharon, Pa. Handsome Dan I, symbol of Bull dogs, arrived on the sports scene in 1896. Unemployment In Douglas Upped The estimated total of uemployed persons in Douglas county, while still more than fifty percent less than for the same penod last year, increased approximately one hun dred and seventy percent during October. Heavy rains and the en suing flood conditions were largely responsible for the increase. Many of the mills that were closed bv high water have since resumed op erations. Summarizing employment con ditions, George T. Foster, manager ot the Roseburg office of the state employment service adds: "Job opportunities are becoming difficult to find as more available by shutdowns in the lumner opera tions. There were but sixty-five openings on hand at the end of the month compared with two hun dred and thirteen at the end of September. The majority of these jobs were in the retail trade and service fields. Very few opportuni ties exist in construction and the lumber industry." "The winter season, with all of its attendant curtailments, is rapifty approaching. The labor shortage that has been evident dur ing the summer months has en tirely disappeared. Thi supply is more than adequate at the present time and little change is expected until next spring." I " 1' I Local News Te Meet Tonight Women of the Moose will meet at I o'clock tonight at life Moose hall on South Ste phens street. Meetinf Announced The ladies auxiliary to the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen will meet at 8 o'clock tonight at the IOOF hall. Te Elect Officers LookingglaSs Grange will hold election of officers at a meeting Tuesday night at I Julia Marfowe, Famous Actress, Passes Away NEW YORK UP) Julia Mar lowe, one of the greatest Shake spearian actresses of all time, died Sunday at the age of 85. With her husband, the late E. H. Sothern, she made up one of the most famous acting partnerships in the history of the American stage. Sothern died in 1933 a tthe age of 73. Both she and her husband retired in 1924. Alarm Clocks & Ironing Boards AT Douglas Hardware BV M J 1 V K.M I x2fflC&UUL JElUELER5i& for a ride V-7 mmmm,mmf,maj.i.m, jf N THE 1951 KAISER ! L", UTNE BROS. K-F Market Compeller NEWS. REVIEW I & Jt ? I MORE THAN 8.000 PAID SUBSBlBERs At . We o'clock at the hall. Former Risident Visits Mrs. Grace Wilbur, former resident of Roseburg, has been a visitor at the Bernard Howser home on Umpqua avenue East for the past few days. Te Portland Miss Maryrarol Jones and Miss Goldie Beal, of the Veterans hospital staff, spent the weekend in Portland visiting friends and relatives. Circle Te M.t Cirle No. 2 of St. Joseph's Altar society will meet at 8 o'clock tonight at the home of Mrs. Robert Foye, 825 S. Pine street. Te Elect Offers Eden Ladies Aid will hold election of officers at a meeting Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Carl E. John son. Te Meat Tonight Lady Lions will meet at 7 o'clock dinner tonight at Carl's Haven, with Mrs. Conrad Chine, Mrs. James Campbell and Mrs. Edell Bryant as hostesses. Trainees Arrive Lee Holmes, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Holmes, and Pat Sullivan, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Sullivan, have arrived at Camp Polk, La., for basic train ing. To Miet Tuesday Alpha Theta chapter of Beta Sigma Phi will meet at 8 o'clock Tuesday night at the home of Mrs. I.ee Fredrick son, 714 Alameda street. HEC Te Hold Meeting Olalla Tenmile HEC will meet at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at the Olalla hall. The subject will be textile paint ing. Mrs. Rhodes Leaves Mrs. R. B. Rhodes (Eugenia Virden), left Wednesday via streamliner from Eugene to Join her husband who is in service, stationed at Ft. Mac Arthur, Calif. Winston-Dlllard HEC Te Meet There will be a m-iiing of the Winston-Dlllard HEC unit at the Winston Community club Wednes day afternoon, Nov. 15, at 1:30 Those attending are asked to bring paints and supplies. To Meet Tuesday A J e a 1 8 n Commandery, Knights Templar, will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Masonic temple. The meeting will be preceded by a 6:30 o'clock din ner. Members and visiting Sir Knights are invited tc attend. Nurses Te Hold Meeting Ore gon State Nurses association, Dis trict No. 11, will meet Tuesday night at 7:30 o'clock at the nurses' quarters at the Veterans hospital. Dr. A. B. Munroe will be the sneaker. The appeal of private duty nurses for a raise in pay will be considered. Club To Meet The Patch and Chat club will meet Tuesday night at the home of Mrs, C Domenico. Club te Meet-The Junior Woman's club will meet Tuesday night at 8 o'clock at the Episcopal pa hirlnoaElsCtasstser.etosr.M. R-hr hall on East Cass street. Mrs. Ro bert Green, president, requests all members to be present. Dessert-Supper Badoura club of Nydia temple, Daughters of the Nile, will meet at a 7:30 o'clock dessert-supper Tuesday night at the home of Mrs. O. M. Berne, 6.T0 E. Douglas street, with Mrs. D. L. Taylor and Mrs. C. V. Crites assisting hostesses. Auxiliary Te Meet Eagles aux iliary will meet at 8 o'clock Tues day night at Eagles hall. Receives Certificate William Henry Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. William R. Anderson, Har vard avenue, has been awarded his certificate in watch-making by the state examiner f watch-making and clock-repairing. Chapter Te Hold Meeting Xi Epsilon of Beta Sigma Phi will meet Tuesday night at 8 o'clock at the home of Mrs. M. C Bowker on S. Main street. Mrs. Worth Davis will be in charge of the program topic of "Argentina." Basaar Sale Slated The Gar den Valley Woman's club is spon soring a bazaar and cooked food sale Friday, Nov. 17, at the J.V. sporting goods store. PRICED FOR QUICK SALE Strictly modern 4-bedroom home . . . Auto matic hoot . . . Sealed qaraq . . . Hard wood floors . , . Fully Insulated . . . Concrete drive and walks . . . Stationary tubs . . . Immediate Possession . . . Well built. A good buy. Small dew payment will take. House at 2007 Eden Lino. Call I84-J-1 after S p.m. to see. Aloma Aytch, Glendale Resident, Found Dead Alonza Marion Aytch, 79, was' found dead in his cabin by neigh bors last Thursday. He was a resi dent of Glendale for a great many years an was never married. Surviving him are two sisters, Mrs. Minnie Allen of Roseburg and Mrs. Ada Rudolph Kellogg of Ida, three nephews and a niece, David, Francis and Charles A. Tyrer, all of Roseburg, and Mrs. Gladys Partee of Glide, Ore. Graveside service was held i n the Masonic cemetery this after noon. Nov. 13, at 2 p. m. with Rev. J. K. Howard officiating. Ar rangements are in care of Steam's mortuary in Glendale. Airman Injured When Plane Dives In Columbia RAINIER, Ore. A Rainier pilot, George Hansen, escaped with severe inuries Saturday afternoon when his light plane rammed tele phone lines at nearby Prescott and was pitched into the Columbia river. Hansen is in Cowlitz general hos pital, Longview, Wash., with several fractured ribs, a deep scalp laceration and several cuts and bruises. His condition ia "fairly gooU". Plane Hits Mountain, Four Occupants Die GREENVILLE, S. C. An air force transport plane crashed into the side of a mountain late Saturday night, carrying the four men aboard to a fiery death. The victims were three crewmen from a Pittsburgh, Pa. reserve wing and a passenger. The crewmen were Capt. John Miles . Struckrath, pilot; First Lieut. Robert B. Schmitt, co-pilot, and Staff SRt. John Davis Bloomer, all from Pittsburgh. The passen ger was Staff Sgt. Walter O. Lott of Pensacola, Fla. MILK PRICE HIKE DUE PORTLAND UP) New milk prices were predicted by trade sources today when State Milk Ad ministrator Thomas L. Ohlsen is expected to announce findings on producers demands for more money. The trade believes Ohlsen will advance prices l't cents to 21 cents a quart for grade A standard. Ohlsen was to leave today for Klamath Falls to hold milk hear ings scheduled for that area. DANA WILL RETIRE PORTLAND jn MaNihall Dana, editor of the Oregon Journal editorial page, plans to retire Dec. 31 after 41 years on the newspa per's staff. A testimonial dinner is planned by civic leaders of the city and state. SOUTH END FUEL CO. Phone 11 9S-R 207 Rico St. rtlPlftlAl m vmijAPiwt, wm Wise buyers look for the Imperial silver label that says the finest In wallpapers. Guaranteed to with stand room exposure without fad ing and to clean satisfactorily when instructions art followed. I QjJ WE FURNISHINGS I SEE OUR AD ON PAGE 12 33 SHOPPING DAYS 'TIL CHRISTMAS Cfe PHONE STOCK UP NOW! 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