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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1951)
"Cawrss Seeks To Enoln DeGnaths From Blocking John F. Cawrse, in i iuit filed Thursday, sought to enjoin August and Ruth De Gnath from blocking his Way to timber markets from logging operations east of Camas Valley. Cawrse's circuit court complaint declares the DeGnats have placed barriers on the only road lead ing out of an area where he owns felled and bucked timber. Steel Decking For 3 Bridges Is Ordered Steel decking for the Umpqua, Pruner and Riddle bridges has been ordered and will be in stalled this fall, the county court announced Thursday. Work has been started on straightening the Dixonville-Llttle river road at Hahn's corner, a spoKesman saia. I Got Reasons! THE fellow who has just had a "close call" doesn't have to be "sold" on the wisdom of insurance protection. He's been warned! Unfortunately, disaster doesn't often "call its shots". Consider yourself warned! Call on us for YOUR insurance protection NOW. ROY 0. YOUNG DIAL 3-6671 205 West Cass Street Roseburg . ..-ft (06 DAILY FROM ROSEBURG One-Way To Exprtues Fore Portland 7$ 4.25 Seattle 7 7.25 Sacramento Los Angeles San Francisco Oakland 5 7.50 4 12.00 3 8.00 3 7.95 Plus Federal Tax Plus many regular Schedules Daily Return Trip 20 LESS . . . on Round-Trip Tickets DEPOT: 344 So. Stephens A. J. Murray, Agent Phone 3-5064 GREYHOUND r. tit n ! ''nMm--:---' , , PICTURES OF THE BEGONIA EXHIBIT at the Roseourg "woman's ciub two-day fall flower show are being taken in the above picture by Mrs. T. L. Goodwin, member of the show's staging com mittee. The show, which continued through today, has been visited by a large number of persons interested in flowers. (Picture by Paul Jenkins I. fx jf-JuikM. t-Zt i n , -V ADMIRIN& the Job's Daughter s exhibit at the annual tall tlower show of the Roseburg Woman's club are Miss Muriel Mitchell, Roseburg Public Library librarian, and Mrs. Leland Van Allen, a member of the ciub fiower show committee. (Picture by Paul Jenkins I. Late Al Capone's Brother Revealed As Noted Officer HOMER, Neb.. UP) The long lost brother of the late Al (Scar face) Capone has been discovered in northeast Nebraska where he built a reputation as a fearless officer of the law. He is Justice of the Peace Rich ard J. "Two-Gun" Hart of Homer, former Homer town marshal and Indian agent at nearby Winne bago, Neb. During the prohibition era when the Al Capone organization was WESTERN DANCING EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT FROM 9 'TIL 1 LOU FRANCO'S HAPPY VALLEY "DUTCH MILL" MUSIC BY YOUR OLD PAL LOU FRANCO and his HAPPY VALLEY COWBOYS SNACK BAR: Sandwiches, Soft Drinks PLENTY OF FREE PARKING ADMISSION: $1.50 per couple tax Incl. For A Good Time, Come To. "The Happy Valley Rancho" 2 Miles South of Roseburg On 99 SMOKY and His Cascade Mountainairs Every Saturday Night AtTenmile Tune In KRXL Every TJurdoy, 7:30 P.M. rT:i!l,,l,l,,.,rt...,,.. .., ,,. .aaftB JiL k widely known, fellow officers said Hart as an Indian agent specializ ing in running down bootleggers, was averaging a raid a day and sometimes as many as seven in a single night. Sioux City, la., police captain Paul Mummert, who said he went on many raids with Hart, de scribed him as the most coura geous officer he had ever known. Hart's identity as James Ca pone, about 64, was disclosed Wednesday in Chicago, where a grand jury is investigating the al leged $96,679 income tax evasion of Al's brother, Ralph "Bottles" Ca pone. Cables laid in deep water are usually less than an inch thick. RADIO BROADCAST DIRECT FROM DANCE v II TO 1 1:30 P. M. OVER KRNR Dewey Answers Red Thrust With Sharp Satire ALBANY, N. Y. ffl "Fel low peasants," Gov. Thomas E. Dewey said in a telegram to an Oregon club. "I salute you and congratulate you. The Soviet prop aganda machine has admitted you to the exclusive club of the down trodden masses of America." This was the mustachioed Re publican's back-of-the-hand to a Soviet portrayal of him as an anti-religious leader, in a caption on a picture taken during his 1948 presidential primary campaign in Oregon. . The picture showed members of the Cavemen's club or Grants Pass, Ore., dressed in animal skins and waving jawbones. They were welcoming Dewey "a shore." The club gives the same treatment to all visiting dignitaries to publicize Oregon caves. This week the club was told that a copy of the picture in Leningrad carried a caption describing uie group as peasants organized to protest "the cruel and vicious Wall street-backed church." "Pictured with them,1 the cap tion said, "is T. E. Dewey, a known anti-religious leader and once candidate for President of the United States." Dewey's tongue-in-check tele gram to the club said he was sure the members "will be delighted to learn that they are noe portrayed throughout Kussia Ss the starving victims of American imperialism. You can now put your show on the road. I am sorry you can't take it to Moscow, where no meat, ei ther raw or cooked, is available." Dewey is an honorary member of the club. He also is an Episco pal church vestryman. Wage Increase Granted Unions Pared By Board WASHINGTON UP) Part of a wage increase won by maritime workers on th east, west and gulf coasts was killed Wednesday by the Wage Stabilization board. The board's public and industry members voted to allow a 6.2 per cent general pay boost for the nearly 90,000 workers represented . by four unions. 1 Labor members protested the decision. They wanted the entire j eight percent boost negotiated by the unions. The board, however, approved a reduction in the seamen's work ; week from 48 to 40 hours before overtime is paid. Industry mem bers dissented. Seamen actually work every day : while at sea, devoting seven eight hour days to their jobs. Some years ago they won agreement to get a premium overtime rate for the seventh day's work each week, the overtime rate for the sixth day I also. ' The three unions involved are the National Maritime union, Marine Engineers association, and American Radio association, all three CIO, and the Pacific Coast Firemen's association, independ ent. Public . and industry members said that 6.2 percent was all that was allowable under board regu lations for a wage increase. More Japanese War Criminals To Be Freed TOKYO (IP) Twelve mor'e; Japanese war criminals will be paroled from Tokyo's Sugamo prison ' Sept. 25, Allied headquar ters' legal section announced. This will bring the number paroled to 350. Most of the 12 men had been serving 10-year terms which be gan early in 1948. They include a navy captain, a major, a cap tain, enlisted men and civilians. At Apartment IvaThillips 337 N. Main Phori 3-7959,3) Everyday happenings In the news are a fascinating story in themselves. To bring listeners the most original and accurate news picture possible, KRNR and Mu tual present "MUTUAL NEWS REEL" Monday, Wednesday and Friday, 8:45-9:00 p.m. "MUTUAL NEWSREEL" is a swift, moving panorama of each day's big ana little news events. The striking difference between this and an ordinary news report is the fact that the people who make the news are actually heard. The news is presented from where it hap pens as it happens. The mam moth task of gathering and edit ing this constant flow of news has been entrusted to an extra-large staff of radio correspondents. Nu cleus of this staff is every station of the Mutual network almost 500 in number. From these Mutual affiliates come the colorful and humorous bits of Americana which gives the program its well-balanced content. Important inter national news is handled by Mu tual's corps of over-seas reporters at 53 vantage points throughout the world. This news is trans Brigadier Case To Speak Here Brigadier Guy Case (above) of Pasadena, Cal., will conduct evan gelistic meetings at the Salvation Army hall in Roseburg every night starting tonight through Sent. 28. He will also speak this Sunday morning at the hall. Case was retired in 1948, having served S years of unbroken tenure in tne aaivauon Army, bince re tirement, he has conducted evan gelistic meetings in Kentucky, Il linois, Texas, Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, California and Oregon. His long career saw him called up in 1917 as one of the first group of Salvation Army officers to be sent overseas to work with U. S. troops in France. He served there the length of the war in the front lines and visited Germany after the war. He was second In command of the Salvation Army in Hawaiian DINE AND DANCE FOR RESERVATIONS, CALL 2-9109 V ' I WILL BE AT JOHN'S u R v 3 Miles North of Myrtle Creek on Hwy. 99 FRIDAY NIGHT, SEPT. 21 mitted by shortwave to Mutual's New York newsroom. Here, along with news material gathered from Mutual-affiliated stations, by spe cial lines, it is edited and incor porated Into a fifteen-minute pro gram. Dispatches from press wirei are used to alert stations and correspondents on news "breaks" in their areas. To-night at 8:00, prepare to roll back the rug and join in a smooth dance session with Guy Lombardo. He gives with that sort of free and easy music that makes you WANT to dance. Tomorrow morning, along; about 10:30, Bob McCarl, our genial em cee presents the QUIZ-CLUB, our kiddies, audience participation show from across the hall, in the American Legion hall. If you've never attended, by all means come down and see radio In the making. There's free ice cream for all and the more the merrier. In an audience participation show, the more audience wo have, the better we like it. There's lots of room. Kids, come on up and see the show, while mother gets in a half hour shopping. Islands from 1930 to 1934. His last appointment before retirement was as chaplain for Men's Social in Seattle, Tacoma and Portland, New Fires Attack California Woods By The Associated Press Weary fire fighters today tight ened their hold on the last of Cali fornia's major forest fires but at least two new ones were re ported racing through rugged tim ber country. U. S. forest service officials said they expected to gain complete control of the stubborn blaze that has flamed across more than 13.000 acres of brush and timber land near Banning in southern Califor nia. Other crews began mopping up the remaining hot spots of the Boardman ridge fire in -northern California's Mendocino national forest. It was controlled after black ening some 6,700 acres of forest. The new fires are on the Six Riv ers national forest in the state's extreme northwest corner. Helicopters and other forest service planes ferried fire tight en to the Gasquet area 13 miles northeast of Klamath where two fires had flamed through 700 acres by Wednesday night in nigh-Inaccessible country. i MRY I NIGHT f laser Brewing Company . Son FranclicoJ -j ! . 9.30 P.M. I KGO 70 n,DN,CHT TUESDAYS AND FDIDAYSN i Dial 810 I lOiU TO MIDNIGHT ! A FEATURING Merchants Lunches and the most danca obte mutlc in Rose burg. Open every night 'til 2 a.m. r SKYROOM 115 W. WASHINGTON THE NOBLE MUSIC AC i AND HIS ORCHESTRA Frl., Sept. 21, 1951 The News-Review, loteburg, Or. I RADIO PnOGMtASC KRNR U90 kc. REMAINING) HOURS TOD AT 4:00 Fu Hon Lewli Jr MBS 4:15 Hemingway MBS 4:30 Behind th Story MBS 4:4i Sam Hayea MBS 5:00 Bobby Benton MBS 8 30 Clyde Beatty MBS 5:55 Tex Fletcher MBS 6:00 Gabriel Heatter MBS :15 World of Sport 30 Brighter Side 8:45 Sam Hayes MBS ' ' 6:55 Bill Henry MRS 7:00 Sleepy time Talea 7:15 Lionel Barry mora 7:30 Cisco Kid MBS 8:00 Guy Lombardo Show 8:30 Union Oil Special MBS 8:35 Mutlc 8:49 Mutual Newireel 9:00 Glenn Hardy MS 9:15 Pulton Lewli Jr. MBS 9:30 HI Neighbor - B:45 Personality Tlm 9:55 Newi Summary 10:001 Love a Mystery 10:15 Music You Want 10:45 Nite Watch 11:25 News Nltecap 11:30 Sign Off , SATURDAY. SEPT. 51, 1951 6:00 Coffee Club Caper 6 30 County Agent 6:45 Way of Life 7:00 Hemingway MBS 7:16 Breakfast Gang MBS 7:45 U. S. Navy Band 8:00 National Guard Show 8:15 News MBS 8:30 Havea of Rest-MBS 9:00 Stars on parade 9:15 4-h Club 9-35 Man About Town 9:30 Telephone request 10:00 Ten O'clock News 10:15 You and Your Camera 10:30 Quiz Club 11:00 Dunn on Discs 11:30 Sports Parade MBS 11:45 Jerry and Sky MBS 12:00 World News 12:15 Music In Modern Mood 12:30 Man on the Street 12:45 Local News 12:35 Market Reports 1:00 Mert'i Record Adventure MBS 1:30 National Kids Day 3:00 Music 3:15 U. So. Calif.-Wash. State coi- lege football 5:00 Hemingway MBS 5:15 Music 5:30 Music 8:45 Flying Time 6:00 Joe Massey & Guitar 6:15 Navy Star Time 6:30 World of Sports 6:45 Legion Program 7:00 Pigskin Parade 7:15 Lest Wa Forget 7:30 Happy Valley Cowboys 8:00 Murder by Experts MBS 8:30 Family Theater 9:00 News MBS 9:15 Wrestling 10:30 Arthur Van Orchestra MBS 11:00 Happy Valley Rancho 11:25 News Nitecap 11:35 Sign Off Ousted Revenue Official Denies Bribery Charges BOSTON UP) Denis W. Delaney, ousted collector of in ternal revenue for Massachusetts, is free on $2,500 bail after he pleaded innocent to indictments charging he accepted bribes and tiieu false certificates. Ho was charged specifically with STARTS TONIGHT LATE SHOW SAT. NIGHT Bud Abbott Lou Costelb IN- "Mexican Hayride" -AND- JON HALL VICTOR McLaglen "Michigan KicT PARENTS fee n "...WSPIWNO" JAMES WHITMORE NANCY DAVIS GARY GRAY JEFF COREY DIIICTIO IV William WEllMAN Of "BATTlfGfiOUNO" HMEIBsgS 2ND FEATURE STAND UP AND SING ENDS SA T . COUNTRY 1240 kc. ICnjtL RCMAININO HOUBS TODAY 4:00 Liberty Jsmboree LBS 4:00 Liberty Jamboree LB1 4:15 Tony Pastor 4:30 Once Upon a Time 4:43 Sleepy Joe 5:00 Brother Bones 5:13 Time for Musfe 8:00 Sports Spotlight 6:13 Lamplighters 6:30 Modern New 6:45 John W. Vanderoook LSI 7:00 Moods In Muilc 7:30 Cote Glee Club 7:45 Loggers Weather Bulletin 7:50 K, Falls vs. R.H.S. 10:00 Modern Melody Hour 10:30 Jim McCulla New 10:45 Midnight Flyer 11:30 Sign Ott BATUBDAr, SEPT. It, lSl 6:00 Early Bl-dl 6:05 News Headline ,f 6:10 Early Birds xSffy 6:30 Rooster Reveille , 6:40 Local Weather Report 6:45 First Edition News LBS 7 00 Platter Party 8:00 World News 8:15 Tops In Pops 9:00 To Be Announced 9:15 Say It with Musl 9:30 World Wide News 9:45 Top o' the Mornln' 10:00 News LBS 10:15 Sugar 'n Spice 10:30 Saturday Clambake 11:00 Open House 12:00 Variety Time 12:15 Band Review 12:30 Mid-Day News 12:45 Market Reports 12:30 You Never Know 1:00 As You Like It 1:15 Oregon-Stanford Football aunt 4:16 Henry Jerome 4:30 Hot Off the Record 8:00 Smoky & The K- Wranglsn 3:30 Time for Music 6:00 Sports Spotlight 6:15 Lamplighters 6:30 Modern News 6 43 Jack Foster es Hie Orchestra 7:00 Masked Rider 7:30 Western Caravan 8:00 Heidelberg Harmonalrt 8:15 Pee We Hunt 8:30 News 8:35 Music 8:40 Loggers Weather Bulletin 8:45 The Old Scotchman LBS 9:00 Saturday Night Dancing Party 10:00 Modern Melody Hour 10:30 News 10:35 Midnight Flyer 11:30 Sign Off taking $12,500 to Influence decis ions and falsely certifying Ux liens of more than $180,000. Conviction on all counts could carry fines up to $67,000 or prison terms totalling 27 years or both. Delaney was fired by President Truman in July. He had served for seven years. STARTS SUN. CONFESSIONS OF A FEMAlt i tt W nl . J. J3i 'V. Ml tOBrv-r IVfUliifk Technicolor ENDS SAT. VAN JOHNSON ftTOiklfrsllflMWm Starts SUNDAY YOU'LL WANT TO TELL YOUR NEIGHBOR ABOUT THIS PICTURE I AND I-AIK BS5fl m am mum ' 1 - of ihs tumr ; JJ jjj g a noun I4I