Federal Budgeteers Evidently Think That If a "Sustained Yield" Policy Helps the Timber Industry, it Should Work Satisfactorily on Pocketbooks of Taxpayers HOTTER That's the status of the second world war today, with heavy blows being struck on all major fronts. Any day may see a smash indicating the trend toward ulti mate victory. Read the NEWS REVIEWED dally and keen posted. THE WEATHER By U. S. Weather Bureau Cloudy tonight. Rain Saturday, Little change in temperature. See page 4 for statistics. fHrDOlJGLSS COUNTY DALY VOL. XLV NO. 236 OF ROSEBURG REVIEW RObtBURS, ORbfcON, FRIDAY-JANUARY 10, 1941. VOL. XXIX NO. 134 OF THE EVENING NEWS IMI'IQ) N IS) M UK News ' By FRANK JENKINS nrODAY (Wednesday) there is a comparative lull In the war storm. (Since the advent of air bombing, lulls can be only com parative.) IN cyclone territory, there is a peculiar lull that comes before the vicious and terrifying storm. The wind dies. The air be comes oppressive. Dark clouds mass on the horizon. Gradually 'these clouds acquire a greenish tinge. Humans and animals, sensing the tension, become jit tery. Suddenly, the STORM BREAKS. "TMIE present lull in .the war storm is like that. Despite the comparative calm, the air is tense. On the Balk an horizon, dark clouds have been gathering for days. Threat ening clouds loom about Britain. Throughout the world, peo ple sense the tension. Unless you are an exception, you feel it yourself. IF you have lived in cyclone country, you know that when jthese conditions appear the fol lowing storm is as certain as anything can be. You know that when the storm breaks it will be SOMETHING. The whole world knows that today. INTERESTING: The British government agrees today to the passage of Ameri can Red Cross ships through the blockade with condensed milk for the children of unoccupied France and wheat for the hun gry of Spain. The dispatches explain that humanitarian, not political, con siderations have led to the deci sion. v MAYBE. ' Don't forget, however, that Franco can still be useful to the British cause (which is now of ficially our cause) if she chooses to make the sacrifices that will be involved. Spain, holding the road to Gibraltar, can also be useful. The point is that in war hu- (Cnntlmiei! nn nnee 4) SERIAL STORY CONSCRIPTS WIFE BY BETTY WALLACE CHAPTER ONE The neighbors called them, dis approvingly, "That crazy young Marshall couple." The neighbors romplained about the late parties they gave; the high laughter, the shuffle of dancing feet, the blar ing radio. They objected to Butch, the bulldog. The neigh bors opened their windows and slammed them down meaningly whenever Peg, the wheezing old wreck the Marshall called a car, sprang to groaning life at the curb outside. And the neighbors talked about Paul Elliott, who was always with them. Imagine! Evervone In town knew that Paul Elliott was the man Mrs. Marshall had been engaged to for two years. Then, all of a sudden, less than three months ago his .old college friend, Bill Marshall, blew into town. He got a Job as credit manager at Throckmorton's Jew elry store. And what happened? Before you could turn around he was taking Martha out. Within a month, she married him! And now, look! The three of them, chummy as you please, running in and out what used to be a nice, quiet. r--pectable apartment house. Oh, the neigh bors sniffed, sure, sometimes there was another girl a tall, InU xal Collapse To Beat Axis, Says Dr. Victor Morris Alternative Would Be U. S. Entry in War, Speaker at Roseburg Chamber of Commerce Banquet Asserts; World's Business Wants Peace, Free Enterprise. A prediction that the axis powers will be defeated in the present world war through interna! deterioration and a gradual breakdown in morale, rather than through the force of British military might, was voiced here last night by Dr. Victor P. Morris, dean of the school of business administration of University of Oregon. Speaking before the annual banquet meeting of the Roseburg chamber of commerce, Dr. Morris declared that there already are indications of an internal breakdown in the axis struc ture. If, however, the totalitarian states succeed !n holding to gether, the United States eventually- will be forced to send men as well as supplies to Britain's aid, he predicted.. Dr. Morris pictured tne world s business interests, as represent ed through chambers ot com merce and like organization, the greatest force for peace, person al liberty and law and order. The meeting at which Dr. Mor ris was the principal speaker was held at the Umpqua hotel last night with a large attend ance. The program was conduct ed by Tom Parkinson, retiring president, and included music by the Roseburg high school Swing- sters and the Roseburg Men's Glee club. H. H. Cleland, Med- ford, president of the California Oregon Power company, and E. P. Leavitt, manager of Crater Lake .National park, were guests at the banquet and spoke briefly. Business Wants Peace The addness by Dean Morris, which was the principal pro gram feature, gave an interest ing picture of the economic and social factors involved in the present war. He pointed out that the busi ness interests of the world are the strongest advocates of per sonal liberty, free enterprise and peaceful society, because it is un der such conditions that bus!- (Continued on pa Re (!) Captured Jail Fugitive Faces Kidnaping Charge SALEM, Jan. 10. fAP) A year-old charge of kidnaping awaited Warren E. Bartges, Sa lem, here today, following his ar rest in Klamath Falls, Sheriff A. C. Burk said. Burk -accused Bartfes of escap ing -the county jail December 30, 1030, with another prisoner and forcing Mrs. A. R. Hunter, 53, Sa lem, to drive him to Portland. Mrs. Hunter has since died. Barteges' record also includes navy desertion and an arson con viction in Yamhill county for which he served a sentence in the penitentiary, the sheriff said. COPYRIGHT. 1841, - NEA SERVICE. INC. slim blond, supposed to be Paul Elliott's new girl. Early on the morning of Oet. 1(5 registration day the neigh bors heard whoons of laughter from the Marshall menaee! Thev judged, correctly, that Paul El liott was eating breakfast with the Marshalls again. "We might as well register to gether. Bill." Paul had said. "Aft r a hearty breakfast, the con demned men will go forth brave Iv. Bill, you certainly were the farsighted bird, seeing all this coming." He didn't sav that he'd had the Idea first. "Now you're married, in the exempt class." "So that was It. vou worm!" Martha turned on Bill. "You mar ried me for protection." Her golden brown eves sparkled with lauehter, her little white nose wrinkled adorablv. "What else?" Bill ran a casual hand through her red curls. "You didn't think I was in love with you?" Thev munched their tonst. In perfect blips. To Paul. Martin said serlonslv. "You should ruh to the license bureau with Su zanne Decker, that's what you should dn." Paul grinned. "Should I? Per- (Continued on page 2) Douglas Selectees Called to Service County's Initial Quota of Nine Men, All Volunteers, Leave Roseburg on January 22nd. The nine men composing Doug las county's selective service quota for the January call will leave Roseburg by train at 12:45 "a. m., Wednesday, Jan. 22, it was announced today at Salem. Trans portation schedules for all the 351 Oregon men ordered to re port to the army Induction sta tion at the armory in Portland, .beginning Jan. , 20, have been sent to the 55 local boards by Lieutenant Colonel Elmer V. Wooton, state selective service director. The Douglas county men will arrive in Portland at 8 a. m. Jan. 22, and, after physical examina tion .it the induction station, will probably be sent cither to Camp Murray, Wash., or Camp Clatsop, Oregon. The draftees are George Har old Long, Roseburg: Charles Ed ward Dean, Drain; Thomas How ard Hubbard, Riddle: John Charles Giovaninl, Yoncalla; George Benjamin Gruver, Myrtle Creek; David Thomas Higeln botham and Freeman Llovd Hic pinbotham. both of Oakland; Sherwood Harris, Roseburg, and Ted Wilbur Parsons, Glide. These men are all volunteers and. peculiarly, with but few ex ceptions are In the last 1.000 men in the order of call. Had they waited their regular turn thev would not have been summoned for training for several months, but elected to take their year's training ahead of schedule. The local hoard reports that it now has 20 such volunteers on the list and these will be called upon to make no nuotns before resort ing to conscriptions is made. Waae Disoute Threatens Airplane Engine Output FAR MTNGDAI .E. N. Y.. Jan. 10. (AP) John Owens, represen tative of the national defense commission, reported "little or no progress" lodav in efforts to avert a strike which would halt production on S7.750.000 worth of government airplane engine or ders. Owens told newsmen that a con ference at the Ranger plant of the Fairchild Engine and Air plane corporation had adjourned until later In the day because "so far, they have been unable to agree on any substantial wage basis." "Once they agree on that," he explained, "other matters can be cleared up easily." Sheep Stealing Charged To Four at Crescent City CRESCENT CITY, Calif., Jan. 1 0. ( AP ) Charged with stealing 120 sheep near here and selling them In Grants Pass, Ore., four men were under arrest today. Those accused were Lloyd Ed gerton, 30: Charles Hornbarger, 21. John Eller and Harvey Wat kins, both 17. Deputy Sheriff Frank Blackberry said that Ed gerton also admitted stealing cat tle. Sheriff Austin Huffman said the men admitted taking the sheep to Grants Pass for sale to a riding academy operator there. Gets Puerto Rico Governor Post II ! 1 1 1 MPWHW f - ( l 'MrtHftnr-iiniii' - JI ww ; ' 1 -Jm2- d Former Congressman Guy Swope, above, lately auditor of the Pennsylvania railroad, has been nominated by President Roosevelt as governor of Puer to Rico. He succeeds Admiral W. D. Leahy, who was trans ferred to the post of ambassa dor to France. Gardiner Youth Plans to Enlist as British Aviator Announcing his intention to enlist in Canada for service with the royal air force in Great Bri tain, Robert Milan Richmond, 24, of Gardiner, Oregon, secured his release from the selective service board ,1iere today and departed for Vancouver, British Columbia. ' Milan, a graduate of Oregon State college, where he received training in the ROTC, recently completed an enlistment in the U. S. navy, where he trained as an aviation mechanic and ob tained flying training. He has had 50 hours of solo flying. Discharged from the navy only last week, he registered here Monday, with the selective serv ice board. I SAW By Paul PAUL SIMPSON, Gnue ranch er, as he made an appearance at the "open house" the Farm Bu reau Cooperative Exchange stag ed last Wednesday. The wire net-1 ting "dodger which shows up so splendidly in the photograph above bears ample testimony to this. "Ever since we lived In Doug las county once before," Mrs. Simpson told me a year or so ago, "we have wanted to come back. I, particularly, liked the climate here so well. So, the first oppor tunity we got, we came back." You see, after leaving here that time, the Simpsons went to the Tule lake district. Just below the California line souin oi ruamain Falls, and took up the first home- j stead opened in that area by the: government. Mr. Simpson didn't tell me this, I ;: .-,1 ' RAF Stages Terrific Raid On Nazi Bases French Ports, Ruhr Valley Blasted; Greeks Capture Gateway to Valona : (By the Associated Press) Massed hundreds of RAF war planes thundered across the Eng lish channel at midday today challenging Hitler's fighter plane defenses along the nazi-held French coast and blasted the Ca lais and Boulogne areas with bombs and machine-gun fire in one of the greatest attacks in many weeks. Residents of a southcoast Eng lish town said "at least 50 bomb ers" engaged in the assault, which capped a six-hour overnight at tack on the German U-boat base at Brest, France, nazl "Invasion" bases, and targets In Germany's industrial Ruhr valley. It was indicated unofficially that 500 RAF fighter planes es corted the bomber In the daylight raids, spreading over 1,000 square miles of northwestern France. London aviation exports declar ed that the foray compared with mass Gorman daylight raids on Britain last September and Oo toher" hut that it was "more suc cessful." German airdromes, military In stallations and patrol vessels were among the objcclives hit. The RAF offensive came as Britain's empire armies slashed against Italian - east Africa' -and massed lor an assault on tno las clst stronghold of Tobruk, North Africa, and as Britain's little ally, Greece, rejoiced over still another triumph against Italy's batlored legions in Albania. Greeks Capture Klisura. Church bells pealed throughout the. ancient Aegean kingdom as (Continued on pnise fi) Jenkins K.uK-Hvlrw Hinlo Hint fcllKrnvinK but I mink he goi moderately (or more so) rich down there; so, when the time came when he could sell out profitably he did so, and returned to Douglas coun ty. He bought the Beckley ranch this side of Glide, and Improved It in many ways. First, he built a fine new house, which undoubtedly you have wen If you havo driven the river road to Glide within the past several years. Then he commenced clear ing a lot of stumps out of the al ready ample farm lands there and lately he has Irrigated a large portion of the ranch. In fact, this next summer he w have eighty-five acres under v,,.,Pr. The North Umpqua river fowg alongside the farm, and ,n, water is pumped Into ditches which lead over the rich bottom lands. This ground will be seed- ed to red clover. Twosomes in New Upper picture shows the youngest members of the 77th con gress, each 26 years old. They are Representative Hale Boggs, at left, a democrat from Louisiana, and William G. Stratton, a repub lican, of Illinois. Lower picture Is that of father and son sitting among the na tion's lawmakers. At the left Is Senator John H. Bankhead of Ala bama welcoming his son, Representative Walter W. ' Bankhead, who succeeded his uncle, the late House Speaker Wnv B. Bank-head. Birth Certificate Filings Increase Arrangements for filing of birth certificates principally by persons born In Oregon between the dales of 18!)0 and 1010 ,are rapidly increasing, according to County Clerk Roy Agee. Birth records were not authorized in Oregon until 1003, and from that date until 1010 were not kept with any degree of accuracy, Mr. Agee reports. Opportunity for employment in civil service, national defense Jobs and other types of employment, In which It Is necessary for the applicant to furnish a birth cer tificate, has resulted in a great demand for such filings. A recent Oregon law permits the recording of birth data where an affidavit Is obtainable from either parent, a near relative, or some person having direct knowl edge of the birth and its date, provided the affidavit can be sup ported by some person outside the family who also has knowl edge of the exact or approximate date of birth. This opportunity for recording a birth, however, is open only to persons born within the state of Oregon. During the past few months, Mr. Agee stales, his office has filed 105 such certificates, has 25 pending and has furnished ap plication blanks to many other persons who are attempting to secure the required affidavits. Legion Chief Criticizes Oregon State Guard Plan DAIXAS, Ore., Jan. 10. (AP) Alfred P. Hellcy, state Ameri can Ij'gion commander, voiced criticism hero this week of Gov ernor Sprague's decision to form a state guard only In ease ot an emergency. Kelley warned, "I have a high regard for the Integrity of our governor, but when it becomes ap parent to him that an emergency exists requiring a state guard, it will be Just too late." May Change Knox Law to Aid Fruit, Berry Raisers PORTLAND, Jan. 10. (AP) The state liquor control commis sion said yesterday it would con sider changes In the Knox law to aid Oregon fruit and berry grow ers and wineries. A discussion with wine manu facturers was planned for next week. Congress New Laws Asked By Assn. of Counties PORTLAND, Jan. 10. (AP) The Association of Oregon Coun ties opposed an Increase in lengths and load limits of freight trucks yesterduy. The association, acting through its executive committee, also fa vored a proposed state law mak ing state und county welfare commissions responsible for care of indigent persons with com municablo diseases. Oilier bills to be taken to the state legislature would: Grant to counties a lien on proceeds of fire Insurance poll cles in cases where delinquent taxes were charged against de stroyed buildings. Enumerate minimum audit standards and require a list of qualified auditors for county books. Correct asserted Inequalities in distribution of the counties' shares of state highway revenues. Reduce mileage fees of wit nesses and Jurors from 10 to 5 cents a mile In counties under 50,- (XXI population. Nazi Propagandist Given Two-Year Term in Prison NEW YORK, Jan. 10. (AP) A government prosecutor assert ed today that Isidore Lazarus, who was sentenced to prison for passport fraud, had carried large sums of money from Germany for such lop nazl leaders as Her mann Goering and deposited It in other countries where some "was believed to have been used to fin ance espionage work and propa ganda." Lazarus, 58 years old, had plead ed guilty to un indictment alleg ing he had made false statements In obtaining a passport and had used the passport so obtained. He was sentenced to two years In prison and fined $2,500 by Federal Judge Lelbell. Swollen-Tongue Deaths Traced to Poison Beets PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 10. (AP) Portland's three mysteri ous swollen-tongue deaths were traced definitely to botullnus poi soning In home-canned beets, Dr. Harry J. Sears announced today. The food bacteria claimed the lives of Miss Laura Gordon, 43, her sister, Mrs. Gladys Cook, 35, and Fred Thompson, 53, Lend-Lease PowerVested In President Repair Provision Could . Include British Craft; "Neutrality Act" Holds. WASHINGTON, Jan. 10. -r (AP) After President Roosevelt urged quick action on his vast lease-lend program, administra tion leaders asked congress to day to give him sweeping pow: era to transfer American-made military equipment to Great Britain and other warring "democracies." . . The president told his press conference just before the leg islation was introduced in both houses of congress that the pow ers which it gave him were need ed to avoid delay. The bill would permit the chief executive, '"when he deems it in the interest of national defense," to: 1. "Manufacture In arsen als, factories, and shipyards under their Jurisdiction, or otherwise procure, any de fense article for the govern ment of any country whose defense the president deems vital to the defense of the United States. 2. "S e 1 1, transfer, ex change, lease, lend, or oth- , erwise dispose of, to any such government any de- lon ammo 3. "Test, inspect, prove, repair, outfit, recondition, or .. otherwise, to place In good 1. working order any defense ... article for any such govern ment. 4. "Communicate to any such government any de fense information, pertaln- . Ing to any defense article furnished' to such govern ment under paragraph (2) - of this subsection. I 5. "Release for. export any defense article to any such government." "Repair" Proviso Board A statement Issued by congres sional leaders said that the bill's provision permitting the presi dent "to test, repair, outfit, or otherwise to place In good work ing order any defense article" meant that repairs could bo made to defense articles whether manufactured In the United States or not. "It could conceivably mean, for example," the statement gaid, "that the British battle cruiser Renown could be repaired in the Brooklyn navy yard If the presi dent considered It In the Interest of our national defense to do so. "The provision is broad en- (Contlnund on page ft) Cult Leader Must Pay Heart Balm McMINNVILLE, Jan. 10 (AP)' Alfred Smith, gray-bearded head of the "Household of God" suc cessively married his step-mother and three of the four Taylor sta ters. But it was the one he didn't marry who cost him $500 yester. day. A circuit court Jury held ha alienated the affections of Mrs. Maxine Hadley and ordered him to pay her husband, Russell Had ley, $500 damages. The Jury returned its verdict after Smith had spiced the day's testimony with his "talking in tongues" on the witness stand. The 52-year-old cultlst of tha small Falls City, Ore., lumbering community, confounded attorneys and the court reporter with his utterances. The reporter said sha took down Smith's talk phonetic ally but could make no meaning of the sounds. . An explanation demanded, rtmiin sum nu nuu nu lut-a wuui, he said. Three of the Taylor sisters, Thelmn, his present wife; Julia, his second wife, and Maxine sat beside Smith In court. Only Bernlce, the first of tha Taylor sisters to marry him, tes tified against Smith. She said Smith declared It the will of God and her duty to get Maxine away from Russell Hadley. Later she divorced Smith after losing faith t In his religious powers, she said( '