itiiiiiki rwsifeiiw, R&iiife, tJ&cti, EripaV. may 2, 1941. Dr. Jameson, Dean Of Women, O.S.C., To Retire in 1941 - CORVALLIS, May 2. (AP) Retirement of Dr. Kate S. Jame son, Oregon State college dean of women, at the end of the year pas announced yesterday by Dean F. A. Gllfillnn, chairman of the administrative- council. I. Age limitation rules of the state board of higher education forced the retirement, Dean Gilfillan said. The hoard probably will name a successor at its next meet ing, May 1.3. I Dr. Jameson will take sabbatl enl leave for a year beginning in July and will return to the college staff afterward for half-time Studies and possibly work on the modern languages teaching staff. She formerly was dean of women and professor of German at the University of Montana and later was dean of women and head of the German department at the University of Arizona. She has been on the Oregon State staff since 1923. . Dr. Jameson is credited with reorganizing the Associated Wo- Senior Class Play to be Given Tonight DOUGLAS MARKET Your food wants can always be taken care of here. Prices are constantly in line and quality is in keeping with any. HAMS Tender, tasty, with the old-fashioned fla- -. vor, lb 23C BACON Medium weight, ex tremely nice as to ft quality, lb. Ajl. A competitive Bacon of very good quality, a m lb lG HAMBURGER Our reaular price on a duality a mm product, lb MjC SAUSAGE Country style, lb SWISS STEAK Baby beef, lb BACON 8QUARES m To season, lb 1AC 10 LBS. PURE r m LARD 9 Phone us 350 238 N. Jackson 15c 23c I J. 11 B iit , . ! r v ';!... ! - , . i ' """ ' - .... j (NwB-livlew Photo and Kngrnvlng. "A Murder Has Been Arranged" is the title of the three-act mystery comedy to be presented at Roseburg senior high school tonight by members of the senior class. Members of the cast costumed for their respective roles are shown above in a scene from the play. They are, from left, Roger Olmscheid, Florence Hamilton, Don Hall, Mary Peterson, Barbara Garwood, Harold Russell, Alan Knudtson, Atha lle Taylor and Pat Quine. President Calls for Increased Defense Speed (Continued from page 1) FUNNY BUSINESS 3'3 CO. IWI 1Y HIA mviCI. IMC T. M MO U I aT, Qf ' Manslaughter Charge Hits Two Naval Fliers should be used where they are or moved to places where they could be operated, and that suf ficient men be found to operate them. Defense Output Upped American defense production Is increasing so swiftly that offi cials predicted today federal ex penditures would reach $2,()(X),- 000,000 a month In the fiscal year beginning next July 1. In comparison, the government spent approximately $i,;i0O,uoo,- 000 last months about $750,000, 000 for defense and $T)50,000,000 for other purposes. Under Secretary Morgenthnus theory that two-thirds of the government's overall spending during the defense emergency should be covered by tax revenue, the new figure would require doubling of the treasury's plan to add $3,500,000,000 of new taxes to the $9,223,000,000 revenue expected from existing levies. Ship Issue Raised An unexpectedly strong move developed in the senate today for curbing the proposed authority of the president to turn over seiz ed axis shipping to Great Brit- and It was Kaiser Wllhelm's dream of a Baghdad-Berlin rail road to tap the wells that helped precipitate the 1914-18 world war. The new British perl', briskly fiinned by nazl propaganda, arose from the landing of British troops in Iraq to protect the east flank of the Suez canal. For days Britons have been ex pecting a German move on Asia Minor, that three-way bridge link ing Europe, Africa and Asia. Iraq's rich oil fields and a road to Suez are the stakes. Turkey would be in the middle if the nazis started to move into Iraq by land. Seized Greek Islands however, might offer a by-pass, but at the same time isolating Turkey. Garrison at Tobruk Still Battles Besiegers (Continued from page 1) "Apart from having been olTcrcd work once, I have nicl wilh nothing but kindness." men Students to make theirs the strongest organization of the campus; with starting women's week end, and 18-year institution, and with introducing cooperative houses for women. TELLING THEIR AGES The approximate age of a horse can be told by his teeth; a tree by Its ring growths scon In cross section; and a salmon by the an nual growth rings on its scales. By request of our out-of-town customers w e are extend ing this sale through Monday, Fullerton's M1B BAY MINETTE. Ala.. Mav 2, CAP) Two naval fliers wnm tn. -aln. dieted for manslaughter today In I Projected as nn Integral part the death of an Alabama farm'0' legislation which would per woman beheaded March 25 hy ajmit tllc President to requisition plane that swooped low over a ianii Py for about 80 foreign flag turnip field near llohertsdale, I vessels lying idle in United States Ala. I ports, this provision was said to Sheriff W. R. Stuart said En-'have aroused a storm of protest signs Joseph C. Thompson, 23, of I within the senate commerce Healdsbuig, Calif., and Paul C. committee. Brown, 22, of Chicago, were nam- Some committee members as ed in true bills voted by the Bald- Iserted that the transfer of one win county grand jury in the 1 belligerent's ships to another bel death of Mrs. Robert Phillips ,'ligerent could only be regarded 35-year-old mother of four chil- as "an act of war." dren. Chairman Emory S. Land of the maritime commission dis agreed with this view, although Senators Clark (D., Mo.), John son (R Calif.) and others took the ctnnd tlint such n transfer and i wou(j be a warlike gesture. I Despite reported administra Wilbur WILBUR, May 2.-Mr. Mrs. T. E. Grae went to Winches ter Bay Wednesday lo look afi-iinn nrnseure in keen the nrovl- er business interests for a fewuinn in the hill Chairman Bailev days. (p N. C.) said he would not be Miss Jane Irving spent the surprised if a majority voted to week-end visiting her mother, restrict to American use the Ger- Mrs. Lois Irving, and other rela-imnn and Italian shins recently tives. She is employed in the; taken into "protective custody" Canby school. iby the coast guard. Some other Miss Veva Brldtre went to West committee members disagreed, Fork Friday to visit with her New U. S. Chamber Head Asks United Defense WASHINGTON, May 2. (AP) Albert W. Hawkes, 62-ycar old president of Congoleum-Nairn incorporated, Kearney, N. J., yes terday was elected president of the United States chamber of commerce. Shortly after his selection by the chambers board of directors, Hawkes made public a statement he had made to the board in which he asserted; "Representative democracy Is now charged with the task of demonstrating to the world that a free people, hy means of vol untary cooperation, can success fully defend themselves and their way of life against any people controlled by a dictatorship. "In the face of the present world challenge wo must obtain maximum results through com mon effort In our preparation for national defense which is the most important problem now be fore the American people." Other officers elected included Eric A. Johnson, Spokane, vice president, western division. l.ntontm- urith nnllm,'e n nnn i en 1 of the opposition strength. 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Iodine, 2 for I If 10c Mercurochrome, 2 for IIJ Broader Loan Policy to Aid Farmers Advocated (Continued from page 1) parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Bridge over the weekend. Mrs. Frank Parker went to Portland Thursday for a physi cal checkup and visit wilh her daughter, Mrs. Alan J. Wickhnm. Mrs. D. E. Moon spent Satur day shopping and visiting friends in Roseburg. Mr. and Mrs. George Goff and daughter, Joe, of Marsh field, were visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hart Sunday. Miss Virginia Smith went to Marshfleld Wednesday to visit relatives for a week. Mrs. W. E. Russell went to Cot tage Grove Sunday to visit her son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Russell. Domingo Saballa was brought home from Mercy hospital Satur day and Is convalescing at Ills home here. Rev. Jacobs a retired Presby terian minister has rented the radio indicated nn effort was in parsonage here and moved in full swing to align all Moslems in Saturday, wilh his wife and the near east with the Iraqis in daughter, Miss Ruth. They ejf-1 a "Jihad, or holy war. pect to make their home here permnnentlv. The Wilbur cents for cotton. Legislation demanded by the influential American Farm Bu reau Federation and Senator Bankhead (D.-Ala.) would require loan rates of at least 85 per cent of parity, or 10 per cent more than proposed by the department and embodied in legislation al ready passed by the house. Iraq Army Launches War On British Forces (Continued from page 1) Uniform U. S. Pay in Lieu Of Lost Taxes Favored PORTLAND, May 2. (API Eleven western states favor Sena tor McNary's bill for a uniform method of payments to states in which the federal government holds title to lands, Earl B. Day of Medford said last night. Day told district No. 6 of the Association of Counties that the 11 states contained large federal holdings. The bill provides federal pay ments annually of two per cent of the fair value of the lands. In this category would be forest re serves, national wild life refuges and Indian resrvatlons. Day said that because almost 50 per cent of Oregon is in federal lands the state loses large tax revenues. were said to be joining In a heavy attack on the British at Tobruk, seeking new openings in the fort's thirty-mile perimeter of defenses. Cut off from the nearest Brit ish troop columns by more than 80 miles, defenders of the host saw their outer fortifications military circles expressed confi military circles expresed confi dence that the garrison would 'continue to hold out until Gener al Wavell can muster strength to counter the axis drive into Egypt. Nazi quarters In Berlin said violent attacks by German dive bombers had silenced numerous British batteries around Tobruk. It was apparent that axis forces were making a supreme effort to wipe out the post, which threatens the German-Italian line of communications stretching more than 900 miles from Tripoli to just beyond the Egyptian fron tier. Across the Mediterranean, the Germans reported full occupation of the Grecian Peloponnesus with all British troops "eliminated" on the Greek mainland. The nazl high command, said nazl tanks sank a British trans portapparently one of the B. E. F. "escape" fleet and forced an other to surrender under heavy fire from the shore of the Gulf of Corinth. Claims Conflict Lleut.-Gen. Sir Thomas Blarney, deputy commander-in-chief of the British middle east armies, said removal of the B. E. F. contin gent had been completed with the rescue of 43,000 men. By contrast, military circles in Ber lin asserted that two-thirds of the B. E. F., or approximately 40,000 men, could be regarded as "lost." The German figure included cas ualties and prisoners. The Ger mans said 8,200 British were cap tured in southern Greece alone. Gen. Blarney reported that 3,000 B. E. F. troops had to be left behind on the beaches when they were cut off by advancing: Germans. Although the battle of Greece, has now become a closed chap ter, officers of the allied com mand said British and Greek troops who escaped from the Grecian mainland and landed on the Island of Crete would defend it against threatened axis inva sion. The island, lying only 60 miles off the southernmost tip of the Peloponnesus, is the new government seat of King Georga II. Notable Rescue Reported Larry Allen, Associated Press correspondent, reported from Al exandria, Egypt, that a squadron of British cruisers and destroy ers had landed 5,000 Australian troops from Greece there after beating off persistent nazi dive bombing attacks. " Another Associated Press cor respondent, Robert St. John, who arrived in Cairo with a machine gun bullet wound in his leg after a 25-day flight from Yugoslavia by way of Greece, called the res cue of '"something under 50,000 imperial troops from Greece" possibly "one of the greatest feats of the tsritisn navy. There was little activity in the western air war during the night. The Germans lashed at Mersey- side, in the Liverpool area, but the British said it was a light, brief raid. DANCE Evergreen Grange EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT H. C. STEARNS Funeral Director Phone 472 OAKLAND, ORE. Licensed Ltdy Assistant Any DlsUnce, Any Time Our tervlce li for ALL, end meet EVERY NEED SUMMONS No. 8712 In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Douglas County. Frank D. Pillatt, Plaintiff, vs. The Unknown Heirs of Fenix Rose, deceased; the Unknown Heirs of John Martin, deceas ed; and all other persons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or in terest in the real estate describ ed in the complaint herein, De fendants. To: The Unknown Heirs of Fenix Rose, deceased; the Un known Heirs of John Martin, de ceased; and all other persons or annual cemetery meeting was held Saturday eve ning at the home of D. P. McKay. It was voted to hold the old of ficers over another year. The of ficers are: President, D. P. Mc Kay; secretary and treasurer, Roy Agee; directors, Frank Park er, Ralph Sands and Mrs. Ver non La Raut. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hockins and Miss Aileen La Raut of Salem were weekend guests of the lat er's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ver non La Raut. Mrs. Lee Wlniford of Garden valley spent Monday afternoon visiting her daughter, Mrs. Ken neth Harneberg. Dale Turner, son of Duffy Turner, Is In Mercy hospital with a broken leg. Sarg. and Mrs. E. P. Vincent will be visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Balrd, Sr., during the coming week. W. L. Hash of Chemault Is a "uest nt the home of Mr. and Mrs. James Hunter this week. A play and flag drill will be presented by the grade school Friday, May 9. The hlch school play, "Never Darken My Door," directed by Miss Mary Rlstig, will be pre sented nt the high school audi torium Mav fl. Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Rockhlll were dinner guests of the Misses Mary Rlstig and Aileen IVil, Mon dav. Miss Norma Forrell Is employ ed at Ilrand s Barbecue. Graclano Saballa, accompanied hy Felix Urier of Burns, return ed Tuesday. April 2:1, from a trip to eastern Oregon. An archery meet and picnic sponsored by the Unipqua Arch erv c'uti. was held nt Wilbur high school Sunday. April 2S. Mr and Mrs. Kd Russell and daughter. Lolita, of Cottage Friday The Germans also reported dip lomatic activity in neighboring, parties unknown claiming any Iran, formerly known as Persia. I right, title, estate, lien or Inter- The German radio broadcast a report from Turkey asserting that Iraq's premier had called on the nation's fierce-fighting Moslems to "shoulder a rifle of struggle seems to be near." The premier was further quot ed as declaring; est In the real estate described in the complaint herein, Defen dants: In the name of the State of the hour Oregon: You are hereby requir-1 plaint filed against you in the above entitled court and cause within four (4) weeks from the The Iran nation will not sub-1 date of the first publication of mit to humiliations infileted by this summons, and if you fail so a foreign power. We are waging I '? "Ppear and answer said com n s icreri striiL'cIe " I Pla1"1- Ior want thereof, the a sacieil stiut.gie. plaintiff will anply to the court The Iraq radio station was said (or ,ne rcllt th'crln dpnlRnde(i, to be broadcasting martial verses a SUCclnct statement of which is from the Koran, the sacred bookas follows: of the Moslems. That each and all of you be Huge Investment at Stake. I forever barred and foreclosed The arrival of a second contin-lof any and all right, title, equitv, gent of British troops, apparently! L71V?LileLi,,Va!!ldn,tJ to guard Iraqs great Mosul oilln ,,,,, ,.,.. nreann. !t am, nvl. Ilinict wnc .. " ' fields against any axis thrust, was countered by the massing of Iraq troops around the British air drome at Habbaniyah, CO west of Baghdad. wit: All of Section 2G. Northeast ouarter (NED of Section 27. miles Northeast quarter (NE1 ) of Sec tion iNonnwest quarter Britain has Invested more thaniNVV and North half (Ni) of a billion dollars In developing the country and Its fabulous oil feilds, Stock and Bond Averages BONDS Compiled by Associated Press May 2. 30 15 15 GO Northeast Quarter (NEJ) of Sec tion 35, Township 27 South of Range 4 West of the Willamette Meridian, in Douglas County, Oregon, and that the plaintiff's title there to be forever quieted, and that plaintiff be decreed to be the owner thereof in fee simple, free from any and all claims of the above named defendants. This summons is served upon vou bv publication in the Rose burg News-Review, a newsoarjer of general circulation published Friday .. Prev. day Month ago . 59.3 Year ago 71.3 1!11 high ...63 9 1940 low 54.8 " i r-..... r ...... Ind'ls RR's Ufs Sfks ' ' XIWY Vi 65.6 104.5 101.3 549 16.6 30.8 17.5 18.6 17.7 15.4 43.5 39.2 33.7 39.0 35.5 30.8 BONDS 20 10 10 1 drove, visited relatives here over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Rockhlll s.ient Friday In Roseburg con 'ducting business. RR's Ind'ls ITs Fgn. .55.0 16.8 30.8 393 Prev. dav ... 65.1 104 4 101.2 Month ago . 65 8 104.3 101.4 Year ago 58.5 103.4 97.1 1941 high ....156.1 105.3 101.5 1941 low 60.2 104.2 99.0 able Carl E. Wlmberly, Judge of the above entitled court, dulv 42.3: made and entered on the 25th 49.8 1 dav of April, 1941, requiring 45.0 this summons to be published 39 1 1 once a week for four ( 4 ) succes sive weeks, and requirlne vou to I appear and answer plaintiff's I complaint within four 4 weeks 10 ifrom the date of the first publi- cation of this summons. I Dated and first published April 41 q iz, 11H1. HALLMARK & GEDDES. "ill Attorneys for Plaintiff. "Pffllolllci1 Address: Douglas Na-3-9 1 tlonal Bank Building, Roseburg 38.0' Oregon. 2U FREE DELIVERY PHONE 690 Specials for Saturday, May 3rd MORNING DELIGHT COFFEE .. 23c 3 lbs 67C S. AND W. COFFEE ,lb 27c 2 lbs 53 EGG NOODLES I -lb. Pkg. , 15c GRIFFIN'S SELF POLISH, HIGH LUSTRE Pint can vmrnn WAX 49c PEAS CORN 1L LSi STRING BEANS fk Cans 25c 3 cans . . . ,25c PLAYFAIR DOG FOOD. 25c BORENE Larqe . ae Giant 49 ( 27c j&Ji:Hli4.VmH:irc SPINACH, . 13c ASPARAGUS Long gron, 2 lbs. ... 15C NEW SPUDS nibs. 2SC RADISHES 3 bunchy IOC i i BEEF ROAST Choice, lb. 18C PORK ROAST Shoulder, lb. 25C BEEF BOIL it 15C BACON BACK u lie FISHING TACKLE AMMUNITION COMPLETE STOCK OF FROZEN FOODS