SIX ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, ROSSBURS, OREGON, MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1942. Japanese Repulsed in Drive Toward Singapore (Continued rrom page 1) liy at Melbourne. '.'Again this morning Monday Iho enemy attacked again, and again were defeated by our troops. Australians are holding their ground evorfwhere." The Muar river zone, about 90 miles northwest of Singapore, hnd developed as the softest spot tl litL' t'liiMll in tt'ilbl. Illll- IlllUUIi i itil uaii-';;vu iu iuii; tiiu 1:111111; ui- fense line by Infiltrations and ell rect assaults In that region, near the coast. Naval Base Area Damaged. It was disclosed, meanwhile, that Japanese A l raiders which struck a heavy blow at Singa pore yesterday had killed 56 per sons and Injured 135 mostly ci vilians. For the first time the British acknowledged the raiders had done damage In the naval base area, a communique reporting that fires had been started in a fuel oil depot. Several blazes still were raging when the com munique was Issued. At least two raiders were shot down, five others probably were destroyed and two more were damaged, the bulletin said. . The raid followed up a Satur day assault by 70 Japanese bomb ers which left 130 dead and 100 wounded. With battle lines pitched with in 90 miles of Singapore at one point on the west coast, additional manpower was called to arms. All European male Britons under 41 not already serving in inc ugni ing forces were ordered to regis ter Wednesday for military duty, FUNNY BUSINESS J Piano Pupils Dated for Recital Over KRNR . The Recital Hall program, broadcast each Tuesday from (station KHNIt by Douglas county music teachers, will feature to morrow piano selections by pupils of Mrs. Clyde II. Heard. Mrs. Beard will present June Lee Hughes, Marilyn Beard, Virginia Mills, Joanne Deets and Dorothy liusch, representing the begin- intermediate and advanced t'lmcuu. The pioL'iam will ' tf 'i from to p m,- l-l'S, the Hal fay a area, the allied of fensive was marking time in the El Agheila region, at the inner curve of the Gulf of Sirte, where German General Rommel's forces have been making a stand on the road to Tripoli. Nazis Claim Triumph Russia's great counter-drive on the eastern front showed no sign of let up, but the German high command made much of an ap parent setback in the Crimea, where Feodogjya, on the south east coast of the peninsula, was reported recaptured by a com bined German-Rumanian force. This "victory report" must have come as a surprise to the German people, for the Hitler command had never officially acknowledged losing Feodosiya. The communique said 4,(i0O Rus sians were taken prisoner at Feo dosiya. But the high command also found it necessary to report at the same time that the Russians had launched heavy attacks along the entire Donets river front. The communique said that the fight ing was still in progress but gave no indication of the trend. In air warfare, the Germans claimed to have damaged several merchant ships of a British con voy in the Gulf of Sjrte, follow ing up a claim of yesterday that a British destroyer had been sunk off Salum, and said that ports of Britain's southwest coast, a munitions ship off the Shetland islands and a merchant ship off Russia's Arctic port of Murmansk were bombed. PHONE 857-R Free Pickup and Delivery Service ' CHAPPELLE'S Shoe Repair 226 N. Jackson Quick Service "Every ''-' they cross the foul line it pops up mid bans 'em !" JAPS FACE WATER GAP IN DRIVE TOWARD -SINGAPORE (By the Associated Press) Soon, but no one' knew when nor where, the British imperials must make their final stand if the Japanese thrust for Singa pore is halted short of Johore strait. This is the water hazard which in the final analysis shields Singapore island with its invalu able naval Installations. Whoever is to hold Singapore may well' control the, course of the war in the, southwest I'acinc. The official silence of the Dutch on land action Indicated that the Japanese offensive from foot holds gained In the Netherlands East Indies was marking time, pending outcome of the battle for Singapore. , However, the Dutch did report Japanese air raids on the Borneo oil port of Bhllk Papan and on the island of ! Sabang, off the northern tin of Sumatra. A pre viously announced air attack on an airdrome in middle Sumatra um said, after final tabulation Jo have caused nine deaths and 41 other casualties. Third Tanker Sunk Off East Coast of America (Continued from page l signaled to It for help. Philippines War Slows As the navy searched from sky and sea for a trace of the east coast marauders, the Japanese in vaders In the Philippines were regrouping their heavily superior forces (or yet another smash at the battle-tried little band of troops that has kept the Stars and Stripes flying over the Bataan peninsula. For the moment General Doug las A. MacArthur had a respite. War department's communiques Sunday told of dlmlnshed enemy pressure, followed by repeated re connuissance thrusts designed to feel out the strength of the American lines. The war department said ground operations by Japanese troops against American and Filipino troops on liataan penin sula In the Philippines had be come of a desultory nature. General MacArthur reported that Japanese were seizing har vested crops and food stores and had dispossessed Filipinos of their means of transportation. A Dome! dispatch admitted the stubbornness of the American Filipino resistance, saying that strong barricades across Jungle paths and enfilading fire from hidden artillery had held the Jap anese advance to "but a few met ers per hour." Reuters in London heard a Tok yo broadcast today reporting a Japanese imperial headquarters claim that Japanese naval air craft yesterday scored direct hits on "four enemy ships totaling 5,500 tons" of the Philippine Is land of Cebu. Price Control Measure In Conference Deadlock (Continued from page 1) who chose to enter a 20-week training course. In such a course they would receive instruction calculated to fit them for work on aircraft, tanks, guns and other vital war equipment. ' Senator Brown said the pro posal, If adopted by congress, would go a long way toward tid-; Ing over workers in such Indus- trial centers as Detroit, where thousands face weeks of unem ployment while the auto plants are being converted to war. pro duction. New Defense Fund Asked President Roosevelt asked con gress today for $28,500,767,495 in supplemental appropriations and contract authorizations for the 1942 and 1943 fiscal years for the war and navy departments and two other defense activities. 1 For the inter-American high way he requested $7,000,000 and for the federal bureau of investi gation 15,950,000. Pair Remarries Because Fire Destroys Record Because all records of their marriage in California ten years ago were destroyed by fire, Lu ther Byron Woodruff and Ora D. Woodruff, residents of Roseburg, today obtained a marriage license and are being remarried in or der that official records may be available, County Clerk Roy Agee announced today. Mr. Agee said he was informed that the couple was In need of proof of marriage. . for business reasons, but had found that all records had been destroyed In oi court house fire In the California town where they originally were mar- rls Inflammable Material Explodes in Garage A handful of Inflammable ma terial which failed to Ignite promptly when tossed Into a stove at Blessings garage, exploded suddenly shortly before noon to day and sent up a great volume of oil smoke, resulting in a fire :ilarm. Hie blaze however, was confined to the stove and did no damage to the structure. The ma terial had smouldered unobserved and formed a gas which caused a minor explosion when It finally Ignited. Barking Dog Leads Man To Child's Body in Creek PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 19. (API "Babe," a dripping wet and shivering mongrel dog, raced into the house and barked Iran- ically. It was several minutes before Harvey Erb, unable to quiet him, followed "Babe outside and along the frozen Pennypack creek bank. A few hundred feet away, Erb found the body of his four-year- old daughter, Joanne, lying be neath the Ice. Marks on the Ice Indicated "Babe" had tried to save he child. VITAL STATISTICS BORN Forestry Receipts Give Douglas County $3,347 An allotment of $3,347 to Doug las county, representing 25 per cent of receipts from the Ump qua National forest for the fiscal year ending last June 30 was an nounced today at Washington, D. C.,' according to word received here from Representative Homer Angell of Portland. The forest service Is required to spend 10 per cent of receipts on improve ment of roads and trails, a sum of $74,534 for the state of Ore gon. In addition, 25 per cent of receipts must go to counties In which the forests are located, and this, It was stated, amounted to $183,830 for Oregon. Fourteen counties will participate in the distribution. U. S. Marines Forced to Toil for Japs, Report CHUNKING, Jan. 19 (API Chinese reports said today that United States marines captured by the Japanese at Peiping had been put to hard labor in an In ternment camp. All foreign and Chinese mem bers of the staff of the Rockefeller-endowed -Peiping Union Medi cal college were said to have been forced to continue their work un der Japanese control. These reports: said Dr. .1. Leigh Ion Stuart, president of Yenching university, and other American and British members of the facul ty had been confined in Peiping legation quarters. Most American and British resi dents were reported still at large but with their movements re stricted. Sacrifices Will Stun U. S., Mayor Riley Says PORTLAND. Jan. 19. t AP) The people of the United Slates "are going to give up so many things in the next few years that they will be stunned," Mayor Earl Riley said today on his return from a conference at Washing ton. "This is no easy war to win," lie continued. "We will be on the defensive for two years before we can go on the offensive. In that two years will be the time when we learn the meaning of the word 'sacrifice'." All capital expenditures of cities are definitely out for the duration, Riley said. Money sav ed will he spent on additional po lice, fire and health service. , Hitler Plots Shift in Principal War Target (Continued from page 1) strategic position of Malta, the little British island just south of Italy and Sicily, figures promin ently and recently stepped up aerial pounding of that island lias underscored the likelihood that an offensive there, perhaps in ihe style of the battle for Crete, stands high on the axis order of business. A high British officer, just re turned to London from Malta, said that the axis air attacks were "stoking up a little bit" but that the defenders were putting the hard-learned lessons of Crete to good use. Perhaps significantly, he would not say whether he regarded Malta s air defenses as adequate, but he asserted that they were strong enough to exact a high price for any attempt at landing in Malta. Malta, under air alarm more than 1,01X1 times in this war so far, has shown a capacity for ab sorbing tremendous, closely based aerial blows. The shore of Sicily is only do miles away. II Ouce Changes Generals The Italians announced today that despite adverse weather, the Gorman air fence yesterday con tinued attacks against "military objectives and airdromes of Mal ta.' It was noteworthy, perhaps, that the Italians claimed no Mal ta attacks hy their own planes. Ihe Italian high command in fact was getting another shake- up. The replacement of General Roatta as army chief of staff bv General Ambrosio, hitherto com mander of the eleventh army. was announced in Rome. This may be part of the after math of the British imperial re duction of German-Italian hold out forces at Halfaya pass, Bar dia and Salum along the Egyptian-Libyan border. The British announced their capture of the axis positions, along with about 14,000 German and Italian soldiers and consider able war materials, was accom plished with the loss of fewer than 100 killed and 400 wounded out of the combined forces of British Imperial troops, Free French and Polos. Some 300 miles to the west of Two Trainmen Killed in Collision at Metolius MADRAS, Ore., Jan. 19. (API -Two trainmen were killed and two others injured yesterday as a northbound Spokane. Portland & Seattle freight train crashed into the rear of another that had stopped fur water at Metolius. S. P. & S. officials said Fire man Adrian Wilson, Wishram. EDMUNDSON -To Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Edmundson, 109 West Mosher street, Koseliurg, at Mercy hnuttll.ll. b'l-iilnv .l:inn.-irv 1ft :1 son: weight six pounds eight -". ami uraKeman lony man- ii, m-ini, wi-iu iiut'u iiiiiilKlli. One engine was derailed and a fire destroyed two freight cars and inflicted burns on Engineer Egan Maimborg, Ridgefield. Wash., and Fireman George W. Walker, Vancouver, Wash. Trainmen said efforts failed to signal the second train to a halt. ounces. MARRIAGE LICENSES ICE HOGLAN - Uiwrence Ice, Camas Valley, and Hazel Hoglan, Broikway. HAMMOCK - CARDWELL Leslie Vernon Hammock and Hel en L. Cal dwell, both residents of Roseburg. Notice, Legion Regular meeting of Umpqua post, No. 16, American Le gion, will bo held Wednes day evening, Jan. 21, 8 p m. at I. O. O. F. hall. All drum corps members are asked to be present. BOWEL WORMS CAN'T HURT MEl j That's what YOU thlnkl I lrn thi tmtli ! N'ownilnyn It It esuy for you Uvorntn. Ami lht n imly crviiturt-a coin cuu , rent dUtif inside you, kUAum! puur tvn , (I'llCK-illi (t ftut let u roi.it. Um Jnyitf'a Vermlfuire In drtvf out romnt ! worm U-foiw they can "trt-t vt" tuiU makf trt'iiMt'. Jajnf'n In AmoiU-n'it K-t known f lrii letnr y worm nitituine : ul ly mil lions lor vver n century, j ! nrn yiMi nmioo ininvnn, m-ny now or i 'out. unwtsy pt on inch, lona of wvitiht nu-Mtvt i roundworm! and Kvi JaMie't Vrrmtfunc riitht away I It xpvts etuhborn worm, yt-t Hitu very tiontly. When no worm mo thif. I It work rnrrvly im n mild tfl.ttiv. IVmnml I J;nc'i Vermifuge! At nil itiutf itlort'tf. BUY liUeLf. FOR THE YEARS AHEAD BUY THE BIG NEW EASY fiTTT 1 DOES A WHOLE WEEK'S WASH WHILE OTHERS DO A TUBFUll Washes in one tub while It Spin dtiea up to 2b9 MGRC water out ol a second load. All told it will wash. linse. damp-diy 27 pounds of clothes in 59 minutes! SEE 1T1 Buying Cue fo '42 Plastic Agitator Fast and gentle, savinq on "wash wear," Spindlier Banishes broken but tons, nipped tingei. Thermostatic Control Tolls water lemperatute. While our supply Lists 119 95 a Oft's' Music Store NEW LOCATION Next to Douglas County B.irk National Thrift Week Bargains Buy Now-- Put Savings in Defense Stamps GRAND CLEARANCE LADIES' AND GIRLS' SWEATERS WHILE ALL WQfl THEY WOOL 7t LAST gnd LE GANT WARNER'S CORSELETTES, 9 AS All Sizes 937J I il. 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