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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (March 16, 1942)
i six ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURG, OREGON, MONDAY, MARCH 16, 1942. Health Nurse Goes To Coast Area to Conduct Clinics Mrs. Mary A. Barrel t, Douglas county health nurse, left today for coast points to remain Thurs day on business. Tuesday she will conduct an immunization clinic at Gardiner. Dr. Ruth Jens, of the U. S. Indian service at De lake, Oregon, will give the im munizations and will spend sev eral days in the Gardiner com munity checking cases for the Douglas county health associa tion. Dr. E. J. Wainscott and Mrs. Hazel U. Lytle will conduct a clin ic at Green and Dillard schools Tuesduy morning. Adults are urg ed to take advantage of the clin ic. Small pox and tuberculin im munizations will be given. Child ren from six months up to school age arc eligible also to this ser vice provided by the health as sociation. A small fee is charged those desiring to pay for the ser vices to cover costs of the immu nizations. The health association would appreciate the cooperation of the public in attending and taking advantage of these clinics. Anyone desiring to take typhoid Immunization shots can do so by going to the courthouse any Thursday. This morning 10 children; five from Roseburg; one from Green; one from Oakland and three from Canyonvllle, took the bus for Portland, where they will under go tnnsilcctomles at Doernbecher hospital Tuesday and will return to their homes here Wednestlay. CLIP THIS ... STUD Y IT ... AND SAVE TIME -.APPLICATION FOR WAR RATION BOOK (To U wua in tr Rii.tm 01,) rMPOHf ANT.-'-A Mptrar application rauit 1 mailt by (or. wb?rt ths Regulation permit, 00 behalf uf) errry ptrtoa 10 vhom a War Ulioo Book iat to to Uanad. Th pr application (ut rautt and tvary bhoUt of fr'tnU Unit (m luiiroctMuia to hcUuar) muir bo modi by on, and only on, adult wmoIim of aucb Faauly Unit. Loral Board No. County . Application made at . Data.. 194.... Hook One No. , I. NAME, ADDRKSS, AND DESCHIPTION of per too to whom tUa book ia to La KTHaXT hO, OH K 0. hOX HO. " 1 IiVf " 111 Mn7i" ui" nVu'c iita.tr oh a. f. u city uh town .... jra. Se"1-. t. (u) Jf ilw pcraon named altova IS a memker of a l-'aiiiilj- Uult, auie the followinf : (1) Number of wranna in Family Uult, Inrludinf tbcperaoa named abore (2) The (Mtraou named abura la mr . ' ' . ............ LUr. FA1 Ill'B, MOTIII.R. BUt HAND, WIFE. HON. DAUUUTXR, UClniOK (3) Total amount of while and brown aufar In any form which I owned by lite Family Unit or lia nierabere: r.,.,. ....,.. lba. (fc) If tbti peraon named alrfiv IS SOT a member of a Faintly Unit, in 10 the total amount of Hbiio and browu sugar iuauy turm which ta owned by the peraon named abovet ...,.-...Mw. lba. S. Number of War Hatlon Stamp to be removed froui War Ration book One (upon the hi of luformation atated ahore)i . OPA Form No. H-.101 I hereby nuk application to the Office of Prier AdmltaiatratioB, an agency of the United State tiorernment, for the faauance to the peraoo wboee name, addroae, and description are act forth above, of War Hal ion Uook Uua and all War Ration Booka hereafter iMued for which the peraon named above become eligible under stationing IteruUtimia. 1 hereby certify that 1 have authority to make thia application on brlulf of the peraon named above, that no other apidication for War Ration Book haa been made br or on behalf of aucb peraon, and that the statement made above are true to lite beat of my knowledge and belief. Section 35 (A) of lite United State OiminoJ Code make it a criminal ulienae, punithaU by a maximum of fen yean impriton men. $10,000 fin, or both, to make a fule elalemrni or repre erntation to any )eortment or Agency of the United Stale to any matter within the jurii diction of any Department or Agency of the United Slate. F. D. R. Tells Railroad President to Arbitrate . (Continued from page 1) fllONATCHfc OW AtVUCAMT I hereby certify that 1 have witneaard the Applicant aiKiialure and that War itatipa Book Our., bearing the above number, haa been dliv. ored, u the Applicant with lba above -l a led suuibrr of etatupa ramorcd. iUV.VATUHfc Of ItKUlBTttAU (Thia parc reterved for later enirie by Locul Hoard or Applicant) The underpinned herrby eerlinVa to the Officii of Price Adminlilration that- he received lite folLiwiiiK War Ration Hooka on the dutea iixtioatrd below or on the back hereof, and l tint with each receipt he reaffirm the trurtt of the eiaicinenl 'in the foregoing application. ItiU Book So. Serial No. t Signature of Applicant ir NOSH WklTJC NUNJt TV V. . cevraNMtNT mimtim erne (Continue on revene aide.) This Is the form you will be asked to fill out In order to obtain wartime ration books, it In order to save time and confusion when date for application is announced. The News-Review suggests you clip and study Share of Oregon's Income Taxes For Schools Sought Aixrralian Port of Darwin Again Bombed " '"'nnrlriuea rrom paije 1) An Initiative measure which would earmark nil Oregon In come tax receipts In excess of $7, 500,000 annually for (he common school fund by amending the state constitution, will be placed on the ballot at the November election under the sponsorship of the Oregon State Teachers' asso ciation, K. F. Carleton, executive secretary, announced Saturday. Carleton pointed out that the state's operating expenses, for merly supported by property taxes, approximate $7,500,000 dur ing a year, but he predicted that an "appreciable excess" will be received from Income tax collec tions for the next scycrul years tinder the present terms of the Income tax law. Proponents of the teacher sponsored bill estimated unoffi cially that 1941, income tax re turns would approximate $8,G00, 999, more than $1,000,00 Oin ex cess of what the state needs for Its own uses. . Only uses of the Income tax revenues now permitted by law are to pay the expenses of state government and to reduce state taxes on property. It was pointed out that all state levies against property, including tile 2-mill ele mentary school fund tax, have been made unnecessary by the In come tax revenues. No provision Is made in the law at present for disbursing the excess funds. Attendance Basis Set The teacher measure would have the surplus distributed to all public school districts on the ba sis of average dally attendance. The proposed constitutional amendment also would change the method of distribution of the common school fund. At present It Is distributed In proportion to the number of children between 4 and 20 years of age residing within the districts. Sewage Disposal Plant Here Built None Too Soon The fact that Roseburg has a sewage disposal plant In full and faultless operation was a source of great satisfaction today to Mayor A. J. Young In view of or ders by the state sanitary com mission to five Willamette valley cities that disposal plants must be provided immediately to halt pollution of the Willamette river. "Itosclnirg squeezed under the wire Just In time," Mayor Young declared today, referring to the Koselnirg plant, which was put Into operation last year. The demand for the purging of sewage from the Willamette river was made by the U. S. army which holds the river to be a pos sible danger in connection Willi the construction of the canton ment In the Corvallis area. "Although this order applies only to the Willamette river, It will only be a matter of time un til disposal plants will be re quired in all parts of the stale." the mavor said, "and I for one am well pleased by the fact that Roseburg already has met this situation." mink 00,000 tons of Japanese "hlnnlrg ! In a '15,000-mile foray hrntmrl Indonesian, Philippine ml Malayan waters. The nationality of the subma rine which docked solely at Perth after surviving several attacks' with deDth charges and aerial bombs during its 60-day voyage, was not disclosed. , Reports were published here, however, that the United States was launching an offensive against Japanese overseas com munications with a vast fleet of submarines forming the spear head of the attack. No authority was given for the reports. Australia Braces for Foe. Newspapers, meanwhile, warn ed that the battle for Australia was moving rapidly toward a cli max and cited reports that the Japanese : were strengthening thiMr forces for an Australian In vasion. ' ' i ' ' Observers said allied bombers were helping the Australian air force step up its assaults upon potential Invasion bases, but they suggested the need for getting further reinforcements quickly was the chief motive behind the address which Prime Minister Curtln broadcast to the people of the United States Saturday, when he asserted the fall of Australia would open the way foi uii attack uion the American west coast. The official announcement of the raid on the Japanese air drome at Dili, about 450 miles northwest of Port Dai win, indi cated that extensive damage had been done. gaining by Japan for renewal of rights to fish In Russian terri torial waters. A Tokyo govern ment spokesman told a press con ference today that there still was no accord. , British imperial forces in Bur ma, stiffening their resistance af ter a long retreat, were unoffi cially reported today to have re- crossed to the east bank of the Sittang river in a countc-roffen sive and captured Shwcgyin, 80 miles north of Rangoon. Hitler Sets Russia's Defeat for "Summer" (Continued from page 1) Vacationinq Attorney and Mi's. Daniel P. Keohnne have left for Lou Angelas and other south ern California points to enjoy a vacation. RUSSIANS REPORTED READY TO MEET JAP ATTACK Reports current in Australia of Japanese troop movements from China in an ominous gathering of offensive power, which Austra lians assumed was pointed at them, were partially offset today by talk of air and sea counter offensives against Japan. An air offensive on Japan's tightly developed home Islands would seem to depend on a suc cessful defense of the northern Burma gateway to India and south China. United nations strategy also was Increasingly concerned with the future relations of Japan and Russia. Some reports said that the U. S. S. R.'s Siberian forces and naval bases were ready for in stant action against any Japanese attack. Chungking sources, seeing a Kurusu-llkc design In Japan's dip lomacy toward Moscow, indicated that the Japanese attack might he Imminent. The London Dally Mail said that Russia had increas ed her Siberian army to 3.000.000 front line troops, besides Immense reserves In training. A dispatch from Stockholm to the London Dally Mall said th Soviets had "Issued battle orders which can be put Into instant op eration at Vladivostok, across the sea of Japan from the Japan ese coast, and Nikolaevsk, about 1.200 miles up the Russian coast, at tile mouth of the Amur river opposite the northern Russian owned half of Sakhalin island. Jap Force Stir Derision. The Dally Mail quoted tin Swedish press as reporting that the Japanese army in Manclni kuo had been Increased to more than 1.000.000 men and said that soviet authorities In the Swedish capital "laugh at even a million Japanese constituting a serious menace to the Independent far eastern soviet army which Is nor mally a million and a half men." A pivotal factor In Japanese Russian relations Is the long bar- winter he described as the worst in 140 years. Roosevelt Rapped Hitler's reiterated assertions that "Jewish and capitalist con spirators" had caused the war and laid much of the blame u,jon President Roosevelt. "In what kind of a world the American president wishes to live is a mutter of complete In difference to us Germans," ho said. "But his aims to organize Germany or even the European world In accordance with his own needs . . . and to build a detest able new alien world will not only fall but bring about the collapse of his own world." Hitler referred disparagingly to the Rlom trials of French leaders charged with responsibility for France's fall. "The characteristics of this trial," he said, "Is that not a single word of guilt of those re sponsible for the war is men tioned and nothing but Inferior preparation for war is talked about. We see in this a mentality Incomprehensible to us, but which, perhaps, is better than anything else In revealing the causes of the new war." RECOGNITION OF HITLER DOWNFALL SEEN IN TALK WASHINGTON, Mar. 1G (AP) The new importance of Adolph Hitler's speeches, acting Secre tary of State Sumner Welles told a press conference today, lies In the fact that "there is lmollcit evidence in every word and every phrase of Hitler s own (cognition of his impending downfall." Welles added (bat it was onlv natural that Hitler In his latest speech should have referred to the kind of world In which Presi dent Roosevelt and the American people wish to live in as a "new, detestable, alien world." The kind of world for which tho American people and their gov ernment stand, Welles asserted, is a world of International decen cy, a world In which men and wo men have freedom of worship, freedom of thought and speech, and freedom from fear. Welles gave out the full text of his reply to a press conference inquiry, so that it could be quoted directly. Two Army Planes, With 16 Men Aboard, Crash (Continued :rom page 1) discovered by a ship from the Boise airbase. BOISE, Idaho, Mar. 16. (AP) Wreckage of an army bomber from another base has been sighted in sagebrush three miles south of Gowen field, Public Re lations Officer R. S. Gihbs said today. There were two officers and four enlisted men aboard the ship but their fate is unknown until Gowen field crews can re port from the crash scene, he added. Their names were not re leased Immediately. Gibbs was unable to give the home base of the bomber, but said it was on a routine training trip. "The ship circled over the field about 2:15 a. m. and signaled for a landing," he said. "It was giv en clearance to land but was not heard from again." A ground search was organiz ed. The bomber was sighted from the air. Soldiers went to stand guard. There was no indication as to the extent of damage to the bomber. Shows His True Colors CINCINNATI No more side remarks, please, about the nazl ancestry of Mrs. Joey Hardin's pet dachshund, "Hansi." "Ilansi" Is wealing a blanket. Embroidered thereon are the words "I am an American." AMERICA'S Him mmmc TABLE BEER SEATTLE BREWING & MALTING CO. Since 1878 Emil Sick, Pre. Reelection to Port of Umpqua Board Sought Norman Weatherly, resident of Elkton, today filed his declara tion of candidacy for Port of Umpqua commissioner with County Clerk Roy Agee. Mr. Weatherly has been a member of the port commission for several years and is seeking reelection. He will be a candidate on the re publican ballot at the primary election, May 15. would Ignore their security rights and reduce wages. The company has said the contract would boost wages an average of 26.7 per cent. Law and Order Demanded. After the rioting, McNear urg ed the labor board to take steps to see that law and order were enforced or to arrange for the government to assume control of the railroad. The board had sent a "final ap peal" to the road president on March 13 asking him to submit the controversy to arbitration. McNear said at Peoria, 111, that he received the president's letter this morning, but added: "In view of the fact that the white house did not disclose that the letter was sent until it had reached me, I feel that the presi dent is entitled to the same cour tesy and I will not make public my answer, here until It has been received by the president. British Fleet Blasts Axis Island of Rhodes (Continued from page 1) .ward the Caucasus through Tur key. In such event, Rhodes might readily serve as a forward base for flanking assault on Turkey's Mediterranean shore. Nazis Admit Line Pierced. The most astonishing of the lat est reports from the war In Rus sia was Berlin's bald admission that the red army had breached the German line on the central front during a heavy snowstorm and that "heavy defensive fight ing developed there." That appeared In a special an nouncement of the Hitler com mand while the regular commu nique admitted that the Russians had renewed mass attacks against German forces on the Kerch pen insula of Crimea. From the Russian side came re ports that liberation of the great Industrial center of Kharkov, on the southern front but north o the Crimea, was Imminent. The German high command de clared that the central front at lackers were favored by a blind- f ing snowstorm in achieving their "local breach ... In closely wood ed country." The assault started Saturday, It was said, and "after 15 hours of hard fighting the, breach was closed again in a counter attack. The Soviets suffer ed heavy and bloody losses." UNEASY STOMACH? You may have If a horrible to think shout, btit you hni) better face the fuel. Anybody, unywhori', can Inive rounilwormo t If yon have kwiih Huch as uneasy itumuch, Itchintf noite uiul Mtut, iiervouHiieHtt, hnitky ui'ltctiUt, tbete VckIh may be living inside you note Play unfel Get Jynei Vermifuge rltfht away I Jayne'i U America" lead inn proprie tary worm medicine. Scientifically tented. Used by millions for over s century. It expels large worms, yet acts very gently. If no worms are there, it works merely nit u mild laxative. J Jem and J syne vermuuire. FLOYD K. DOVER in 1935 Helped fo Make Townsend Plan History i V1'" .,'3;witww i Two Flue Fires Call Out Local Department The Roseburg fire department was called twice early Sunday af ternoon to control flue fires. The two alarms were received only 15 minutes apart. The first was at 5G0 N. Pine street arid the second at 1321 Madrono Ave., Laurelwood. No damage was done at either residence. I floyd k. mm Democratic Candidate for 4th Dish CONGRESS Mr. Dover standing (right) in picture and Mrs. Dover seated (right) left Grants Pass, Oregon, September 27, 1935, with their car and house trailer and led an Oregon caravan of Townsend delegates to the national : convention in Chicago October 24 to 27, 1935. Mr. Dover formed 39 CLUBS in 15 states while on this trip and did not receive one cent for his work. Now, in 1942 " ..- . :. : . 1 ; . ; '? , :. i :;.' i May 15 for FLOYD K. DOVER This information by L. P. MATHES, Central Point. Ore. Paid adv. 0 00 THE PROFESSOR WHO SENT HIS WIFE DOWN TO THE BANK AND KISSED HIS MONEY GOODBYE WAS NT SO ABSENT MINDED AFTER ALL V V f. iilTOrfStsEJ ONE 1 linn rnmm r n r tr t m. awnm V ifi'vts y iT" vX trr -NtSI Your tms3$ i o.c motor CJter i s.y AND HAVE YOU HEARD... 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