ROSEBURS NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURG, OREGON, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1942. tHREE By LOTUS KNIGHT PORTER P. N. G. CLUB HAS ENJOYABLE MEETING THURSDAY EVENING The Past Noble Grands club en joyed a very delightful social meeting Thursday evening at the 1. C). O. F. hall, at which time Mrs. Mayme Dimmiek was welcomed into the club as a new member. There were 24 members present for the occasion. A delightful Hallowe'en game was enjoyed, after which Mrs. Klsie Russell, Mrs. Ethel Wilson, Mrs. Emma Lenox and Mrs. El vira Carmichael, hostesses for the evening, served delicious refresh ments at a long table in the din ing hall. Colorful autumn leaves, bright orange fall flowers and matching lighted tapers, decora ted the table. PAST MATRONS CLUB TO MEET ON MONDAY Mrs. R. L. Whipple and Mrs. V. J. Micelll will entertain the Past Matrons club of Roseburg chapter of Eastern Star Monday evening at a seven-thirty o'clock dessert-supper at the home of the iormer on East Douglas street. All Members are cordially invit ed to be present. JUNIOR WOMAN'S CLUB TO MEET ON MONDAY The Junior Woman's club will meet Monday evening at 8 o' clock at" the clubhouse with Mrs. J. E. Henbest, president, in charge, and Miss Betty Strong as chairman. Initiation of new members will be held. All mem bers are urged to be present. Admiral Gives Recipe For Anti-Jap Labor SAN DIEGO, Calif., Oct. 31 (API Rear Admiral Francis W. Rockwell left with shipyard workers at the San Diego Marine Construction Co. his recipe for rivet driving and nail pounding. Rockwell, one of the men who left Corrigidor In motor torpedo boats with Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur spoke at the launching of a minesweeper yesterday. "See the face of a Jap on every rivet and nail you pound." he ad vised recalling Japanese atro cities in the Pacific warfare. Sprague Asks Education Week's Observance SALEM, Ore.. Oct. 31 ( AP) Governor Sprague yesterday urg ed Oregon residents to observe Oregon American education week November 814 by "learning more about their schools, what their program is, and what their needs are." The governor added that "a strong public school system is es sential for a successful democra tic government. We must main tain and perfect the free educa tional system of our state and na tion." DANCE CORRECTION THIS is the LAST one HALLOWE'EN DANCE South Deer Creek Grange Hall 3 miles south Dixonville . Free Refreshments Saturday, Oct 3 1st Gents 40c Ladies 10o Fisk logging and Truck Tires If you are buying truck tires come in and inspect our complete line of PRE-WAR RUBBER TIRES Jarvis Robertson's Associated Station Stephens and Brockway Together and Terrific 4 . u.-,t jj.j? ?js l Is .iff . if Clark Gable and Lana Turner are again co-starred in the action romance, "Somewhere I'll Find You," which opens Sunday at Hunt's Indian theatre. TAKE YOUR CHOICE This- V. S. Treat ury Dept. ORTHIS I Bringing Home the Bacon ffil if H Roast wild pig Is not on the d.-.ily diet of the U. S. Marines on Guadalcanal Island in (act it probably is not on their diet ot all now that the men are lighting desperately ugainst invading Japs. But before latest Jap push Pvt. M. G. Wiggins bagged this beauty. I A 1 ' s Courtesy Columbus (Ohio) Citizen. Civilian Defense Warned Of New Type Axis Bombs SALEM, Ore., Oct. 30. ( AP) Stale Civilian Defense Coordina- tor Owen warned all county de i fense councils today of four new ! tvne incendiary bombs now be- j ing used by Ihe axis. j I The new types are: A. Japanese 110-pound bomb, I conntining rubber pellets impreg- nated with'phofphorus, designed to ignite on exposure to air. This bomb may be exlinguised by aj jet of water. A German five-pound bomb, which contains both explosive j and incendiary charges. The j bomb, which burns immediately i on impact, mamy explode in one! to seven minules. This bomb is' best fought by using a jet of wa-1 ter, but fire fighters were advis-: I ed to keep low to avoid the explo-' sive effect. I A 100-pound bomb containing 00 thermit containers and six magnesium conlainers. A 12 pound charge of TNT in the nose of Ihe bomb explodes on impact. A bomb containing both phos phorus and oil. and a small burst- ing charge to scatter the Inflam - mables. The fires will go out! when thoroughly soaked, but will i re ignite when the water dries off. I Local News Move To Apartment City Rec order A. J. Geddes and Mrs. Ged des have moved from their home on North Jackson street to the Kohlhagen apartments. Episcopal Guild To Meet St. George's Episcopal guild will meet at two-thirty o'clock Monday at the parish hall. Mrs. H. H. Tur ner, president, will be in charge. Circle To Entertain Past Guardian Neighbors of Lilac cir cle, No. 49, Neighbors of Wood craft, will be special guests at the 7:30 o'clock meeting next Monduy night at the I. O. O. F. hall. Visiting At Marsters Monies Mrs. Belle Smith, of Bandoil, has arrived here to spend a few days visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Marsters on South j Kane street. Move To East Douglas At torney and Mrs. Paul Geddes and small daughter, Judith Gayle, and Mrs. Geddes' sister. Miss Vivienne Miller, have moved from Laurel wood to the corner of East Doug las and Claire streets. Auxiliary Meeting Dated The Junior Legion auxiliary will meet ! Mondav at 7:30 d. m. at the homo of the president, Ruth Ann Ruhl. All members and others eligible for membership are urged to attend. Sentence Suspended A ' su- Upended sentence of 30 days in the county Jail was imposed In Justice court today upon Dewey winKci-; man. 23, of Powers, a seaman who j I allegedly celebrated too freely a Uriel lunougn irom ine navy. Move To Laurelwood Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Moore and two sons, i Henry anil urnin, nave moveu ! from I he T. D. Barry residence on East Washington street to the Dr. H. C. Church residence in Laurelwood. Mr. Moore is train master for the Southern Pacific company. ' IdYie Leaves For Home Mrs. MdVie Flint McCall left this morning for her home in Salem, following a visit here at the home of Mrs. Douglas Waite. She was accom - panied home by her niece, Mrs. Lottie Quarters, of Los Angeles who has also been a guest of Mrs. Waite and by the Misses Curry, of this city. Visiting at Brockway Mrs. Frank Mills of Sjxikane and Mrs. Harold Coon of Seattle, daugh ters of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel E. Reagles of Brockway, are visiting this week with their parents. An other daughter, Mrs. Lloyd Veitch, has returned to her home in Rockford, III., following an ex tended visit with her parents and other relatives. Will Return Here This Even-! Leibl. a native Chicagoan, said ' ing Louis Kohlhagen, Sr., is ex-: his father, Joseph Carl Leibl, had peeled to return to his home on lived in South Bend, Ind., from Military street tonight, following , 193ti to 1030, when he accepted a a trip to Sherwood, Ore., Thurs- i position In Stuttgart as a transla day to see his new grandson, : lor with the German labor parly. George Frederick Zimmer, baby i Leibl was one of the Americans nn f Mi- K'ohlh.ieen'a son-in-law ! returned last summer on the l and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. How-; diplomatic exchange ship Droit n i ai d Zimmer. He was accompanied ingholm. His parents and a bro- home bV his (laughter, MISS Bertha Kohlhagen, slate suiter- visor of home economies, and Mrs. Josephine McElhinny Fredrick- son, both of Salem, who will spend the week end visiting here. Holman Asks Civil Air Patrol for West Coast PORTLAND. Oct. 31 IAP1- Kenator Holman believes a civil air patrol should be started im mediately on the Pacific coast. Pointing out that Oregon ter- j ritory has been subjected to i enemy shelling and bombing and j that at least two ships have been j torpedoed olf the coast, he sug I gesled the patrol's establishment i in a letler to Lieut. Gen. H. H. I Arnold, army air force command- ,Hc praised such patrols now in operation along the eastern sea- hoard and the gulf coast as 'help - iui 10 uie iniiiuii y iiiiu-s mimi i-i-fective in Ihe defense of military and civilian interests." The estimated number of daily workers and visitor at Rocke feller Center in New York Is 151,0(10. or more than the popula tion of all but 5t cities in the United Slates. CARD OF TANKS Wr are sincerely grateful to friends and neighbors for their many kind acts of sympathy dur ing our sad bereavement. Our appreciation cannot be adequate ly expressed. R. C. Gilo and family. j NOTICE 1 KOIN Monday, 5:15 p. m. Basic school bill. 'Adv.) l DAILY DEVOTIONS DR. CHAS. A. EDWARDS In that great classic war epic. Homer's Iliad, the victory of Greece over Troy Is post poned for eighteen books out of twenty-two, because two army generals of the Greeks quarreled over the very same issue that brought the war be tween the two countries. Isn't this an example of our human inconsistencies? How easy sometimes, to see truth In the ideal and miss it In the real. Many a Sir Launfal travels afar In search for the Holy Grail, only to find that he passed it by over his own threshold. It was Hogarth, the artist, who pictured a man in stocks for n private debt, working on paper a scheme to pay the national debt. It is not growth when we lack power to control power. Yours Is a great mission. Nothing short of a universal standard of con duct; of the recovery of sacred human rights; of regard for persons as persons, and not for sex. color, or caste, and of the protection and preservation of life has taken you from the re straining influences of home and loved ones. God give us all integrity that we shall not practice any means that will cancel such noble ends. By His supreme sacrifice our Saviour showed that there were values greater than mere existence. Most people die of something. He died for something and all who have His spirit share n dedication for the kind of n world He believed in. Amen. Tells How Nazi Swam Rio Grande To Escape FBI CHICAGO, Oct. 30 (API A private in the U. S. marine corps testified yesterday that Herbert Hans Haupt, one of six nazi salxv teurs executed last August, had boasted that he escaped FBI agents by swimming the Rio Grande river under fire. Wearing a marine corps unl - form, William Lelhl, related nt the treason trial of six Chicagoans that he had met Haunt in Stult- j cart. Germanv. 'Mav 1. 1012. He '; added Haupt made a "purely ' social" visit at the Lei hi home, , where he boastfully averred that 1 he had been forced to flee the I United Slates because the FBT ' was trailing him for spreading 1 German propaganda. Leibl said Haupt told of swim- jming the Rio Grande with two i companions, one of whom was 'shot. Haupt told the Leibl family jthat he was given money' by the German consul in Mexico City ithis was In Junij, 104 1 and sailed for Yokohama, Japan, by way of San Francisco. In Japan, he re-j celved more money from the Ger man consul and sailed to Ger many on a blockade runner. The entire trip took 1K0 days and he I arrived in Germany just before Christmas. ! urn leinauuu mun jr. mi.. i .-. j testimony concerned Haupt's trip ! from his Chicago home to Ger- many, where he was trained lor sabotage" duties. Snell Broadcast Set For Monday Local headquarters of Ihe Snell-1 for-Governor club announced to day lhat a SX'cial five-minute transcription broadcast by Earl j Snell, republican candidate fori governor, will be released over Station, KRNR at 6:15 p. m ' Monday. Nov. 2. This broadcast has been ar ranged by the various Snell for Governor clubs of Douglas coun ty. Paul Geddes, local attorney, is chairman of the local organlza- j ,ion an(1 Mrs Roy yolln(, is scry, n as SCCI.,,,a,T. otnPI. dubs have been organized in each pre- einct of the county, with the re spective republican precinct com- mitteeman acting as chairman and the committeewoman as sec- retary. An extensive personal : campaign has been conducted by 'each of these groups In an effort j to give Snell an overwhelming vote In Douglas county, j These clubs, Attorney Geddes j states, are urging all voters to . listen to the sccial broadcast Monday evening. Enlists In Navy -The navy re cruiting station at Portland today announced the enlistment of Clyde Van Atta of Roseburg. POWELL'S FOR FISHING TACKLE 245 N. Jacknon St.. Roacburq Nazi Persecution Of Jews Cited At -Protest Meeting LONDON, Oct. 30--(AP) Prime Minister Churchill yester day declared In a statement that "when this world's struggle ends with the enthronement of human rights racial persecution will be ended." The prime minister's statement was read by the Archbishop of Canterbury before a meeting con voked as a demonstration of pre test against nazi treatmimt of Jews. "The systematic cruelties to which the Jewish people, men, women and children,, have been exposed under the nazi regime are among the most terrible events of history and have placed an Hi delible stain upon nil who per petrate and instigate them," the Churchill message added. ' Premier General Sikorski of the Polish government in exile told the assemblage that "tens of thousands" of Polish Jews had been exterminated and others "driven further east in appalling conditions, treated far worse than herds of cattle." . The Archbishop of Canterbury urged the public today to face the fact of monstrous evil in Europe -"such an eruption of evil as the world has not seen for centuries." The archbishop, Dr. William Temple, declared that what was happening on the continent was "so horrible that the imagination re (uses to picture it." "The sufferings of 1014-18 and of much of the period between the two wars led to hardening of hearts," he continued. "The drain upon sympathy began to be un bearable. We are in danger of be coming morally numb." Dr. Temple declared (here was every reason to tear that a large proportion of Jews "from two years old and upwards" being de ported from France were destin ed for "the ghasly ghetto In east ern Gal icia (Poland) where thousands of Jews already have i perished." "ft is hard to resist the conclu sion," he said, "that there Is a settled purpose to exterminate the Jewish people If it can lie done." I ! j BEGGAR BUYS BONDS NEW YORK (AP) Clutching at a paper shopping bag, the pan handler walked Into a bakery and ordered a loaf of bread freshly sliced. The clerk sliced the bread. The panhandler said he had no money. The clerk called police. Police saw the contents of the bag, called .treasury officials. They left the panhandler minus the bag but wilh $S3 in war bonds. The bag had contained that sum in old gold back bills, called in by I he treasury, which the panhand ler had been hoarding. He didn't get tile bread. The oldest Greek Loiter Frater nity in American colleges Is Phi Beta Kappa, which was organized in 1773 at William and Mary col lege Williamsburg, Va. Sunday Most Unttjut tn the nvstl lie 30c 40c I . S!mT 1 i. m v n m. a k .n , iff ewh arr. . ej m 2-3:1 5-6:30-9:30 P. M. Starts ' ' A romantic N scandal that Kl the South! j f J 1 SiJOAN J0HNV, ' 8pF BL0NDELL WAYNE Plus ENDS BLUES IN THE NIGHT" - Monday - TODAY SONJA HENIE JOHN PAYNE PLUS PREVIEW TONIGHT Ue-2Sc 30c Sunday SHE WAS GONNA' BE A LADY...evta if it killed him! t' ' i i it TODAY "LAND OF THE OPEN RANGE" Tuesday ICELAND"