SIX ROSE BURS NEWS-REVIEW ROSEBURG. ORESOW. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1942 Road Plans Must Fit War Efforts, Mott Announces WASHINGTON, Nov. 30-f AP) Representative Moll IR-Ore) second ranking republican mem ber of the house roads committee, reported the committee was plan ning to introduce in the next ses sion of congress federal road legislation liut added it would have lo fit the war effoits of the nation. Tl! representative raid ho ho lieved toad building for the !)M fiscal year would have lo consist of military strategic highways iind access roads. Congress passed a federal aid highway hill early this year hut the president vetoed it and after some modifications were made he signed a second measure. It did not liecome etfective, how ever, heeause of scarcity of mater- lals imd war needs and congress later approved two measures for cons) ruction of strategic and ac cess toads and landing strips totaling $200,000,000. The Big Noise in Italy Blizzard Aids Reds In Smashing of Nazis (Continued from page 1.) Russians fought their way Into an enemy stronghold over -.he hodles of (iOO German officers and men and captured "ight guns, 14 machinegiins, a :'adio station and a munitions dump, to day's communique said. Only in the Caucasus did he Germans rhovv nnv aggressive ncllon. An infantry attack roulh east of Nalchik supported iy tanks was broken un hy Russian artillery and machincguns, the communique said, and the 'Ger mans were forced hack to their orieinal positions. Hundreds of thousands of pam phlets in the German language were dropped on enemy positions. Informing nazl soldiers of the new situation along the eastern front and the cllmallc allied drives In north Africa. Pravda said "the Iron ring of our troops Is closing around the Germans" in the Don-Volga zone. The situation on Ihe central front, where red army vanguards are slashing west of Rhev, 1.10 miles noi lhwest of Moscow, was sum med up with the declaration that t ho red army men "vigorously overcome all obstacles, over whelm the enemy's resistance and steadily advance." Drain DRAIN, Nov. 30.-Mr. and Mrs. I'hll Varloy and son, Don ald, sponl last week-end ill Ml. Angel, visiting relatives. Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Gardner have reluriH'il from Portland, where Ihoy visited Iheir son, F.I herl, wlio was recently called to the service. Dwight itossller left Sunday night for Vancouver alter a weeks visit here at Ihe home of; his mother, Mrs. George Kcster- j son. and oilier relatives. Dwight j came recently from Hawaii and! was in the lighting at Midway and Solomon Islands. Miss Vernle tlallelon left lasl week for Poi'lland. where she will lake a commercial course al the Hclinkc Walker business col lege. Mrs. .lay Alford of Norfolk. Vh., ai mpanied hv her mother, Mis. It. II. Home lit North Da kota, came last weekend for a visit with her parcnts-iii law. the Arch Al fords, .lay is now in Great lirilain. He was commis sioned ensign in Juno. Mrs. Al ford and her mother are en rotilo to Oalilornia lo spend Ihe win ler. Mr. and Mrs. W. II. Vlniont and family have moved to Ihe Mrs. I.lllie Ilawoiili properly recent ly purchased hy 11. A. Woolnian. Mr. and .Mrs. Glenn t'ooper of Klorenre, former Drain residents, attended the marriage of their son, Dtiahne Coooer. to Miss Nancy Itoseman, November 7, In j the presidio chapel. San Krjn j Cisco. Miss Koscman is Ihe' daiighlor tit l.t. Commander ami ; Mrs. William Franklin liosrman. i Mr. ami Mrs. Coper will make iheir home al Kils; p Inn. llieni : orton. Glcndctle ! fil.ENPAI.E. Nov. ). Chat les ; J. Kit for visited at homo lasl i week-end from Grants Pass where he is employed in Ihe lor est service. ! Corp. F.lhert Troxell came Moll- 1 clay for a Ion-day furlough with his parents here. , Mrs. V. T. Harbour and Mrs. Wavno I-ewellen were business visitors in Roschurg Wednesday. ' Mr. and Mrs. George Marey nnd daughter. Dianne. from Rand, who had been visiting at the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Hud Frost and Mr. and Mrs. W. It. Losh, left Monday for their homo. Toe. Sgt. Karaba and Sgl. Denico of Monterey visited hero Monday morning with Corp. Robert Maroy. Ralph Sloano was a Thanks giving dinner guest at Ihe home of Mr. mid Mrs. W. T. Harbour and family. Miss Mae Madison loft Mon- i' ''Z' U. S. Casualties Since Pearl Harbor ON THE HOME FRONT AMERICAN WORKERS ON THE WAR FRONT IV. S, ARMED fORCIS - .1 HOSPITAL I IE ;:.! I . ... Ah .1 rj Sftil KILLED IN ACTION ; 5694 I DEAD, WOUNDE0, Mining or Priioncrt 48,956 Hulled in accidents r 44.500 IWOUNDED IN ACCIDENTS 3.800.000 America's casualties on the home front have far exceeded those on the balllcfiont in uur lirst year of war. Figures from National Safety Council compare number of dead and wounded in the armed forces (except in Africa) with winkers killed and injured since Pearl Harbor. Total U. S. casualties due to accidents m the past year arc UU.UUU de.ul, H.HUU.mio injured. Mural: lie Careful! Axidcnts Aid the Axis! Following in the Wake of War Astoria High School Building Swept by Fire ASTORIA, Ore., Nov. 30 (API Fire Chief Wayne Oster hy estimated today thai the As toria high school building, dam aged by fire yesterday, was it .'0 per cent loss. Origin of the flames continued a mystery. The building had not been used since Wednesday, when classes disbanded for '.ho Thanksgiving holiday. The healing plain was not in operation, and electricily had been cut oft from the building. Ostcrhy said the flames appar ently started in a small kitchen In the building's "enter. Walls wore left standing, and much of the first and second floors were not burned. The ym nasium and Ihe healing plant were untouched. School authorities said the building, constructed in 1(111 at a cost of SI 05,825, was insured to (III per cent of value. 60-Day Reprieve Asked For Battleship Oregon PORTLAN D, Nov. 30 I API An appeal for al least a (il)-day delay in the scheduled dismantl ing of tile old battleship Oregon was made hero Saturday. "In view of the recent remark able American successes in '.he war and the hope for an earlier victory, the COday slay is ask ed." K. C. Summons and Iar schall Dana of Ihe battleship Ore gon commission said. They asked Sen. Charles ).. McN'ary lo discuss the Slav with Ihe navy department, pledging to raise an amount of .icrap metal equal to Ihe battleship's weight. Partial wrecking of Ihe ship, a veteran of the Spanish-American war, lias started nlreadv. day night for her homo in Elk ton anil Miss Helen Schmeltzor li'll lor Sheridan lor the Thanks giving holidays while Miss Kiev Walker loll lor her home in Fores:! Grove. Glide GI.IDi:. Nov. 30. -Mrs. Ashor Agoo, who was injured in an unto accident some time ago, has Ixvn discharged Irom the hospital and is convalesing at the home of Iter son, Mr Orval Agoo. In Portland. Mrs. John Harney is visiting at j the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. II. D. Cennine, while her husband, Capt. Harney, is in the least. j Mrs. Kvangelino Layton left I Sunday for her homo in Herkeley. j California, after siM-nding a few j days visiting her friend, Mrs. I Asam. A basket ball game was played ; last Tuesday between the high school and town teams. The town ! team won 29 to S. I Miss Stella Woods is In Eugene I attending Standard Oil training school. The Christian church plans an Dismantled Warship To Furnish Souvenirs PORTLAND, Nov. 30. - ( API- Souvenirs are to bo carved from the woodwork or the hist oi ie nl,! battleship Oregon. An oak cigarot box will lo fashioned for President Roose velt, and oak gavels for t ho -IS governors. Oak plaques also will be cut for Oregon school children, who may get them by buying war bonds. If any are loft over, they may bo obtained by adult war bond purchasers. Ihe battleship is being dis-1 mantled for its scrap metal. Back From Eugene Lee Wlm berly has returned here, where he is a senior at Hosehurg high, following a visit since nnirsdav in i-.ugcno with his brother vvimDcny, Jr., at I niv Oregon. Boston Fire Death Toll Rises to 477; Injured List More Than 200 (Continued from page 1.) door pqulppod with a panic lock designed to open under pressure, but It was out of order and had been secured by another lock. Tho death of many of the vic tims was ascribed by Medical Ex aminer Timothv Learv to mnnnv. me poisoning and smoke lnhala- eu icauing pans in a siasning an 1C0 miles to the east, virtually useless. Attu lies about three fourths of the way from Alaska to the Kurile islands of Japan, and the enemy might well regard It as being more valuable from a defensive than from un offensive standpoint. ' GRANTS PASS FLIER TOPS CANTON RAID SCORE WITH AMERICAN FORCES IN CHINA, Nov. 28-Delayed) Pacific northwest fliers play- lion. He said that a number were "terribly burned" after death. The stampede for the exits be gan, fire officials said, when a gill, detecting a thin wisp of smoke curling along the walls, shouted "fire," and within sec onds the crowds broke tor the doorways. . The wrecked stucco building resembled a huge brick oven af ter the flames had been extin- r,l..l.a ...I.U u , j Kuiiii.-u, vnii nuiuiy a scorcneu spot on tne outside walls and roof, but wilh the interior a mass of debris. Notables Among Victims. Among notables who escaped from the inferno were Charles (Buck) Jones, Van Nuys, Calif cowboy star of the motion pic tures, who was critically burned, and Scott Dunlap, also of Van Nuys, mollon picture producer, who was injured and among j Hongkong on Oct. 28." those hospitalized. (The Japanese lost 15 Other widely known persons I planes that day.) who either perished or were in- battle yesterday over Canton, in which 22 Japanese fighter pianos were believed destroyed and five others probably shot down by American bombers and fighters. The dock area was plastered with bombs and two large enemy freighters sunk. The accurate blasts of Ameri can machine guns sent most of the Jap planes down in flames, and all American planes returned unharmed. Fighter pilots described the hauling as a "field day," or "like shooting ducks on a pond," and Capt. John Hampshire, Grants Pass, Ore., was high man of the day with three confirmed victor ies. "I had them so confused they didn't know what they were do ing," he said, "mere were many sleepers and stragglers. They didn't fight like they did over jured include: Edward Ansin, Brookline, Mass., president of the Interstate Theater corpora tion and treasurer of a Boston textile firm, dead; Dr. Gordon Bennett, of Swampscott, captain of the 1(137 Dartmouth football team, dead; Robert Beverly Charles, 28, Winchester, Mass., son of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Charles of Oak Park, 111., and eastern manager of a Chicago candy company, dead; Joseph A. uoratyn, star fullback of the Holy Cross football team a year ago, dead, Norine Helen Welch, 17, daugh ter ol Vincent S. Welch of Port Washington, N. Y., vice president of the Equitable Life Assurance society, dead; Mary Ellen Mc Cormack, niece of U. S. Repre sentative John W. MeCormack, dead; Grace McDermott, New York, entertainer at the club known under tho stage name of "Vaughn," dead; Katherine Woods, 22, daughter or Carl Woods, Boston manufacturer, president of the Crosby Steam Gauge company, dead. Law Violation Indicated. Police Commissioner Joseph F. Tlmilty indicated that the youth who Innocently started the fire should have been barred hy law from working In Ihe club. "Isn'l it against the law for a boy thai age to work in a place where liquor is sold.' newsmen asked the commissioner. "Well," he said, "you know tho rules. He isn't supposed to." "There Is no doubt that tho boy started the fire," Timilty added, "and thorp is no doubt that it was accidental." Claflin (piotod the boy as say ing: "A patron came into the place and unscrewed a bulb in the ceil ing. This made the room too dark. One of the waiters came to mo and asked me to screw the bulb back in. j "I stood on a chair to do it. I lighted a match and held it while I screwed the bulb in Willi the other hand. Tho match set fire to the palm tree. That is how the fire started. " A night club singer, Billy Payne, saved ten patrons by leading them into a huge base ment ice box. A revolving door trapped a number of persons when it be came jammed by a pileup of bodies, and one body was even found in a telephone booth. Catholic priests were on tho scene shortly after the fire got under way and administered tho last rites of the church to vic tims. One priest said he minis tered to at least CO persons. The death toll ranked only be hind the steamship General Slo cum fire of 1004 in New York's Fast river in which 1,021 died, Chicago Iroquois theater fire of 1(10.'!. which claimed 002 lives, and the San Francisco earth quake and fire of l'.HH! ill which 500 died. U. S. Airmen Sink Two More Jap Destroyers (Continued from page 1.) Carl itv of all day nnvting Dec. (i at which time they will burn the mortgage. Mi', and Mrs. Richard Woods spent Sunday in Springfield visit ing Mrs. Woods sister in-law, Mrs. Helen Scholos. Welmer Fuller from k'rtohn. ! kail. Alaska; Mrs. W. II Dune of Prinoville, Mrs. Lizzie Gage and son of Prinoville are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. Helms. Mrs. Dune and Sirs. Gage are mother and sister of Mrs. Helms. Indicating that the Japanese would attempt a show of resist ance against attacks such as those that have made their Kiska base. ANTI-GRAY HAIR VITAMIN... HERE! li gry hlr a hin.llcap! Port Ic vnVt You ap pr more el.ltrlv than vour vn! Ihtt new miracle anli-vrav hair vitamin, c'alciuni Pan toinrnalr, haa won wi.le popularity lollowing Ihf report of ini appearinu in a leading na tional magazine, lliif report revealexl that hrtt ot peraoru reted ahowej poaitire evi dence ot a return of hair color. OKAVV1TA b CaL-ium Pantothenate Pl.l'SI A CRAYVITA tablet ia 10 mgro. of Cal cium Pantothenate PLL'S the other uteful vitainlna in the U complex group an.l 40 I'-S-P. lnlt. of Vitamin Bi (Thiamin). Order CiR.WVl 1' A niw a.,,1 taWe advantage of our introductory price. OnW SI.VO lor a 0 daT uppl. MaV for a 100 day aupply (Regular i.00 and .00). Juat Thon Phono 269 103 N. Jackson CHAPMAN'S DRUG STORE Destruction of Turin Spurred by New Raid (Continued irom page 1.) ed that the germans had captur ed in a height in the Tunisian mountains and taken 110 prison ers. Italian field headquarters as serted that axis troops had cap tured "an Important position" :'n Tunisia, stopped armor-supported allied columns and captured more than 200 prisoners. "Some British-American tanks were destroyed," the fascist com mand said, but its failure to ;;ive the locale of tho clash suggested that it was an isolated action. Rail connections between Tun is and the great naval base at Bizerte, W miles to the north, were cut off by the allied thrusts to Djedeida and to Mateur, l miles south of Bizerte. While German and Italian troops waited for the assault, drawn up in half-moon defenses on the outskirts of Tunis and Bizerte, the nazi-eontrollcd )'aris radio reported that heavy fight ing was in progress near Sousse, on the coastal road 20 miles south of Tunis. In tills sector, french Iroons under Gen. Giraud were attempt ing to seal off the axis "escape corridor" and prevent reinforce ments from reaching the belea guered Tunis-Bizcrte zone from Tripoli. British headquarters said allied heavy bombers pounded anew at Triixili. Tunis and Bizerte, soft ening up the German and Italian strongholds as a prelude to ihe land assault to drive the axis into the sea. ' For the fourth consecutive day, the British communique an nounced "nothing to report from our land forces" in Libya as Gen. Montgomery's 8th army awaited tho arrival of fresh forces and supplies moving hundreds of miles across the desert. Churchill Cautious In his speech Sunday, Church ill, commenting on allied victory prospects for lfj-l.'i, said: "I promise nothing, I predict nothing. I cannot even guarantee that more successes are now on the way. "The dawn of 1043 will r.oon loom red before us and we must brace ourselves to cope with the trials and problems of what must be a stern and terrible year." But he emphasized that "now at this moment the first British army is striking hard at the last remaining footholds of the Ger mans and Italians in Tunisia." Soldier's Bravery at Truck Fire Wins Medal Change of Teachers at Junior High Occurs Miss Holone Robinson, who for the past six years has served as teacher of music and English in the Roseburg Junior high school and as supervisor of music in tile elementary schools, left to day for Flagstaff, Arizona, wher she has accepted a position In vh-a school of music at Arizona Teachers college. , Her place has been taken here by Mrs. Paul Geddes, who assum ed the duties today. Mrs. Geddes is a graduate of Pacific college, where she majored ' in English and music. She has had previous teaching experience in Suther- tin high school. CAMP ADAIR, Ore., Nov. 30. (AP) Sergt. Clarence D. Leach, Hamilton, Texas, received tho soldier's medal Saturday for risking his life in a truck fire here September 2. Major General Gilbert R. Cook in presenting the award, said Leach jum'd from the truck, rolled on the ground to extinguish flames In his cloth ing, then leaped back into the truck and drove it to safety. Reedsport Judge Quits To Manage Logging Job REEDSPORT, Ore., Nov. 30. (API J. L. Gibbons, Reedsport recorder and police judge, today announced his resignation to be come office manager for s log ging company. BILL'S GARBAGE SERVICE Under New Management Efficient Service Rates: 50c per month and up PHONE 338 Oregon Soldier Dies of Wound Received in Riot PHOENIX, Ariz., Nov. 30 (AP) First Lieut. August J. Ess man, 31), Sheridan, Ore., who wa '"j shot in the abdomen during .( bloody Thanksgiving day riot be tween negro soldiers and military police, died of his wounds yester day. His was the third death from the melee. The incident flared up again yesterday and a negro soldier was slightly wounded when he resist ed arrest by military police. Two negroes were killed during the three-hour gun battle. Essman was shot while leading a detach ment of military police. VITAL STATISTICS BORN REDIFER To Mr. and Mrs. R. Redifer, of Days Creek, at Mercy hospital, Saturday, Novem ber 28, a son, John Oliver; weight five pounds seven ounces. DIVORCE COMPLAINTS WALTERS Cora versus Monr'' Walters; married at Vyan, Okla., Nov. 13, 1911; cruelty. Relief At Last For Your Cough Crcomulslon relieves promptly be cause it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, in flamed bronchial mucous mem branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulslon with the un derstanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis D 100 or 101 A tenant for your empty apart ment ... a better job for you ... a customer for what you have to sell . . . all of these and many more are at your fingertip as near as the nearest 'phone! 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