ill1.,,'! mi Villtf' : 'jL -fi . i'-jr 1 HE,SECRETAKI L A 0 0 K i Secretary of State Dean Acheson sets to work on a. !rpenterinr chore in the workshlp during a weekend on his Uarewood Farm, near Sandy Sprint, Md.v CANYONVILLE Lions Observe 1st Anniversary With Banquet And Installation By MRS. H. M. ANDERSON INewa-Revlew Correspondent) Canyonville Lions club mem bers, their wives and out-of-town Lion guests met at Ford's Cafe at Canyonville recently to com memmorate the first anniversary of the granting of the club char ter. Lawrence Boyle, outgoing; pres ident, was master of ceremon ies. Short talks were given bv district governor; Ralph Thrift of Sutherlin, deputy district gov ernor; Phil Harth of Roseburg, cabinet secretary; and Mrs. Viv ian Harth of Roseburg, past pres ident of the Lions Auxiliary. Boyle talked on the accom plishments of the local Lions club during its first year. The following officers were in stalled by Losee: R. E. Olsen, president; T. L. Weaver, first vice president; Don Acklund, sec ond vice president; H. M. "Chic" Anderson, third vice president; R. E. Mesick, secretary-treasurer: John Bingham Jr., lion tam er; and Henry Ford, tail twister. Losee also installed the officers a year ago. At that time the membership was 15. It is now 25. Olsen, the new president, talk ed on plans for the organization for the coming year. Guests and members attending the dinner were; Dr. and Mrs. L. M. Lehrbach, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Elliott, Mr. and Mrs. Phil Harth, Mr. and Mrs. Forrest C. Losee, all of Roseburg; Mr. and Mrs. Don Coon and Mrs. Mel Hanna of Myrtle Creek; Mr. and Mrs. Don Clark of Riddle; Lou Torey, mayor, Ralph Thrift, Al Stanley, William Crowell and Mr. Thatcher, all of Sutherlin;' Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ford, Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Mesick, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Boyle, Mr. and Mrs R. E. Olsen, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. George Binder, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hays, Mr. and Mrs. William Cox, Mr. and Mrs. Don Acklund, D. W. Gill, Mr. and Mrs. John Bing ham Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Norman Chapnell, Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Weaver and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Oaks, all of Canyonville. i The City of Canyonville was forced to make new water re strictions because of a strain on the water distribution sys tem brought on by the contin ued warm weather. The new hours for the sprinkling of lawns and gardens will be from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. until further notice. ' It has been reported to the city officials that numerous Canyonville water users are not complying with watering hours. For the past month water no tices have been posted in sev- flOT WATER AN& SOAPi Get White CoftesggSjS Colored Oolftesgg3. THE lAMOUsWStinlOUSe AUTOMATIC WASH!! WITH mi fcccksm ML . "at saves up f0 lu Silons of wofr per load water In it,. lze the load All LAUNDROMAT U s Trade-Hark, Ber. U.S. Pat. Off. . bok at these Features I Only Laundromat has tiiem . im JfjVfl'' SIANTINO WONT No awkward J$T ng bending or stooping when loading ; . ArfffiO'' or unloading washer . . . the loading ' shelf is a time and work saver, .,')t esty convincing woyl SINOll DM1 C0Nr0l--AH opera- ' ' tions performed automatically: Starting, stopping, filling, water temperature, washing, rinsing damp-drying. INCLINID ASKt1kn Improve ment over all known washing meth ods. Inclined Basket gives a wash ingaction that is amazingly efficient. SM - CIM H! VO The Laundromat has no lint trap. Wash and rinse waters keep interior sparkling clean. Phone us and make ar rangements to see the Laundromat wash a load of your clothes. IT'S FREE. INSTALLS ANYWHEREI No bong to floor... No Vibration! iMimk J.ftft'Vfcstinffiouse TROWBRIDGE ELECTRIC German Paper Criticizes Mann's Visit To Country ' FRANKFURT, Germany, Julv 25. (K) Thomas Mann's first visit to Germany since he fled the Nazis in 1933 drew sharp criticism today in the German newspaper, Allgemeine Zeitung of Mainz. Mann, noted German author who now makes his home in America, is due here tonieht to accept the 1949 Goethe prize for literature awaraea Dy trie city of Frankfurt. The article criticizing his be lated return to his homeland was signed by -Fabian von Schlabren dorff, one of the leaders in the bomb plot against Hitler July 20, 1944. eral downtown stores. The Canyonville Boy Scouts are spending this week at Eel creek camp at Lakeside. The boys are divided Into two troops with Andy Worrall and Bob Springstead patrol leaders. ' Besides Worrall and Spring stead the boys making the trip were: Charles Pickett, James Tabor, William Hoffee, Jr., Alan Anderson, Larry Bailey, Walter Garland, Blake Hardy, Clyde Zumwalt, Robert Strahan, Jerry MCKinney, Maynard Holt, Den nis Lewis and Delbert McGinnis. The camp staff includes Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Worrall, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hoffee Sr. and Bert Springstead. Worrall is Scout Leader. Fire Hazards Reduced Members of the Canyonville volunteer fire department reduc ed the' fire hazard in the city of uanyonvme oy Durning ary grass on vacant lots Sunday. Thursday they put on a fire drill at which time fire was set to a vacant lot on Wall street between First and Second. Warn ing tickets were given to several motorists who followed the fire truck and to pedestrians who con gregated in manner inter ferlng.with the firemen, or caus ing traffic congestion. Announce ...Faculty Names i Omer J. Monger, superintend ent of schools In Canyonville, has announced the complete faculty for the Canyonville schools for 1949-50. 1 '' Grade teachers will be: Gwneth Brinkworth, Canvonvllle, 1st grade: Mildred Fredrickson, Cnnvonvillc,' 2nd grade: Bessie M. Hackenberg, Grants Pass. 3rd grade; Adeline Adams. Rose burg; 4th grade; Jennie W. Stum- bo, Wolf Creek, 5th grade; Verne; G. Worrall. Canyonville, 6th ; grade; . E. Mildred Black, Cen tral Point, remedial work. j ' The high school faculty will In clude: Charles A. Dowd. Taco ma. Wash.; , John R. Norman, Minneapolis.-Minn.: Ronald C. I Krasky, Canyonville: Dorothy Krebs. Benridge; Minn.; and Lei la Wimberly, Roseburg. Curtis Lu Winders of Roseburg will -teach music In Canyonville for four half days a week. I ELKTON BOND ISSUE PASSES City's Water Use Restricted; Felling Limb Injures Logger By PHYLLIS A. SMITH Newa-Review Correspondent Elkton citizens voted favorably on the $15,000 water bond election recently. The money will be used to improve the present water sys tem. Mayor W. S. Carlson of Elkton has requested that all users of city water please refrain from using water for sprinkling and irrigat ing purposes. Injured By Falling Limb Raymond Monner received a badly bruised left shoulder and compound fracture of a rib when hit by a falling limb Wednesday. Monner and Joe Bishop were fall ing timber for the Elkton Log ging company. Monner was taken to Sacred Heart hospital, Eugene. Dale Mode received injuries to his left ankle and arm when he was pinned beneath an A frame that was accidentally pulled over at the Beckley Thomas gravel plant near Kel logg Thursday. He is undergo ing treatment at a Eugene hos pital. The Church of Christ has a new roof and is now being painted. The Rev. Mr. Troxell, pastor, is doing most of the work himself. There was a father and son banquet at the church Friday eve ning. Personal Doing Reported : Mr. and Mrs. Russell Redfield have moved back to Elkton. Lorna Aildridge is ill at her home with mastoid trouble. Dixie Lee Riley is ill with the- mumps. Mrs. Wade Henderer is visiting with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Weigle, at Harbor, Ore. Recent visitors to Eugene were Miss Billie Sue Reed, Mrs. Ted Taylor, Bob W. Cowbrough, Mrs. Warren Baker, Mrs. Elmer Schad, Mrs. Lester Riley and Bruce Ri ley, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Sullof and Donald Sullof and Joe Hud son. Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Schnabel and sons of Pacolma, Calif., who have been vacationing at Elkton, have returned home. Mrs. Schna bel is the former Ellen Riley of this city. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Shirley of Florence visited at the home of their daughter Mrs. John Mac Neil Tuesday. Mrs. Ted Taylor and Mr. and Mrs. Russel Mowry have gone to Grand Junction, Col., to visit with their parents and friends. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Mitchell and their children have returned from a trip to Sunnyside, Wash. They visited Mr. Mitchell's father while there. Mrs. Violet Baker and her son of Port Angeles, Wash., Is visiting at the home of her sister, Mrs. Newton Henderer. J. Boyd Rader is reported Im proving at his home near Kellogg. Rader recently underwent a ma 1or operation at the Sacred Heart hospital In Eugene. Mrs. Edith Gates reports that her grandson Richard Gates, Is as well as can be expected. Richard is a patient at the Doernbecker h spital In Portland. Mrs. Donald Mode in home again after a trip to Spokane, Wash., and Mullan, Idaho. Mrs. Mode went to Idaho with her fa ther, Charles Randall, but tame home by plane early this week. Miss Hebn Hanna of Portland is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mode. Sandy MacTavish of Eugene is conducting a ball room dancing class the I. O. O. F. hall on Thursday evenings. tne death of Claude McDonald Friday, July 22, came as a shock to his many friends. Boy Is Injured While Attempting To Rescue Dog BALTIMORE. Julv 25. UP) Twelve-year old Wayne HeubecK tiiea io save a stray dog from being hit by a train Saturdav and was seriously hurt himself. Young Heubeck was sideswlped by a Pennsylvania Railroad Ex press. No one aboard apparently was aware of the accident and the train didn't stop. Heubeck, and his friend, John Warner, 14, started out to go fish ing this morning at Lake Roland. A stray dog followed them along the railroad tracks. The mutt squatted down In the center of the tracks as a Baltl-more-Harrlsburg Express roared up. Heubeck ran over but couldn't pull the dog to safety. He himself jumped back and crouched down alongside the track. But he was hit by a side of a car that whizzed by. The Cog was killed. Britain Claims Proof Russia Has Slave Labor GENEVA. Switzerland, July 25. UP) The British government claims to have documentary proof that forced labor Is an established legal policy of the Soviet govern ment. It says It believes about 10, 000,000 persons 10 per cent of Russia's working population are in forced labor camps. The British, . delegate to the United Nations economic and so cial council, Corley Smith, made public a set of documents he said were laws and regulations cover ing 'he forced labor policy of the Soviet government. The British published photo stat'c copies of what they claimed were the original Russian texts, running to 8500 words, plus full French and English translations. These documents will form the basis of Britain's case against al leged Russian slave labor which is being investigated by the coun cil under terms of an American motion approved last March 7. One of the demands then was for a survey by a U. N. commis sion of conditions Inside the Soviet Union. Russia denounced this as a plot by Britain and America to get spies Into her territory. Previous attempts to bring the slave labor questions to a head have been stymied by Russian as sertions that there was no forced labor In the Soviet union and that Western claims to that effect were "imperialistic propaganda." The British are reported to feel that these documents will now force the Russians to some more definite action than a mere shrug ging off of ths charges. Mon., July 25, 1949 The Newt-Review, Roseburg, Ort. 11 I' " 1 ' ' ,. - ' "Mi v - it , t i! r i a i (lEA Ttlepholo) 1 ilckle. Qane Boss I r.ANfi BLASTS COHEN Attended by Dr. O. D. Dickie, Gang Boas Mickey Cohen receives plasma in Hollywood Receiving Hospital after ' he, a state attorney general's Investigator assigned to guard him and two others were wounded In a gangland-style shooting at a restaurant on tbe exclusive Sunset Strip. Cohen was the least-serlously wounded. . The assailants escaped. . . Coll 100 for News-Review Classified Ads , . AT Pi Our Teacher Lives in a Cave! or will be If he doesn't find a home or apartment to rent. Too bad, he's a nice guy, swell wife and little daughter. . . . Now If anyone knows of an un furnished house or apart ment in or near town, why Bob Sabin will pay up to $60 a month rent for it. He's the new Junior Hi vice - principal, permanent and reliable you bet. Phone ' Bob Sabin at 1137-R won't you? We don't want our teacher and his family to live in a cave all winter! . g fljpnnAt - WALLPAPERS, Wh Wise buyers look for the Imperial silver label that says the finest In wallpapers. Guaranteed to with stand room exposure without fad ing and to clean satisfactorily when instructions are followed. J Home Fubniswngs IMEY9 llAY-AWAY'S EASY A! i MiiiWiaiiWnir 51 p Will hold any blanket on Lay Away this week! LAST CALL! This is the last week that 50c down will hold blanket. After this week there will be the usual one-third down to hold blankets on lay away. Take advantage this last week of our small down payment of only 50c on any blanket! NOW! WARM PLAID PAIRS 98 Two thicknesses of (95) blended with (5); you get doub! blanket! Body heat itayi tho night, cold blasts Real dead-ot-winter thrift-minded price! t strong cotton jm kitten-soft wool YI warmth in on II itays all through I I its can't get in! I IJ protection at a JACQUARD BLANKET 98 Now the flower basket design you love so well in a new blend of lus trous rayon (75) combined with 25 strong cotton. Teamed up with Penney's money-saving low price, here's a real buy! Blue, rosed ust, green, peach or wine, 72" x 90". 100 WOOL BLANKETS .pi up LOW! M EXTRA LONG... 72" x 90" AND PENNEY'S PRICE IS TRULY This year blankets go colorful! This fluffy beauty comes in seven luscious shades: blue, rosedust, green, white, yellow, mulberry and gray. Teamed up with' 4 lbs. of pure wool, this is a real find. 5-year guar antee against moth damage! WARMTH AND BEAUTY u, 6UU 100 WOOL SEVEN COLORS 72"x84" SIZE Penney's price is low, of course! But the true measure of a blanket's worth is the wool that goes into it! That's why you get 3 lbs. of coxy-warm quality wool, seven of the loveliest, full-bodied colors we could find! Yes, it's at Penney's. BLUE ROSEDUST AQUA YELLOW GRAY ORCHID GERANIUM RED i -'. . - ' - THRIFTY PENNEY PRICE 90 Three and one-half pounds of 100 virgin wool in a generous, large size, 72- x 90, for double beds. Guaran teed against moths for five years. Beautiful soft tones of gray, mul berry, roseduit, green, blue, gold and white all with royon satin binding. 8 Border Striped All Wool 90 Thick, firm-textured wool . . . 4Vi pounds of it ... in gay scarlet with black band or white with multi-colored stripes. If you want protection against piercing blasts, this mas sive . . . and manly . . . blanket is for you! Thrifty Penney price! 10 Phone 268 156 N. Jackson PERSONALIZED SERVICE FOR THE HOME 1.