8 The Newi-Review, Roiebjrg, Ore Thurt., Sept. 22, 1949 1 mscell a nei Society and Gluhk By LOTUS KNIGHT PORTER NOTICE Social Items uhmilleil by tele phone for the society page must be turned in before 12 o'clock Monday through Thursday md by 10 a. m. Friday at which time the social calendar and Sat urday society page are closed weekly. ROSE BURG RE9EKAH8 TO MEET NEXT TUESDAY Roseburg Rebekah lodge No. 41, met in regular session Tues day night at the I.O.O.F. hall with Mary Alice Mortensen. no ble grand, and Golda Nickell, vice-grand, in charge. Sadie Brown and Nancy Wulf were Ini tialed into the order. A number of Sisters and Brothers were re ported ill including Kalhryn Bing man, adopted sister of the lodge. The lodge will meet next Tues day night, Sept. 27. at the I.O.O. F. hall with Ethel Busenhark. Mabel Barlsoff. Inga High, K. C High, Dena Singleton, Iris Arkell Spring, Ruby Bloom and Nellie Myers In charge of refreshments. Following the meeting the members went to the dining hall and enjoyed a sack lunch. COOKED FOOD SALE TO BE HELD SATURDAY The women of Sr. Geoige's Episcopal will sponsor a cooked food sale Saturday, Sept. 24, at the Marshall Wells store on Jack son street. Women of the church are asked to hav et hleo oofrrsfd are asked to have their foods for the sale at the store by nine-fifteen o'clock. STATE REGENT TO BE HONORED AT DINNER AT CARL'S HAVEN Umpqua chapter, D.A.R. mem bers are requested to make res ervations by Monday, Sept. 26, for the dinner honoring the Stale Regent, Mrs. Archie McKeown, who will pay her official visit here Sept. 30, at a six-thirty o' clock dinner at Carl's Haven, fol lowed bv the evening meeting at the home of Mrs. Douglas Waile. Those planning to attend arc requested to make reservations bv Monday bv calling Mrs. W. M. --... r,KU fi7R.l . Trnnsimrtation to Carl's Haven will be furnished members In neea oi u. PENNY SUPPER AND DANCE TO BE HELD FRIDAY EVENING The Tpnmile Community club u....A ...Hi Ka ha sottinp fnr a six- thirty o'clock penny supper and oia-iasnionru udmiiiK " j Cnnt y All rouiripnl of the community and friends are cordially invnea. it, L In HHnfr W 1111111 niV annr ... ... covered dish, also a salad or des sert and their tame service, pro ceeds of the affair will buy oil heaters for the schoolroom. r.i inc r.BlhJC.F TO MEET AT POTLUCK SUPPER r-IIA f-ranM UiU tnMt flt A seven o'clock potluck supper at .L... C'.t,,rv4ut nioht. Spot. 24. All members and friends are in- ..HA t,wA a ocUaH In WPflf Old clothes and bring paint brushes IO assist III miiiiiiiK .11: ' work of the hall. A Beautiful for your Fall Wedding Individually planned and decorated for you. Order' It Now from Quality Bakery Phone 981 -J ECUS SHOWER IVEN . Mrs. Ira Vlan. Mrs. Dorothv Lloyd, Mis. Wlllford Vlan and Mrs. Charles Vlan and Mrs. Anuy Curtrlght were hostesses at a miscellaneous shower honoring Mrs. Marvin Thompson, a late summer bride. Games were play ed with Mrs. Fred Lee and Mrs. Melvin Howard winning first prizes and Mrs. Oelbert Langdon and Mrs. Meslon winning conso lation prizes. After opening the many beautiful gifts, delicious re freshments were served to the following, Mrs. Marvin Thompson, Mrs. Elmer Thompson, Mrs. Dan wngnt, Misses Lois Ann wngnt and Esther Benner, Mrs. Fred Lee, Mrs. Art Kychard, Mrs. Tom Wallace, Mrs. Wilbur Brin er. Mrs. Melvin Howard, Mrs. Delbert Langdon, Mrs. Oscar Langdnn, Mrs. Meston, Mrs. Max Main and son; Mrs. Geo. Edes, Linda and Gala Briner, Mrs. Ira Vlan, Mrs. Dorothy Loyd, Mrs. Wilfred' Vlan and son; Mrs. Dora Benner. Gifts were sent by the following unable to attend, Mrs. Eric Slenseth, Mrs. James Ea den, Mrs. Atkinson, Mrs. Schlachier, Mr. and Mrs. Con way, Verle Thompson, Mrs. Al dropp, Mrs. Lewey, and Mrs. Percy Langdon. SEVEN MEMBERS OF WOMAN'S CLUB ATTEND DISTRICT CONVENTION Seven members of the Rose burg Woman's Club attended the convention of the Second Dislrict of the Oregon Federation of Wom en's Clubs held at Newport, Fri day Sept. 16. Mrs. H. F. Hatfield altended as chairman of the nom inating committee, representing Douglas County, Mrs. E. L. Tau seller second vice-president of the district, Mrs. Paul Elliott, record ing secretary of the district, Mr. J. M. Boyles, Mrs. C. W. Disn man. Miss Alice Upland and Mrs. Lee Wells as delegates. Mrs. Tau scher was re-elected to her of fice. A very profitable and en joyable meeting was reported. ZULEIM A CLUB TO . HOLD CEREMONIAL SATURDAY, SEPT. 24 At two o'clock Saturday, Sept. 24, at the Masonic temple, the Zuleima club, Daughters of the Nile ceremonial will be held hon oring the Queen, Mrs. May Moss, Ashland. A banquet will follow at Kennedy's Dutch Mill for all members of Daughters of Nile and their escorts. Admission will be made by ticket only. Tickets may be secured from either the president, Mrs. O. W. Harrah, or Mrs. K. D. Adams. On Sunday, a tea will be held from one to three o'clock at the Masonic temple , honoring Mrs. Moss. DANCE TO BE HELD AT WINCHESTER SATURDAY The Winchester Community club will sponsor a harvest ball Saturday night, Sept. 24, at the new clubhouse, instead of hold ing a dance Friday evening as previously planned. The affair will be Informal and pvpryone in the community is cordially Invit ed to attend. Music will be played by local talent. The affair will open al nine o'clock. USE OUR CHRISTMAS J.AY-AWAY PLAN V t VtrZV w".liVmJI7', ' '.'...:.... t'.i xfeiiNifc- J iv m r x ". - y'r.7wy " IUCKY LADY" i fiTlllihuV " J 1 1! .! . J--I! -.! .LUJ M 52 tnrntffb-Vlui ffc i t 't.t ) r. 9 U ' rM) 4I.4H tvH V fv.clM e-'ie tl ldJ (r ANY f t S 0'-i-l iJ 4,1 ANT Mwf ki -f All the fiery brilliance of a $500 Diamond. Vet you pay only $19.-19 plus tax WEST bros. 301 N. Jeekton I I Phone 1103 J I West Bros. Jewelers 301 N. Jockton Pl wnd m 1ha Oenuln Tirron and On rlni fur . Mm 1 $19 4)1 l.riis at l4fl I am nclojn down pamtnt ( H 00. Cut a narrow atrip of patr eactw th aatn tnth at th ctr,umfir rir of our rtn finger to show ir of ring wanltvl Pin thit atrip of papr to true, coupon. Nam - Adrtraa ... tntm " '-it? A WMaapsBBPs?:. . at ' ,.,,,1 i r, &mmmWmMHm&Cmm0Xti tm M VICKIE LOUISE WELLS celebrasd her first birthday on Sept. 9. Vickie is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh E. Wells of Roseburg. Her parents, Mr. end Mrs. Robert H. Wells, make their home in Portsmouth, Va. Her daddy is HMC on board the U.S.S. Franklin D. Roosevelt. WOMAN'S CLUB TO HOLO FIRST FALL MEETING OCT. 4TH The Executive Committee of the Roseburg Woman's Club met at the Methodist church Tuesday at 2 p.m. There were 21 mem bers in attendance. Various mat ters of business were attended to and plans were made for the year with special emphasis on the first meeting which will be held at the Methodist church social hall Tuesday October 4, at 1:30 p.m. Members are asked to note that dale and to plan to attend and to also plan to bring one or more guests for the opening meeting. CARD PARTY TO BE HELD SATURDAY NIGHT The Fair Oaks Industrial club has invited the public to attend a benefit card party (other games will also be played I Saturday night at the Sail. Proceeds of Ihe affair will go to benefit the Childrens Farm Home at Corval lis. An admission charge will be made. Prizes will be awarded for the card plays and refresh ments will be served free. PROGRAM COMMITTEE OF COUNCIL OF CHURCH WOMEN TO MEET TUESDAY The program committee of the Roseburg Council of Church Women will meet at nine-fifteen o'clock next Tuesday morning. Sept. 27. at the home of Mrs. W. M. Campbell, 919 Wlnrhpslpr slrppt. All membprs of this com mittee are requested to be pres ent. BERTHA REBEKAH LODGE TO MEET Rertha Rphekah lodge No. 188 will hold Its regular meeting Tuesday evening. Sept. 27. at the I.O.O.F. hall In Canyonville. New members will be initiated. Mem bers and visiting members are invited. Military Rule Of Western Germany Comes To An End RONN. Germany, Sept. 22 lAt Military government rule in western Germany ended Wednes day and was replaced by a high commission of the United States, Hrilain and France. The ceremony opened with west German Chancellor Konrad Adenaur informing the three al lied high commissioners that he had formed a German Federal government. Andre Francois-Poncet, speak ing for the commissioners, said in reply that an occupation stat ute a form of peace treaty went into effect "at this very moment." The occupation statute gives the Germans far greater rights of self-government than they have possessed since the war. Under the statute, the allies re tain controls only over such key affairs as foreign trade and rela tions, demilitarization, decarteli zation and displaced persons. Adenaur described the occasion as the "first contact between the Germans of the Federal Repub lie and the Allied High commis sion." He said that the occupa tion statute was a "new chapter in German postwar history." The Chancellor, however, ask ed the commissioners to consid er, as soon as was possible, mak ing revisions that would allow the Germans still greater freedom than they will receive under the statute. Adenauer said Germans must never forget the aid the United States has given them in postwar reconstruction. At the same time, he rapped Poland and the Soviet union for seizing territory in east Germany and continuing to hold German war prisoners. Custom Slaughtering and Curing Have your animal slaughtered and cut by us. We cut and wrap each piece for your locker. Pork Slaughcred Tuesday Beef and Veal Monday, Tuesday and Wedneiday. Limit ed to these days in accordance to the Brand Inspection laws. Beef, veal and pork for your locker at wholesale prices. ROSEBURG MEAT CO. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL FROZEN FOOD LOCKERS 424 Winchester Phone 280 Lethal War Trophies Brought Into U.S. Cause 6,000 Death Each Year Bv JANE EADS WASHINGTON That German luger that it is charged ex-GI Howard Unruth used to kill 13 people on a Camden, N. J., street was a war trophy. Eighty per cent of all armed crimes com mitted today are with trophy weapons. They are the perfect crime tool. They can't be traced by ballistics tests or serial num bers. Innocently brought into the country, 10 years from now they could be in a criminal's hand. Officials believe there are still thousands of German lugers and other explosive war trophies in circulation. Henry Schneider of the Treasury Department's In ternal Revenue bureau tells me that explosive war trophies are causing 6,000 deaths a year. About 80 per cent of those fatal ly injured are children. Most of the deaths and injuries are accidental and result from lack of the trophy owner's knowl edege that they are still "alive." Time does not lessen the danger. People are still getting killed from Revolutionary War tro- fihies. The luger, the even dead ier German "burp" gun, the "empty" shell you use as an and iron, the "butterfly mine" on your mantel, small shells incen diaries or tracers may go off unexpectedly today or 100 years from now. This worries Henry Schneider. He used to be a, T-man in the Bureau of Internal Revenue's law enforcement service. It was Rirt of his job to enforce the atlonal Firearms Act of 1934. which placed a prohibitive tax on certain weapons as they changed hands, whether by gift or by sale. Use of the tommy gun by gangsters was virtually wiped out by this law. Then along came World War II. Thousands of souvenir weap ons, including those coming un der requirements of the act, were brought into the country. A po tential 20.000,000 Gls and mer chant seamen could be bringing them back. And John Smith, nev er a violator, brough' home a weapon to hang in his living I room. In 1947 Henry Schneider Inter ested the Treasury department, the army, navy and air-forces, linked with the National Rifle association, in organizing a mass educational project and in en listing some 20,000 v olunteers throughout the country to advise trophy owners of the hazards. Members of the committee ad vise trophy owners to have their trophies examined by army, navy or air force ordnance experts and have them deactivated if necessary (without cost). The Rifle association advises trophy owners who want to us the guns in hunting and target work on proper usage. The Treasury reg isters machine gun and pistols. Camp Oregon Wool Sale Collapses Under Pound Devaluing PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 22 The Western Wool Handlers association wool sale collapsed yesterday as buyers, fearful of the pound devaluation effect on prices, cut their offers or with held them. Only two lots In the morning's two milllon pound o f f e r i n g re ceived bids and owners refused to sell at the prices quoted. Bids were sealed and prices were not made public, but Roy Ward, general manager of the large Pacific Wool Growers, a cooperative, said he understood they were 15 to 20 percent down from prices paid Sept. 16 at the association's Billings, Mont., auc tion. 'The domestic wool market Is temporarily on the blink," he said. "I think buyers are over pessimistic. I have talked with the secretary of commerce (Charles Sawyer, In Portland yes terday) and he, too, thinks the devaluation effect will be less than many people fear. This sit uation isn't as black as it's paint ed." Wednesday's was the third sealed bid sale by the newly iormea western wool Handlers association. The first two. at Den ver and Billings, brought good prices about $1.25 to $1.50 a scoured pound for the type of wool shown here yesterday. The next sale Is scheduled Monday at San Francisco. "There will be a showing of wool at San Francisco, but it mav not be a sale." Ward said. He added that many of the 24 buyers here today expected to leave for the East. That likely means can cellation of scheduled sales at Salt Lake Citv. Casper, Wvo., Belle Fouche and Newell, S. D., he said. Knowland Joins Demand To Trim Arms Aid Money WASHINGTON. Sept. 22-.?") Senator Knowland (R-Calif) Wed nesday Joined a drive in the Sen ate to slash the $1,314,010,000 for eign arms program. He told his colleagues the ad ministration had "failed to justi fy" the need for the full amount. Knowland said he will suppprt Senator George I D-Ga I in his ef forts to trim $200,000,000 from the cash proposed for arms aid. And if this move fails, Know land said, then he will offer a compromise plan of his own. He proposes to cut $100,000,000 from the cash authorization and anoth er $100,000,000 from the contract authority. Knowland voted for the bill when it was approved by the Sen ate Foreign Relations and Armed Services committees. He is a member of the latter committee. But he said many who voted for the measure did so with a firm understanding they could try later to make any changes they believed necessary. There is still room for improve ment, he said, and for this reason he would vote for a cut. Fire Girls1 Opening Groups In County Schools "Be Friendly Make Friends Join the Camp Fire Girls." With that slogan Camp Fire Girls in Douglas county have be gun their annual membership march, according to.Mrs. Harold Hoyt, president of the Camp File Girls council. Though Camp Fire Girls is pri marily an organization for girls between the ages of seven and 18: adults are urgea to partici pate as leaders and sponsors. "In fact. Camp Fire is a family af. ' fair that's fun for everyone, mother, father and brother as well as daughter," added Mrs. Hoyt. News from national headquar ters in New York points out that a girl's camp fire interests do not conflict with the home circle. Rather, her new skills and friend ships add to the enjoyment and well-being of the entire family.- The youth agency is divided . into three age groups: Blue Birds s for seven through nine year-olds; . Camp Fire Girls, 10 through 15 ; years, and Horizon clubs, serv- ' ing senior high school girls. ; Programs of all groups are bas- ; ed on the seven crafts: home, creative arts, outdoors, frontiers, ; business, sports and games and citizenship. t Groups are being opened In all the schools in Roseburg and in ; many outlying districts. Parents . interested in this activity for -their children are urged to have ' them attend the Camp Fire meet- -ings in the schools. The organ!-. zation, which was founded in . 1910, now has a membership of more than 360,000 girls In the ", United States. The Roseburg council, which comprises Doug las countv. had a membership Sept. 1 of 855 girls. Information concerning Camp Fire Girls' activities and suppli:! " are available in the office main-. lained in the basement of Millet a ; Mercantile store on North Jack-" son street. Hand-made Article Sold on Consignment. Open Monday and Friday 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Wednesday 1:00 to 8:30 p.m. or Ph. 444 J -4 for appointment 4 Blkt. W. of Fairhaven Melrose Road IN ANY SEASON You'll be glad your home Is In sulated every day in the year. Ours is a Roseburg business 'ime-ownpd and home-opc.-at-ed . . . with h"-'dreds of satis tied customers. We apply rock wool with pneumatic blowers which triple the insulation value of the installation. Metal Interlocking weatherstrlpi c applied also. Prompt, efficient installations In new or old homes or commercial buildings. Bui' Ws Insulating Co. "Chuck" Edmonds 230 N. Stephens St. Phone 1018-R for free estimate A written war ranty with every installation. jgiljj CORONADO "GREAT-8" REFRIGERATOR 189 $ 95 Sale Price The Coronodo SUPER 8 cu. ft. capacity with Frozen Food Comportment and Vegetable Crisper. Was 249.95 229" woi 199.95 Hen's a valut that Is 0 ihalltngt to tht industry! This big, economy size refrigerator occupies no more floor space than a regular 6-Ft. Size. It's a fine qual. try reature-pacKea refrigerator at a rock-bottom price. Compare it with any other make costing a great deal more. The Coronodo "CUSTOM" 8 cu. ft capocity. Frozen Food Compartments, Two Vegetable Crispers, Chromed Shelves, Luxury Features. Was 279.95-. 259" Stephens one) Cast St. Phone 97