'I i.i i 4 The News-Review, Roieburg, On. Sat., Dm. 24, 19491 Publlihed Diliy Exoept Sunday ry the News-Revie Company, Inc. (Ur one' olio matlar Mar 1, lt, at Ika fail afflaa at Raaabarg, Oragaa. aadar ul al alareb t. Uli CHARLES V. STANTON ! - EDWIN L. KNAPf i . . Editor ... , "5aS"' Manager - Member of tha Ataoolated Preti, Oregon Newtpaptr Publlshere Asioolatlon, tha Audit Buraau of Clroulatlona praiaotail Oi WEST-nOLLIDAt CO., INC., a'flcaa Is Naw lark. Caloata, -' aaa Pranalaea. Laa Aaaalaa, Baattla. Pertlaaa. at. Laala. annanuiM'i'iiiM BATrrla nrarnn B taraa maalna w.8a. nj Clll i;arriar aaa raar, par manth ai.oa. aaa raar, par manta. 11.00. oalalda maatha la.14, Uiraa eauia a..a .. ... And ., , ... , . . There ! .' '' ''.'' ' ' Wer In ' " ' ' " . ' ,: . , the" ' same ' 0 'country ' h p h e r d abiding; in r the . . V ' . ' field keeping watch . .. "...'.;.. over , their flock by '" " ' ilght, and lo, the angel of Iff Lord came upon them ' 'iid the glory of the Lord , ,,. ., , ahone round about them and they were sore afraid. And the angel- - -said unto them. "Fear Not: For behold I bring you good tiding ' of . great joy which shall, be to all people For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, which ia Christ the Lord. And this shall be a sign unto you: Ye shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger." And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God, and saying,-"Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, Good will toward men." And it came to pass, as the angels were gone away from them into heaven, the shepherds said one to another. "Let us now go even unto Bethlehem, and see this thing which is come to pass, which the Lord hath made known unto us." And they came with haste and found . -j ' Mary, anr - ' Joseph ' ' and the ' Babe . lying in ' manger. .And . ..! .; v V. V- when ! .: ',' . u .. ,,';,. they i;; ... ; had " ' ' icen it " - : . . : " '-.. they i ' . i ' . . ' made ' ' ' ' ' "'' ' ' known ' ' ; abroad the saying which was told them concerning this - child and all they that heard wondered at. those things which were told them by the shepherds. But Mary kept all these things , and pondered them in her heart. And the ; shepherds returned, glorifying and praising God for all the things that they had heard , and seen, as it was told unto them. In the Day's News (Continued from Page One) does to thesa world conquerors passeth all human understand' Ing. There Is Alexander who Is supposed to have sighed wistfully because there were no more worlds to conquer. When he got to Egypt, the priests lnid on the flattery with a trowel. They re ceived him as 4 GOD. At first, he laughed scornfully. But In the end he fell for It and decided he was a god after all and should be treated as such. . . . ... AF course you have to rcmenv U ber that Alexander was still in his late 20's when he was be ing worked over by the flatterers. Stalin Is a hard-boiled old bird of 70. I have a notion that as he looks over the mountains of pros- ents that are belnp poured on him he Just grins cynically. ,, FOR the last seven months, we Americans have been looked over by the red-headed and ac cording to all accounts good-look- Ing Wellington correspondent of the Auckland, New Zealand, News a Mrs. Sidney Moses, who with her husband has been tour , Ing the United States. On the eve of departing for home, she says in Seattle: . "Everybody here works harder than they do at home. They don't have so much fun. The facilities tor fun are here, but you don't use them partly because you all work so hard and partly because your entertainment Is so EX PENSIVE. "At home In New Zealand, everybody can afford golf, tennis and swimming clubs. It's really a working man's paradise." Lady! Lady! I'm afraid you've been seeing, but not understand ing! : . : We can afford golf and tennis Mall ra. vaar IB.M. ala maataa I4.M. far year aia.uv n Mwcr, oragaa ey Halt rar raar a aa. ia and swimming, BUT BECAUSE WE CAN AFFORD 'EM WE DONT THINK SO MUCH OF EM. The reason we go' so hard for night clubs Is BECAUSE WE CAN'T AFFORD 'EM. It's doing the things we can't afford to do that gives us the thrilling feeling that we're getting somewhere and amounting to something. That's one reason why we have to word to hard. High Tuition For Educating GIs Upheld By VA ' WASHINGTON, Dec. 24 The Veterans administration rul ed today it has a right to pay higher college tuition rates for ex-GI's than the colleges are le gally permitted to charge. The decision means millions of dollars for state and city operat ed schools, which may be barred by state law from charging tui tion fees or are .limited In the amount that can be charged. The general accounting office, "watchdog", on government spending, had challenged some VA tuition payments to those schools. In one test case Involv ing the University of Wisconsin an estimated $7,000,000 to $8,000, 000 in pnvments were at stake. The VA attributed the account ing office's action to a "misun derstanding" of VA regulations concerning the tuition payments. va nas neon paying the higher tuition fees to some schools be cause of the heavy cost of teach ing great numbers of Veterans. The GI Bill of Rights also re quires the Veterans administra tor to pay tuition whether or not the school Is legally permitted to charge It, VA said. Primarily. VA said, the rul ing by Administrator Carl Gray holds the VA has the right to nay so-called "non-resident" tui tion rates for GI students even though the Veterans are residents of the state In which they are going to school. - That right had been challenged by Comptroller General Lindsay Warren, head, of the general ac counting office, In the University of Wisconsin case. .wr maty tTtStv jftxwT ?2i4 , I f - - r - -vt a i ... .v ELKS MAKE CHRISTMAS MERRY Members of the Roseburg Eilcs lodge are pictured prepar ing to make Christmas package deliveries to needy families in the Roseburg area. In the fore ground, left to right ere Let Cummings, Blayne Flora, Bob McFarland and Harold Chitwood, Bill Lassiter is In the background. Everywhere, everywhere, Christ mas tonight! Christmas in lands of the fir tree and pine, Christmas In lands ot the palm tree and vine, Christmas where snow . peaks stand solemn and white. Christmas where corn-fieldt lie sunny and bright, Everywhere, everywhere, Christ mas tonight! Then let every heart keep Its "ALUMNUS-BY-ADOPTION1 University Offers Novel Plan For Raising Money . NEW YORK, Dec. 23. ) college alumnus by-adoptlon? fi you need do Is sign your name to a check for $100 up, made payable to Wesleyan University, Mtddletown, Connecticut. It's part of a novel fund-raising, campaign to enlist 2,500 self- educated business and Industrial the university. This new Idea In fund raising was suggested by James E. Stiles, Wesleyan 13, who Is chairman of the fund drive and publisher of the Nassau Dally Review-Star of Rockville Centre. L. I, N. Y. "Ii our plan succeeds," he says, "It should serve as a blueprint for every small, privately en dowed university In America." Stiles explains how It workt: "We selected 250 prominent alumni of the university who have made their names . In industry. This Newspaper, Wishes; You a (Picture by Photo Lab). Christmas within, Christ's pitv for sorrow, Christ's tiatred for sin, ' Christ's care ' tot the weakest, Christ's courage for right, Christ's dread of the darkness, Christ's love for the light, Everywhere, everywhere, Christ mas tonight! Phillips Brooks. a a Christmas Gladness to All and with Tiny Tim: "God bless us every one!" How -would you like to become a leaders as honorary alumni of banking, Insurance, religion, law and other fields. They are known as the Wesleyan vanguard. Each vanguardsman has been asked to select at least ten self-educated business leaders and invite them to become Wesleyan associates. These alumnl-by-adoption will re ceive certificates signed and seal ed by the trustees and president of the university and will be In vited to participate in all bona fide alumni activities. "We want these men to come By ViahtMU S. Martin J fj to our campus, see how the uni versity works, meet and dine with the president and his wife and make whatever suggestions they see fit for the betterment of the university. In other words, -we want them to feel that Wesleyan Is their university. Speclfio Plea Explained Why appeal to seif-educated men for funds? Explains Stiles: "Because a spiritual bond has long existed between Wesleyan and such men. Substantial por tions of the college's plant and endowment were made possible by men of this type. Wesleyan educated Its students to develop against a background of the humanities the 'self-made' quail ties which have helped make this country great. Approximately one-third of the undergraduates are young men of high promise but small resouroes, for whom the college is providing the for mal education our self-educated men were denied in their youth." "Up to the present Wesleyan has relied on its own alumni to keep going. But try as we did, It has been necessary to dip into capital funds to the tune of $125, 000 each year for the last three years. We need $321,000 for our Immediate needs. And we think business men have a sufficient stake In seeing us hold our heads above water to give It to us." In the first five days, says Stiles, the campaign raised $15,-000. BANK POST FILLED WASHINGTON UP) Presl dent Truman has appointed Wil liam McChesney Martin Jr., of New York to be U. S. executive director of the Interantional bank for reconstruction and develop ment. Martin, former head of the New York stock exchange, now is assistant secretary of the treas ury and will continue In that Job, devoting part time to the bank. The bank place has been vacant since July when Eugene R. Black became its president Security, Before Economy, Defense Secretary Says NEW YORK m The na don's military security should get priority over economic considera tions,. Defense Secretary Louis Johnson declares. ' But he said that spending either too much or too little for military purposes could be disastrous for tfte unitea states. Johnson spoke at the annual meeting of the New York Lawyers-association. Outside, 35 pickets paraded In protest against wnat tney termed ''Tim rmui11 nt-anttf-Aa In I.a am- ed forces. Johnson declared that to "build up our military power to the point where it overburdens our peace time economy and nurt, mat prop of our national security, would be disastrous." "But," he added, "while it would be disastrous to wreck our econ omy by inordinate military ex penses, It would be equally dis astrous to be penny-pinching. The watch-word must be military se curity first, economy second." . Johnson declined to comment on the picket demonstration. Grant Reynolds, a leader, said tne picKets were trying to spot-, light the shameful army program of segregation which Secretary Johnson seeks to pawn off on Negroes as a forward step." Johnson, who has been pushing a unification economy campaign to trim $1,000,000,000 from the current $15,000,000,000- defense budget, reported that the drive, already, has passed its first goal. As part of the program, he said that as of Dec. 1, the army, navy and air force have cut 128,000 workers off their payrolls d.oou more than orlginaly scheduled. One Union Bargain Plan For Lumber Industry Upheld WASHINGTON. Dec. 24. VB Asserting that separate craft or ganization "Is not appropriate for employes in the lumber Indus try," the National Labor Rela tions board has declared a policy of letting one union bargain for workers m tnat industry.. The ruling was announced In a case involving a proposed bar gaining representative election at the Weyerhaeuser Timber com Danv's new sawmill and logging operations at Springfield, Ore. A similiar policy oi letting, one union rather than many unions bargain for workers was an nounced by the board last year for the basic steel producing in dustry. In the Oregon case, tne jni,kb ordered an election within 30 days among the company's 630 employes. It will determine whether they wish to be repre sented by the CIO's International Woodworkers Association, the AFL carpenters union, or by no union. '1 i V - At the Srplngfield plant, AFL electrical workers, AFL pulp workers and carpenters had asked for separate elections among small craft groups. All these pleas were rejected. By its ruling, the inlkb re versed its earlier decision which had approved a separate unit of machinists and auto mechanics from the same group of Weyer haeuser employes. Britain Places Order For Timber In B. C. , VANCOUVER. B. C. (CP) The United Kingdom is placing an order for 80,000,000 board feet of limber in British Columbia, it was reported. The order is worth $6,000,000 to the industry. ' It Is part of a luu.ooo.ooo timber order being placed in the Pacific Northwest by the United Kingdom timber control. Delivery is to be made early In 19SO. LUMBERMAN DIES DENVER, Dec. 24 UP) Franklin T. Wright,. 48, Denver lumberman, died unexpectedly at his home Wednesday night, Born at Barnes, Kas., Wright spent most of his life at Kansas City, where he was connected with the Long Bell Lumber Co. He moved to Denver -four years ago and founded the Western wood .preserving corp. witn nis brother, Gene. Other survivors are his mother Mrs. Nelle Wright, Miami Beach, Fla., and a sister, Mrs. J. A Ho ward, Miami Beach. I y ; (Semi-Formal) FIREMEN'S BALL Saturday, Dec. 24 9:30 to 1 A. M. ;. ; At the Roseburg Armory with Johnnie Lusk's Orchestra , Come One, Come All fo One of the Biggert Dance Events of the Year, Your Firemen's Ball Ex-Ball Player, Pal Get -. Life For Murder-Robbery ' LOS ANGELES, Dec. 24 B Ralph (Blackie) iJchwamb, for mer major league pitcher, arid Ted Gardner, each 27, Friday were sentenced to life Imprison ment for the robbery murder of a Long Beach, Calif.; physician that netted them only $53. Dr. Donald B. Buge was beaten to death near Gardena, ' Calif., Oct. 12 ' after, It was testified, he had met the pair at a gam bling club. Gardner pleaded guilty to mur der. Schwamb was convicted by a jury after Gardner appeared as a witness against him. Superior Judge Charles W. Fricke ordered that the pair fin ish out their lives in San Quentin prison. , Schwamb was on the pitching staff of the St. Louis Browns briefly last season. We Wish Everyone A Very Merry Christmas . and a , Happy New Year Dale's Cafe North Umpqud Road DEL REY CAFE Highway' 99 North . ; Open Christmas and New Years Day Turkey With All The Tritomings ,., ; '-'. , ; $1.25 Frog Legs 1.50.: v . ; , Prawns 1.00 f 1 V,V A MERRY- I f ff$ CHRISTMAS and , fJu J HAPPY NEW YEAR Dr. E. W. Carttr Chiropodist Foot Specialist 129 N. Jackson . PhonellTO - Over Rexall Drug Store PHONE 100 between 6.15 and 7 p. m., If you hove not received your News Review. ' 1 Ask for Harold Mobley Dale's Cafe Will. Be Closed From Dec. 26 Until Further Notice For Redecorations 5 BIG DANCE Saturday and Sunday Nights , MOOSE HALL On Stephens street opposlts Greyhound Depot. Dancing and entertainment from 9 p. m. 'til closing Saturday and Sunday nights, Dec. 24 and 25. MODERN MUSIC REFRESHMENTS Annual (Semi-Formal) i 1 i