2 The Newi-Review, Ronburg, Ore. Sat., Aug. 5, 1950 Salvation Army Functions Told By Lieut. Madsen The Salvation Army is a relig ious organization. But it is more than that. It is also a well a re organization, Second I.t. Dallas Madsen, in charge o( the Rose burg corps, stated in a talk be fore the Roseburg Lions club Thursday night. The work of the Salvation Army if primarily charitable, Lt. Mad sen informed his listeners. Based upon a religion, to which it still strongly adheres, the order, foun ded by William Booth, has as its original idea to help humanity. Strength of the Salvation Army movement, he said, is noted in the news reports that Czechslov akia, has banned its work in that country. Salvation Army workers, he said, go where they are told to fo, whether they like it or not. n that respect, he said, it u like an army. It has a function to fullfill. The Salvation Army has a tran sient program, in which meals and needs of persons going through the community are pro vided when these persons are in distress. It has a League of Mercy pro gram, in which the sick and nos- Eitalized and people in the county omes are visited. The Home league is a ladies organization, which makes avail able clothing and shoes to those in need. In some instances a very small sum is charged for the items, not to make a profit, but because many folks do not like to accept charity. He told of tiie youth program. The lot next to the new Army building was intended for a gym. but lack of funds prevent this from being built, tie said ha hopes use of the lot can be turned to other outside recreational pur poses soon. Lt. Madsen discussed the youth hand, in which anyone who de sires to learn to play an instru ment is offered training. The type f I.. I L . ( - jj .: t t Is-') ' 0 TTrTTT""' H. i T , -f 1 . 1 i , , ; it f 'f , 1 Ml L 1 -js ; g I I ; J . .M j H v 'il l '"fa 1 h I ... ' , - I I "i. " j'.lU rax ill I EvEKbll ItAftR holds a lamp casting ultra-violet rays above an exhibit of mineral bearing rocks at the mineralogy show at junior high. Formations ordinarily invisible in daylight or under other artificial lights spring into varied and ttartlingly beautiful colors beneath ultra-violet rays. . WARNING Use Miller's Frigid Cold Fur Storage Free Bonded Messenger) 1 - X-v- , .. C-flf; - IW '5'- J I V II III I MRS. ARLINE M. SIMS is shown standing betide one of the many machines used by workers in semi-precious stones which cut, shape and polish to heart's desire. She and her husband, A. F., proprietors of the Hodge Podge shop at Grants Pass and dealers in lapidarists' working equip ment, had an exhibit at the mineralogy show held at junior high school Friday and Saturday. Interesting Tour Of Europe Related By Miss Helen Casey At Meeting Of Kiwanis Club It was a hop, skip and a jump report to Kiwanis club members Tuesday of her recent four-month trip through Europe told by Miss Helen Casey. But it was clearly evident from her ability to make you feel you were with Jier, even in her sketchy report, that she had ab sorbed a great deal of information about that continent. Most of the trio through Europe. she said, was made by special bus, after she had flown from New York, via the Azores, to Lisbon, Portugal. Her group was joinel by a party of 18 at Madrid, Spain, and they were driven by two Italian drivers who were with them two months. . ' She found Portugal interesting and the people friendly. There are n't too many tourists in that coun try, she said, she said. Her party saw much of Spain. Traveling by special bus, it was possible to take in more of the countryside. The bus, too, which was very large, attracted consid erable attention. Of special interest, said Miss Casey, was the manner in which all highways were heavily policed. One of the party, taking a picture of some urchins, had her camera confiscated by the gendarmes. . ' The Americans didn t aprove too heartily of dinner at 9:30 to 10 p. m., she said. The Madrid art gal lery was "wonderful" and the Ma drid streets clean. Olives from the miles and miles of trees were dis appointingly small. They visited the Alhambra castle at Grenada, and were not "disap pointed." The two-weeks' fair at Seville was colorful and interest ing, the tourists were certainly "taken" from an expense stand point. Miss Casey will remember Se ville. She purchased a popular, black hat, and wore it to a night club. She was immediately brand ed an American. Such hats were nut worn only while riding horses, she learned. They traveled into France and on to Nice on the Riviera. Saw Rita Hayworth's villa and Errol Flynn's yacht It was springtime and the country was at its best. They trav eled on to Italy, to the Riviera, to the leaning tower of Pisa, to Rome, Naples, Sorento, and 'the Isle of Capri. Italians Eager Te Rebuild Back to Rome, they found the city filled with pilgrims and visit ors. They visited St. Peter's cath edral, wliich holds 100,000. Nearly filled, the throng put on quite a demonstration. It was the day af ter tne canonization ol a monk: On the busy streets of Rome, Miss Casey was surprised to meet Eleanor Micelli, daughter of the Albert Micellis of Roseburg. . The Italians, she found, were wonderful people, eager to rebuild their country, v and they were grateful for the Marshall plan. There had been a great deal of destruction in Florence. Venice was the beautiful, quite place one reads about. There were no automobiles, no bicycles. They rode in gon dolas. They went to Austria by the way of Brenner Pass. In Germany they saw the Passion play, given for the first time in 16 years, and it was "beautiful, lovely and sin cere." Munich was a town "all in pieces. Their guide kept talking of partially destroyed towns in that manner. Back into Switzerland. they continued on to France, where they ate the French delicacy, snails. Paris was "truly the beau tiful city," but nothing was cheap. On through Beleium and Hol- lnad, they continued to Copenhag en, Denmark; Stockholm, Sweden, and to Oslo, Norway. They .saw the fiords, and then from Bergen flew across the North sea to Newcastle. Scotland. London Coming Back They traveled through Scotland and England by bus, visiting at tractive Edinburgh and gloomy Glasgow, thence through Coventry to London. There they were told the terrors of the war during 79 continuous days of bombing. Their bus driver drove a bus through London during the war. He had to continue during the bombing, and was called home during a raid to find his wife buried in debris. London there's no place like it suffered a great deal of destruc tion, but it is coming back, said Miss Casey. She saw the changing of the guard at Buckingham palace and at Whitehall. They flew back to New York, stopping only a few minutes for dinner and "garlic coffee" at Shan non, Irelnad. They stopped also at Newfoundland and were in New York at 7 a. m. next day. It was raining there. Miss Casey also flew back to Portland, and one of the most interesting sights of her trip was Mount' Hood. Beauty Winner Is Would-Be Suicide NEW ORLEANS UP - Bar bara Jean Floyd, a New Orleans beauty winner who was spanked last year by her former husband in a hotel lobby, attempted tp kill herself yesterday police capt. Edward Hermann said. Police, rescued the 20-ycar-old Miss New Orleans of 1948 from her gas-filled apartment after an argument with her mother, Mrs. B. P. Floyd. Herman said she sobbed as she told of . unhappiness since the spanking episode here in March, 1949. . "I felt that people were laugh ing at me," police quoted her. "I couian t noia up my neaa in public. Police said the auburn-haired shapely beauty told them her mother nagged her constantly. But, police added, the mother said Barbara Jean "was lazy and wouldn't hold a job." The beauty winner married George Cauthen. pilot for a Co lumbian air line, in 1949. She re turned to New Orleans and said she married him to get a free plane ride home after a South American good will tour because she was broke. Cauthen came to New Orleans for a reconciliation, but she de manded a divorce or an annul ment; The pilot said in a press inter-' view he had been played for "a sucker," and Barbara Jean later flew at him in a scratching, bit ing fight. He turned her over his knees in the hotel lobby and spanked her. DEATH FOLLOWS CRASH WICHITA FALLS, Tex -UP) Joseph Louis Martin, S3, died yes terday of injuries received Thurs day in an auto-train collision at Waurika, Okla. Martin was president of the Wichita Falls River Oil company and maintained offices here and in the Chrysler building in New York. Tire, Tubt Prices Upped By Goodyear Company ' AKRON. O. (.m Retail prices on Goodyear passenger car and farm tires are five percent. higher today. Following the lead of General Tire A Rubber co., Goodyear also has lAed the price on truck tires seven-ad-a-half percent. Inner i ibes made of natural rub ber are uH from 10 percent to 20 percent, depending on their izes. Neither firm hiked the price on tires made of synthetic rubber. Other rubber companies are ex pected to make similar increases. Portland Fire Razes ' Die-Casting Factory . PORTLAND, PI Flames,' fed by a gusher of oil, destroyed a die casting plant here yesterday. Loss in the fire at the Product Engineering company was estima ted at $150,000. - The roof of the nearby Utility Trailer and Equipment company building was burned off at a loss of $10,000 and the Iron Fireman company buildings sustained scorch damage estimated at $500. JUST LIKE THE GAS WE SELL- WE'RE a ACTIVATED no slow motion sorvico hrc, not bit. Wt likt people who ara prompt and thorough wo ore. ROGER'S SHELL SERVICE on Ml'ot Rood ot S. Intronco to Vtttroni Hoipital. PARKING by the month Why risk parking tickets when you can park all day, every day, at our convenient downtown parking lot? Still room for a few cars, so come in or phone today. 120 North Kane Street Phone '48-R II l- AH! 1 ,;.UM I . a li 1 1 -z i y mmm, g I Ev rybody .oves flower. IV : , t UfaWzTtiil ?! L-WT and everybody loves to I , r,:v,, lt .., w & f t4 A ,..;, I - ' receive them Choose V. V V mJ-h 1 " -l'22i?'f 1 " V, - l flowers as the perfect I I r, ' B "MiauuLi ....." f -u ,Slafftt Vtl from u. . . . alw-y, tresh- I V , Vl KXSST'i W 1 1 1 .hd a ,.P ly cut, fragrantly 'ovely. Vi it j.Tyg-v j i X r"-- - i'T""T I The pho.e number to I f I I Z"""-! Vfm . ' rtnuiniw,,, - jl remember ia 158 I II L 1 fl J tSfm, u . --J I LILLIE'S J 6. ;; ii!SS3,; f FLOWER SHOP I , ii,X.' C II' i " I h 819 Wlnohoator 8tret S I , ,f I t Vjaoiii!;- V B "I? '5 I i A . '3Z3 -f M Handmade Gifts For Your Friends or Yourself . . , 2217 Harvard Open Monday .id Friday 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Wodntidoy 1 :00 to 8:30 p.m. or Ph. 444-J-4 for Appointment. LESLIE ROBERTS, 817 South Pine street, stands beside his display cases at the mineralogy exhibit held Friday and Saturday at the Junior high school. In these eases are a portion of his large col lection of semi-precious stones, one consisting in its entirety of 1000 mineral specimens and 1500 others belonging to the quartz family. His prize is a piece of Whitlockeite mineral, ona of perhaps a doien known piecos in the world. of music taught is of the hiehest type, he sain. It is composed by top Salvation Army workers i n England. Oakland, Calif., where he re sided, has a 40-pioce band, all brass, and capable of playing any type of music. Roseburg has ah eicht-piece hand, but now 18 vminT folks are learning to play, without charge. Singing groups are called "snns stcr brigades," not a choir, but the work is the same, he said. The entire program stresses work wilh young people. The wages of the Salvation Army workers are not hieh, said Lt. Madsen. Persons making con tributions can rest assured their nflrrings will he used for welfare work, and not for waces. Lots of things can ho done by hard work, he concluded. ' 'LORD GODIVA' RIDES j BF.KSTON', ENG. l.T) A 27 year old railway clerk, Dennis Harratt. rode through town today on a gelding .horse dressed only in a flowing gold wig and tights. He was Lord Goriiva in the town i pagrnt. None of the village girls could get their mothers' permission to play Lady Godiva so the town fathers gave the part to a man. SEE AMI.Z ING SEW-GEM SUZIE" PERFORM. . .SHE MAKES SEWING SO EASY. l mi t I il l i ill l l r l i l I ROSEBURG SEWING MACHINE CENTER 5'4? N. JACKSON Wedding Halted When Mother Dies In Church FORTWORTH. Tex. l.T) Death halted a weridintr herp last I ninhl - Mrs. A. E. Aikman. 51, collapsed and died in the chapel of the Riverside Methodist church ten minutes before she was to take part in the wedding of her daugh ter, Henrietta Ann Aikman, 21. The mother was chatting with her daughter when apparently stricken by a heart attack. Her husband, a son and two other daughters were in the church waiting for the wedding to begin when told of her death. ft it stays on YOU ...not on Him!. 14 11 xew: Hazel Bishop's a Amazingly Lasting Lipstick Stays On and On mii7 You take it Off! At 11 1 The irritation at nfw, lontlating, norv meat linatu'V you can put on and forget. Won't come off when you at-on diht, ftlattra, eiftarfltrt, trrlh. Won't amrar childrm, rrlativra, nil hand or awrfthrart! Vrt krfpn your lip a frfrt, colorful ai hrn firl applied! Comen off easily with toao and watrrl Mors economical 1 loii 4 to $ rtnti longttl Won't tot off brft oflf-lll f7f ft txtillnf), telrir trwt fathlnrifhl ikvdta Only '1 pita tax Everyone in the Family profits from Classified Ads G RAMPS SAYS: "I putter around o lot , . . occasion ally I need tools, garden stuff, some building material. I know that I con find it in The News Review classified ods ..." GRANDMA SAYS: "Land sakes, I buy a lot jt our food through the classified col umns. Why, you know that you can buy farm fresh produce at real savings when you shop the classified way." DAD SAYS: "Sure I read and use classified ads. Bought a car just the other day from one ... by golly and I sold the old one on short notice through o low cost classified, too." MOM SAYS: "I've found that I can sell the things we no longer use and realize enough money to buy some of the things we really need. You can quote me ... I thoroughly shop the classified ads, too.". SIS SAYS: "GolJy sakes, I read 'em all the time. Mom and dad bought my bike through one . . . and I sold my roller, skates through one . . . nd well, golly, I think every one should read 'em ond ..." Buy for less, sell for cash with CLASSIFIED ADS CLASSIFIED RATES Phone 100 ... ask for "Classified" i CHAPMAN'S PHARMACY 103 N.Jackson Phone 249 PH0HE 6B9-Y ROSEBURG J