t C The Newt-Review, Hoieburg, Ore. Wed., Jan. 10, 19S1 Local News Te Install Offictrt ' In.sialla tbn of officers will be held by Pythian Sister Thursday nignt at 8 o'clock at, the KP hall. To Meet Thurtday l.adiM of the Elko are ask'd to meet at 6 o'ciock Thursday niKht at the torn Pie. Improving Jfs. S. I.. Dilhrd la reported improving at her heme en Pitier sleet, Roseburg, 'oliow in? the last several days of being 111. , , . Misting Announced The l.ezy Daisy club will meet at 11 a. m, Thursday at Uie home of Mrs. Hob. rrt Pinard. Election of officers will be held Te Meet Women of the Rose burg Coun'ry club will meet it a 12:30 o'clock luncheon Thursday at the clubhouse. Contract bridge will begin at 1 o'clock. Club Te Meet The Nort.nide Sunshine club will meet Thurvlay afternoon at the home of Mis. R. D. Parson, Third and H.)llis streets. Missionary Society Te Mett The Garden Valley Missionary so ciety will meet Thursday at 2 c'ciock at the home of Mrs. J. C. Ouihrie. Te California Mrs. Hctlie Mon roe will leave Roseburg Thursday to motor to Antioch, Calif., where ane will visit for two weeks with friends. lo Have Blood Typed Mem here of Alpha lota chapter. Beta Sigma Phi, and their husbands are asked tn so to the second floor of th. Veterans hospital Thursday night between 6:.10 and 8 oclo'k lo have their blood typed. woman s socitrv 10 moor me Woman's society of the First Prs-1 bylerian church mil meet at a 1:30 o'clock desr.ert luncheon Thursday in the church parlors A program and businers meeting will follow. To Have Card Party Melrose Grange will sponsor a card party Saturday, Jan. 3, beginning at 8 p.m., at the hall. The public is in vited. Pinochle and canasta will be played. Members are asked lo bring their own tables and cards. At Woods Homo Mrs. Charlea B. Slallsmiuji of Seattle is visiting her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. William Woods, and her niece and husband. Mr. and Mrs, Alex Lynas. Mrs. Stallsmith Is on her way back to Seattle following a 2'-month trip through the east and south. Guild To Meet Forsylhe guild will meet at 8 o'clock Thursday Slight at the home of Miss Iter 'rude Rast, 454 N. Stephens itr.-et. All business and professional women of tiie Presbyterian cluirch lire invited. Son Born Word has been re ceived that a aon, James lrvin Meyer, has been born to Mr. ami M-s, Maurice Porter of Junction City. Mrs. Porter Is the former Ruth Meyer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Meyer of Roseburg. Purchases Homesite Mr. and Mrs. Prentice Card have pur chased a five-anrl-one-half acre homesite east of Sutherlin from Jessie Cooper. They plan to build a home there in the near future. MMtlnos Resumed The Dis abled American Veterans aux iliary meetings will he resumed on the serond and fourth Thursday of each month. The next meeting will he Thursday, Jan. 11, at 7:45 p.m., in the basement of the armory. All members are asked to attend.' Return From Mexico Mr. and Mrs. K. D. I.yll.; and "on, Richard, have returned tn their Laurel wood home from a trip south during the holidays. They visited in F.nsenada, Mexico, as well as San Diego and Hollywood, Calif. Upon Iheir re turn to Roseburg, Richard Lytle left for Corvallis, where he is a junior in the civil engineering de partment at OSC. He is a member of the Phi Kappa Pai fralernily. Return From Tour Mr. and Mrs. Harold Horn and son, Dallas, returned to Roseburg Sunday, fol lowing an extensive trip through Idaho, Nevada, Colorado and Ari zona. They visited with relatives i Twin Falls, Idaho, before pro ceeding on to Salt Lake. They spent some time at the World s largest open copper mine at Bing ham, Utah, and drove nut amongst a herd of wild buffalo near Lees Ferry. Also on their itinerary were Bryce and Grand canyons, Boulder and Roosevelt dams and various Indian ruins. They visited at "Death Valley" Scolty's caslle and stopped briefly at Las Vegas and Hrnn, Nev., on their way back to Roseburg. Civilian Defense Measure Passed At Canyonville An ordinance establishing a civil defense organization and declaring an emergency was passed unani mously Wednesday night at a spe cial meeting of the Canyonville city council. ' Councilman C. E. Parker was appointed as civil defense director, and as such, will organize ami ad minister the organization for the communities assigned to Canyon ville in collaboration wijji state and federal plans, and through mu tual aid agreements. Assistants Appointed Parker appointed two deputy di rectors. They are Charles E. Wil liams and Joe Walker Sr., both of whon gained experience In de fense wor.( during Wonvl War 11, Williams appointed George Binder and Police Chief Ted Nimmo as his assitant directors. Binder will have charge of health, welfare and shelter departments. Chief Nimmo will direct law enforcement, plant protections and fire services. Nimmo has been instructed to im mediately start the formation o f an auxiliary police force. Walker has not yet appointed his Iwo assistants who wilfhave llirect supervision over air raid warnings, block wardens, rescue service, training supplies and communica tions. Headquarters for the oraan Nation will he at the police station. Parker requests the cooperation of every citizen. The organization will he effective not only in time if actual war, but during floods, fires or any other disasters, Parkct emphasized. First County Porks Board Starts DuiJJs (Continued From Page One) REAL LIFE DRAMA TOKYO tPt Kenii Uesugi woke up in a resort holel to find a thief had taken all his clothes. In his mat was a reserved seat theater ticket. With a detective, llesugl went lo the fametl Kahuki theater of Japa nese slage classics and there found the thief in Uesugi'i aeat and Ue sugi'a coat. Russians Get Trimmed News Of Truman's Talk MOSCOW I.V Pravda In- day gave Russian readers th.ir fir.'t news of President Truman's stale of the nation speech in less than 200 words. Two days ago the Communist oprtv organ printed more than 1,500 words on Sen. Robert A. Tali's Jan. 5 speech criticizing U. S. foreign policy. The U. S. President. Pravada said, devoted the "significant part" f his messace to "nonsensi-j cal charges of 'Soviet imperial-1 ism' and the 'threat of .eizure of i the whole world by Soviet Rus sia.' " Olherwise. said the newspaper, Truman called for flutter niiluar ization in the United Stales, lax increases lo cover war expendi tures and broadening of laws on military service. VAGRANT JAILED Albert Clark Hawkins, San Francisco. Calif., "truck driver," was committed for 10 days in the city jail in lieu of a $20 fine on a vagrancy charge Munici pal Judge Ira B. Riddle reported. The Naval Academy at Annapo lis was established in 1845. iQnager of the Nonh Bend cham ber of commerce, met with the parks board and county court rela tive to joint dev!opment of the Eel lake recreational area. Thia rroperly now is held by the Mate Game commission hut a plat is under consideration to dedica'e the UikI, located on the Douglas nan border lo Ihe public, permu'ing development and management of recreational facilities by the count ies Also appearing in support of the development were Jack Diehl. Keedsport, and Leonard Tnlaian, Winchester Bay, wh i with Taylor, a member of Ihe park board, rep resent the Lower Umnqua clum ciation formed recently to pro mole the Eel lake project. The meeting also was attended l y Ernest .'eaton. Drain, president of the Umpqua Basin Conservation ouncil, County Commissioner R. G. Baker, and Charles V. Stanton, editor of the News-Review. A no-host dinner at the Umpqua hotel preceded the business .os-sion. Dare To Woman 1 Leads To Arrest Of Bank Robber - SEATTLE UP) A 48-year-old ex-convict, who dared a woman to call the police, has been arrested lor the armed ro'ibery of a Seattle hank, special agent J. B. Wilcox o' the F.B.I. said. A warrant charging Walter Hugo Schramm, 48, San Francisco, with the $2,0flfl robbery of a branch of Ihe Seattle F'rst Nation: I Bank Nov. 21 was filed with U. S. Com missioner John A. Burns here. Schramm was arrested earlier in the day in Miami, Fla. Wilcox gave this account of the arrest: Schramm was drinking with a woman in a Miami tavern. He boasted to her the F.B.I. was seek ing him and challenged her in nolify the officers. Then he left the tavern. . The woman watched Schramm cnler a hotel a few floors away. Then she called the FBI. When Ihe officers appeared at his holel room, Schramm re marked: "Oh, she called you, did she? I didn't think she would." Wilcox said Schramm confessed the Seattle .robbery. He said Schramm has served sentences for extortion and burglary at the Mr- Neil island and San Quentin fed eral penitentiaries. After Ihe robbery, Schramm was reported to have taken a bus lo ne; rby Everett, Wash., where he bought new rlolhing and a bus ticket toSan Francisco. The postwar United Nalions Or ganization was plannetl at the Dumbarton Oaks Conference 1 n 1344. Kiwanians' New Officers Seated Thomas Thcoson, Kiwanis lieutenant governor of district 15, installed four new officers and seven directors at the Roseburg Kiwanis club's regular Tuesday noon meeting. In an address Receding the in stallation ceremony, Thompson de scribed the rapid gfov.th of the club in the past year. He said the club will soon observe its 3Rth 'an niversary. Since Kiwania Interna tional v.m, founded, Thompson said, it has grown int,o a construc tive service organization with more than .120 clubs throughout the Oniled States and Canada.. Thompson, a Redmond Kiwanis club member, reported the organ ization gained 4.000 new members in 19.0 and 1.15 new clubs. He said the organization hopes to add two more clubs in Oregon's district 15 in Ihe coming year. Hi;h school K"y clubs, sponsored by Kiwanis all over the nation, added 128 new clubs in Ihe past year. Thompson said. New officers installed for the term were: James B. Slatlery, president: NaJ I). Johnson, first vice-president: Homer Grow, sec- one vice-president, and Gordon Stewart, tr surer. Directors installed for Ihe )!)."! term were: Paul Barrus, Earl Blcile,- Homayne Brand, Ken Bushey, Lee Butler, Harry Hill and (icorge Neuner. Bootleg Whiskey Caught In Upward Price Spiral ' BALTIMORE (JPi B.iolleg y hisky has been caught in the up ward spiral of thn price of "con sumer goods." United States Treasury agent W. T. Benson says Here the current price for the five j.illon economy rize is $33 50. A like amount of powerful old character huildec hold for US to f'i last Feluuary, Benson say.i. "And," Mr, Benson points out, "thai $33.51) price applies in anilh ein Maryland. On the eastern shore it's even higher." Capture Still Evaded By Bill Cook, Desperado ALBUQUERQUE. N. M. - IJPI The hunt for Bill Cook, the lu- i j sive Daaman suspected of gi'iing ' ei?lit persons, centered in New I f.iexico todav. . I But officers conceded Iheir ef- 1 fots were no more productive than those in numerous other .1 cas i j w.ure the 24 yea -old ex-convict reportedly has been sighted. I Described as short and itueky, j with the word "hard" tattooed on -ne hand. Cook has been variously re.icrted also in California, Texas, ! Oregon, OkUhoma, Kansas and! Mexico. Feur-Pover Union Urged On Truman BOSTON (VP) A group of Massachusetts civic leaders has urged President Truman to take the lead in organizing an Atlantic union of the United States, Britain, France and Canada. They said in a letter to the President that "alliances are not enough we need union." "Federation," they added, "can be a dramatic, clfectivc answer lo the present crisis." Among the signers were former Secretary of the Navy Charl-s Francis Adams, Karl '1. Common, chairman of the hoard of the Vas. s.iciiusells Ins.itute of Technology; President Wilbur - K. Jordan of R arid if (e college and President Margaret Clapp of Wellesley col lege. "The nation you lead is stronger today both in hody and in spirit than at any other time in history," the letter said. 'M:spite snr.'ice quarrels, ils people are being united in 'heir response to the present crisis. "Our cause is just, our morale is firm, and we are ready to do our job. But we face a hostile coalition of immense size and power, and we can rreet 'I effec tively only by uniting with the forces of democracy abroad." School Union Talk Without Action School consolidation for dis tricts south of Roseburg was the subject of a meelinf at the Dillard school house Tuesday evening. Dr. Carl Huffaker, author of the Huffaker report on. the central Dou?ias county school prohlc.n, presided over the meeting. Member.-, of the nillarri and Green school hoards attended the hearing as well as interesled parents. No direct action resulted from the joint meeting. County School Superintendent Kennelh Barneburg will be the featured speaker at the Melrose school bousr? Thursday at s P.m. The public meetire was called by lh 'Melrose, board lo discuss con solidation. Consolidation will' also be the subject of a public meeting tn be held at the Wilbur school Tues day. Jan. 16. Residents from the Wilbur and Winchester school dis tricts are urged to attend the ;.ear in". Barneburg will lead the con solidation discussion. Res'dents if the Deer creek community will discuss school con solidation Friday evening in the Deer Creek school at 8 o'clock. Members attending are asked t o bring pies and their own silverware. Price Controls Now Would Be Mistake, Senator Says WASHINGTON t.P Seitor Aiken said today price controls on meat or any other food at 'his lime would create shortages and Ifenerally be "a Dad mistake.' The Vermont senator, senior Re publican on the s"nate agricul ture committee, said food prres "are not generally at a level that warrants controls." Increases which have occrired during the last few months have been caused at least in part "by 1 IV administration constant mms that price control is coming," Ai ' ken said. ' STATE POSTS FILLED SALEM t.T) Heiry S. How ard, Eugene, has been appointed by Governor McKay to the-state w'nge and hour commission. . Arthur D. Hughes Corvallis, ivas named to the state board of engin eering examiners. He is prolessor uf mechanical engineering at Ore ton State college. c. Facial ' El B-x n r m a mm mm mt IIIUIVIIwi' ii.. ...i4 Retinnl external'. i.". --- -:- -Soap cleansing, nd soothing Resinol Ointment for irritated pt, does a world ef good 1 COLLISION DAMAGE SMALL Adrian Claude Wright and Jack Robert Fulmer, both of Roseburg, were involvd in an automobile col lision Monday, Chief of Police Cal vin Baird reports. According tn Baird. Fulmer col- lided with Writht as he was leav iing the Pre-Mix cement plant, j Wright w-as driving east oo F.ast 'Second Ave. South, when Fulmer i hit hitn. Damage tn both cars was slight and no citation was issued, Baird reported. Six Of Family Perish As Fire Sweeps Home COLFAX, Wash. - (P) Six persons burned to death early to day in a fire that swept the Rob ert Walker home. Police Chief Joe Dyesenroth said Mis. Walker, her four small -hil-dren, and Mrs. Walkcr'a brother, Gene Meyer, 18, died, in the fire. The husband was severely burned. 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