U. of 0. Library Eugene, Oregon COMf malt 4 RE MS Death Toll Feared Heavy In British Coal Mine Blast EASINGTON, England (AP) A violent explosion entombed 79 miners early today deep in the Easington coal pit. Hours later rescuers recovered eight bodies and brought one injured man to the surface. Teams of rescuers toiled in non-stop shifts to move tons of rocks and debris shaken loose by the blast 900 feet un underground in hopes of rescuing alive the 70 men still trapped By early ifternoon rescue par- . ties had driven through more than 300 yards of debris. Mining offi cials said the coal face, where it is believed the majority of men are trapped, was another 700 yards i away. Fresh air was being forced i through neighboring seams in hopes it would filter through to the men. The violent blast blew two men clear of the tumbling debris. One i said he was lifted and tossed 60 j yards down the tunnel. Another said he was thrown 20 to 30 yards, j j j cioua oi ran ju Springfield, Ore. He came to Suth poured down the shaft, said George i '.:' ii,. . Williams, twin brother of 19-year-; n'h "' ,,,. old Matthew William, who was! Surviving are the widow. Julia, the first brought out alive. son- Wl h' oth''. The explosion caught the miners i Mrs- Minnie Apger Kimmel: just as the day shift was relieving ,nrOT sisters, Mrs. Ilia Toman, niaht workers about a mile and i Venela, Mrs. Frances Church, one-quarter from the bottom of the pit hoisting shaft. Cause of the disaster . was not known. High Death Toll Feared One of the rescue workers told reporters "it is unlikely that any of the miners still in there are alive. It was terribly hot and we got some idea of the force of the explosion." Crowds of relatives and friends waited anxiously at the pithead in a cold wind blowing off the north sea. The Bishop of Durham, Dr. A. T. T. C. Williams, and a num ber of other clergymen mingled with the anxious watchers. The Easington colliery, one of the largest in the Durham county coalfield, is 10 miles east of the city of Durham. Part of its work ings run under the North sea. In the Day's News- By FRANK JENKINS I've upoken repeatedly in these rambling chronicles of the Span iards, who were the first white men to see California and the American southwest. They were horribly disappointed. They were looking for rich cities to be looted, as Cortei had looted Mexico, and all they found was a raw, beauti ful land whose wealth had to be developed by the application of human labor to its natural re sources. That didn't interest them. They really worked hard at the job of finding rich cities to loot. Coronario. lor example, was ri.s patched fromMexico with a heav ily armed expedition to search for them. He traversed hot deserts where his men came near dyin of heat and thirst. He displayed cour age and determination of the high est order. But he found no cities. Eventually, he had to return to Mexico and confess failure. But he brought back a rich" store of fantastic tales that the Indians had fed to him. Among others I (Continued on Page 4) FARES BOOST ASKED WASHINGTON (P) The smith's major railroads 27 of them have asked the Interstate Commerce commission for a boast of ten percent in their passenger The two schools involved previ fares. ously voted in uv'or oi cousumia. Their joint petition said an in- j lion with Camas Valley and Look crease is needed to meet higher op- ingglass. but the two latter schools crating costs. turned the merger down. fRodeo Parade Plans Readied By Jaycees; Applebox Derby Entries Pouring In Rapidly Hi'irh on the Junior chamber of commerce agenda of future activity is the mid-June Rodeo parade. Monday nifrht at the semi-monthly meeting- of the group at the I'mpqua hotel, Hob Bellows, chairman of the Rodeo parade committee, reported that plans for the gala event were ready to be put into action. He reported that all floats for the j - parade will be relegated to com- ... lmA , . ,. . ...., mercial and non - commercial cat- ,ed fnr ,he ccond and third etnries. Every commercial float P'V', '2?frZ . will he charged an entrv fee of SIS ! , 'n,ry flanks for the event July No charge will be made for non-1 'J m,J,Je "'cured at the Hanson commercial floats. i M'"'"' Co. A youngster entering li .,,.. .i .t j "? 14 years of age or under. p - e of JIM wm he e.ven fV .nj I WC"rl n"d thl" b"" Jw h,H2 . . ? a ' om doub' how winning 1 'd,, :';il,:,,.",llI,1' " would affect a bo". -,...,.,.,, K,r., , j uled for the best float in the com-1 nirii-irti ami non-com mere a rale- gorr and for the best out-of-town . ' ! Still in the rodeo vein, the Jav-, cees voted to sponsor Lou Franco's iMi-nrMra ror uie ronen aances FrMay and Saturrlav niits. June 22 and 23. atoth will be held at Ken nedy'! Dutch Mill on highway 99. Derby Entries Plentiful Also on the agenda tor the near future is. the "Apolebw Derby." Chairman Bob McCarl reported entries are coming in thick o"f!i ' "rt cf ! o.f.Lial snap'aa derby depend -Uy on the -Trccess of this year s ; sponsored race. . m llisnlav at the merlin ine trophy to he awa ner and with it came an announce ment that irann ori; of S oo I v.iii go io ine winning entrant. Ad- ditional tyues of $50 an $:S are i Tractor Accident Fatal To Driver j Donald Frank Apgtr, 22, Suth ' rlin, was killtd at about S:4S ! last night whan a caterpillar ha waa operating en tha Clark Branch road naar Myrtla Craak i rolltd ovtr and crmhod him ae cording to Robart Bollows, dap- uty county coroner. He wai amployad by Sat Log ging Co. of Sutherlin. He was born Sept. 10, 19: Lebanon, and Mrs. Jane Perry Monroe. His father preceded him in death. Funeral services will be held at the Huston Funeral home in Leb anon at a date to be announced. Burial will be at Liberty cemetery in Sweet Home. The Roseburg Fu neral home is in charge of local arrangements. Gen. Vandenberg Rapped By Solon WASHINGTON (PI Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg. testifying in the senate s MacArthur inquiry, I came under sharp fire today from ! Senator Hickenlooper R-Iowa ) who declared that Vandenberg has ; been just as critical of Korean j policy as Gen, Douglas MacAr-' thur ever was. Hickenlooper said it raised the question whether Van rfnhro .hn,.lH r..i.n .., h. m. moved as air force chief of staff. Vandenberg in return denied that he had disagreed with any United Nations policy as to Korea. He acknowledged writing in a magazine article last March that U. S. air power was made just about useless "when the United Nations in an effort to avoid a diplomatic rupture with the Chi nese Communists halted offensive action at the Valu river." But he told Hickenlooper: "I was explaining a result from military action. I was not advo cating it Hickenlooper contended that! vandenberg s comments, published In i'Air Force" magazine, together with other statements he said he would produce later, were "just at critical of U. N. policy ... as anything that General MacArthur ever said." School Merger Plan Protested By Tenmile Tenmile has joined Dillard in a remonstrance against consolidation f h' 'wo districts, reports County School Superintendent Keneth Barneburg. Tenmile citizens filed the re monstrance soon after a similar action had been taken by Dillard. A vote on the question of the two school consolidation will be held June 18. f .... ,m..,lr ..,.. h,,. k. . phasized that he has been informed : .;n . 0.her mapr a,,, wfre methods of cleaning up Camp Tvee for the rmn Fire o.H .nil . ni.. for greater blood donations to he'n autopsy will be neceslary. Mere Bleod Neetjtd Irv Hujjj poiaied out that : the I list bloon received by the Red : I ros m Koseburg was flown to Portland and from there to Korea because of a desperate need for the life-giving fluid. He said t h e Ke4 Y'rosa iust can't eel kiHk.1, liluod". He asked every Javcrsv to ate when the bioodmobile ar-i,Hih "r Mr rives June 21 (JLeweit temp, far any May . Prwdinf theregular order ol HUM temp, yesterday bu,inr , D J., l.w..r temp U.r 24 Mur inralloH in th- rded the wirK'wcre: Tunv atinerlv. Io Ra- i gan. Art ;fllariT. Joe Boatwrighl. Boh Rel!m rinn c.tt.v Willi! ,iirkson. Dan Mindnlovich, "Wille y and Martin McClay. Jack Established 1873 Conferees Reach Committee's Draft Awaits Congress Vote Induction Age Reduced To I8V2 But 19.25 Group Would Be Called First WASHINGTON (-P) Advo cates of universal military training were confident today the nation eventually will get a UMT pro gram out of a compromise bill agreed upon by a senate-house committee. The group Monday worked out a draft-UMT measure under which Congress has to vote again on some aspects of UMT before the six month training program could be set in motion. The bill also would extend the draft hw for four vears and lmver the induction age from 19 to 18'S, The present act expires July 9. The new bill sets up a 5,000.000 man power ceiling on the armed forces, exclusive of the coast guard. Chairman Russell (D-Ga) of the senate armed services committee said he was confident Congress will approve the three matters which it must pass on before UMT can begin to operate. Chairman Vinson (D-Ga) of the house armed services committee said the machinery for UMT should be all ready by the end of this year. However, none of the lawmakers expect the President or Defense t department 10 iry 10 pill ine train I !" Powam into effect until after the Korean war. which broucht on the present emergency call up, eprs. The I'MT issue was the nrinc1-"! point in dispute left for the confer ees Monrijiy. Yney Kid hr?n strug gling with some 20 noiMs of dis agreement since Anril IT. What Compromise Provides The compromise requires later congressional approval, not on the training program itself, hut on three points connected with the op eration of UMT. No youth could be taken for training until Con- re "PProves proposals on: 1. A code of conduct. This In volves a system of military justice applying to trainees: it would be milder than in the regular armed services. 2. Death and disability benefits 3. Recommendations dealing (Continued on Pag 2) Tahkenitch Bears Escape, Killed Someone eoirm to have bear steaks according to Deputy Sheriff ! Cecil Bever, stationed at Reeds i port. I Hcver was called this morning to j Lake Tahkenitch resort to shoot two "tame" bears, which had es I caped Irom their cages, clawed j up the resort keeper and refused to return to the cages. The bears first escaped Monday nij;ht. but the resort keeper, Kred I B. Judges managed to get them locked up again. T h i morning, however, the bears again got out. They attacked Judges when he attempted to coax them back. The man was not badly hurt, but he had had enoueh. Fearing the animals might attack someone along the highway, ne called never to the scene. The deputy chased the animals into the brush and shot them. The bears, both females, were seven years old. They had been captured when cubs, and were a familiar sight at the resort. Drowned Man's Body Found At Reedsport The body of a man identified as Fred Arendt, a Los Angeles mail carrier, was found in a slough near the E. K. Woods mill at Reed'port today, reported Deputy Sheriff Ce cil Bever. The body apparently had been In the water about two weeks, said Bever. ft was discovered by work men akthe mill. The body is at the Unger Funeral home at Reedsport. and District Attorney Robert G. Davis is on his way there to determine. whether Arendt is reported from Los An- geles to be a week overdue from a vacation trip. An effort la being made to locate relatives. The Weather and Wednesday. HI -6: . . ' 44 45 ( 130 . 40 51 ... f.SS Precis', last 24 Murs Z'"'- ,r,m M, ' PreciB). from May 1 Precip. frem Spt. 1 Eacets frem Sept. 1 Sum feday, 1:44 p.m. Sunrise temorrew, S:37 a.m. ROSUURS. m SOUNDS OFF G.I. Joe hat it too, too good, thinks Marine Briq.'-Gen. Lewis B, ("Chesty"! Puller, who wants to "throw out the YMCA. Throw out all these girls from the camps, bet rid ot the ice cream and candy" be cause the American serviceman "has to get down to fighting," Tough General Puller, former assistant commander of the 1st marine division in Korea. sounded'otf on his return to the U.S. to train the Third marine brigade at C amp b ni r"no,"Ton' Cel. Speaker Chosen For Roseburg High Commencement Dr. Alhurey Castell. author, lec turer and chairman of the depart ment of philosophy at the Univer sity of Oregon, will give an ad dress on "Darkness at Noon" Thursday evening at Finlay field for the commencement exercises of Roseburg Senior high school'! class of 1951. Starting at S p.m.. the exercises win seeine seconn largesi class in RnCAhnra Can inf hmh stnhnnl hit. tnry 179 students receive di plomas for the completion of the high school course. George Erickson. principal of Senior high school, will present the class and Vernon Ilarpham, chair man of thedistrict 4 school board, will present the diplomas. Miss Hone Stubhs, who won ton scholastic honors m the c'i, will SALEM 7P The Pacific Tel deliver the valedictory and Gordon ' e phone and Telegraph company uimu win Bnr u.r iiinaiu. v. The processional and recessional will be handled bv Wendell John son and (Tovd Riffe. "Prelude" from "Cycle of Life" will be pre sented by the advanced girls chorus. Father Hyland will give the invocation and the Rev. Clark Robh. the benediction. A trumpet quartet will play "a Mighty Fort ress Is Our Cod." Weds His Grandfather's Widow; Own Grandpa HAGUE, Sask., & Cornel ius Fnesen. 36, married9 his grand father's widow Monday, thus be coming his own grandpa. A crowd ot more than 700 jammeu nif reiimuaiai i iiurvn hi nearhv Grunthal to witness the 1 ceremony. The bride was Mrs. Sirah Frie-, sen. 42. whose husband died a ' year ago, aged 85. Mrs Krippn was married tn her late husband her new husband a grandfather for 14 years and had one son. now 12. who was I ornel uis Fnesen's step-uncle and now becomes his step-son, too. Florida House Refuses To Impeach Governor TALLAIIASSF., Fla. (.Vi The Florida House of Representatives has refused by an overwhelming vole of 76 to 6 to vote articles of impeachment against Gov. Fuller Warren. The action of the House came less than nine hours after Rep. (;eore S Okell of Dade county 'Miami) had introduced a r'u. tion preferring 11 articles of im peachment against Warren "f o r the commission of misdemeanors in office." Drunken Driver Loses License, Fined $150 Willie Lee Stafford. 4). Rose burg carpenter, Monday was fined SI50 and his driver's iicense was suspended tor one year on a charge of driving white intoxicated, reports Municipal Judge Ira R. Riddle. Jesse Vernon Rodgers, 36, Sutherlin. forfeited S50 bail on a drunk and disorderly cnndifct charge, according to Judge Riddle. ORECON TUESDAY, MAY Accord On UMT VA Insurance Chief Resigns With Big Gripe Public Apathy Over Huge Task Impels Breining To Quit After 31 Years WASHINGTON tP) Harold W. Breining, long-time head of the world's largest insurance opera tion, quit today with a blast at apathy over "a damn big job." Breining. director of the multi billion dollar veterans' insurance program, said he is retiring as a Veterans administration's $11,200-a-year-assistant administrator be cause he is tired. He said in an interview he has not had a vacation in 12 years, has been under constant pressure and believes "I've done my part and I need a rest," Breining was 55 last Thursday. He has been directing government life insurance operations lor 31 I years, all but three of the 34 years that the government has been pro- viding life insurance benefits for curve 14 miles up the Little River servicemen and veterans. road from the Glide junction. He organized tj,e national serv-t The logs on the truck came for ice life insurance program at the 1 ward, acting like a vise, and end of World War II, as well as crushed the truck's cab and Km the veterans' loan program. i caid's chest. The truck was com- Breinine said VA has done a 1 pletely demolished, according to "damn big job which nobody ap - predates there is no proper appreciation of its volume and 1 what it means." I Public Attitude Resented Asked if the lark of appreciation was i was on the part of the public, the fCongress, the veterans or the press, Breining replied: "1 think it's shameful that the general public and everyone else is lacking in appreciation for the hard work put in by the people here. "They have worked hard and under pressure. I doubt if you could get people outside VA to riu it. They are trying to do and are doing a good job." Breining said a lack of public appreciation is harmtul to the vet. eran because "it keeps people from coming in and taking a Job with us." He said the VA -insurance di vision hired a number of good young men out of the armed furces in 1945 and 1946 but has lost 1 , good rnXitit ol ,htm. ' (Continued on Page 2) Another Boost In Rates Sought By Telephone Co. now wan s from ts customer! ah additional S3.ooo.000 a year The request for rate increases submitied to George H. Flagg, pub lic utilities commissioner brings the total amount of requested in creases lo $5,980,000. The company asked a S2.920.0O0 increase last year. It was denied. The company took the matter to court where action still is pending. In addition to the overall in crease, the company asked that rates be hiked in 13 exchanges which have more phones than when rates last were assigned. Local calls at pay stations throughout the state would increase from i lo 10 cents. There would be no change in the drfy station intra - state long dis -... ... i.v,,,pij ,.a,u, cept that on present 10 cent routes tance rale, the company said, ex- 'he allowed time would be cut from five to three minutes. There would be changes in mileage steps from 5 ' 2S cents for night and Sunday station calls as well as on person- 1 to-person long distance calls. i A- Dressier, vice president I snd general manager, cited rising j taxes and operating costs as the j reason for the rate increase re-! quest. The company reported last week that requests for increases would ( be necessary when it offered t o , raise workers' pay from 84 to M weekly. I vViM .Tite.zflf.rii m 29. 1951 SENATOR TAFT If Americans Can Bomb In Korea, Why Not Also In Manchuria? He Asks By JACK BELL WASHINGTON (AP) Senator Taft (R-Ohio) today criticized Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg-'s contention that Man churian bombing attacks would require the doubling- of U.S. strategic air power in the Far East. Vandenberg told senators Monday Gen. Douglas MacAr thur's plan to blast Chinese Ked bases and troop centers north of the Yalu river would draw into the Korean fighting planes needed elsewhere and leave the nation "naked" Death Of Truck Driver Explained State police report that the ae- eident in which Howard F Kin. caid of Roseburg was killed Mon - day, occurred when the Roseburg Lumber company logging truck he . was operating apparently traveled straight into a tree bordering a 1 state police. Kincaid was traveling south on a slignt upgrade. Mark Angel, who passed Kincaid traveling in tne opposite direction shortly before the mishap, reported lo P0'.'" "!"' d.',ec,lv "fter '"'J' , Pss, ne neara a crasn. Kincaid was born is Indepen dence, Ore., Dec. a, 190i, aiid had lived in the state most of his life. He worked for the for est service at Steamboat and op erated a cattle ranch in Davis Creek. Calif., for a short time, re turning to Roseburg in 1950. He attended both public and hieh schools in Roseburg. In 1924 he married Idcila Forward in Kla math Falls. Surviving are his widow. Idella: four sisters. Mrs. .1 Freemen, Medford; Mrs. March Brown, Lebanon: Mrs. Annah Kerby, Eu gene, and Mrs. Kay Greame, Leb anon. There are no children as re ported yesterday tn the News-Review. Funeral services will be held in the Chapel of Roses, Roseburg Funeral home, Thursday, May 31, at 2 p.m. The Rev. W. A. Mac- Arthur of the First Methodist church will officiate. Interment will follow in the Burt cemetery. Reward Offered By SP For Train Wrecker KLAMATH FALLS & The Southern Pacific railroad is offer ing a SIOOO cash reward in its at tempt to turn up the person who I tampered with a switch lo wreck an SP freight at Malone siding soutn ot nere May o A few minutes past midnight May 8 a freight bound fnr Alturas, Calif., from Klamath Falls waa shunted onto Malone siding and wrecked. A big mallet engine and 17 cars piled up. Investigators determined the switch had been rigged, signals set to show the main track open while the switch was set to divert the train on the siding. Non-Stop Solo Flight Over North Pole Begun OSLO, Norway Air liner Capt. Charles Blair started a non-stop solo flight ever the North Pole today in the converted P-Sl Mustang fighter In which he set the nen-ttep New York-te-London record last January 31. Fairbanks, Alaska, it hit des tination. Lettert he carried will be auc tioned In New York far the bene fit ef me Damon Runyen cancer fund. He said he espected to make the hep te Fairbanks in 10 heurt. 127-51 Program CRITICAL against air attacks. Taft said in an interview he was told recently by Vandenberg him - self that as many as 1,000 U. S. planes had been used in attacks on the Chinese Reds in Korea. "If they can bomb in Korea. I ! don t see why they can't fly a lit- i lle further and bomb in Manchuria or why there have to be so many mnre " "c" " ao ine joo, tan sa'd The Ohioan said he fears the military men who have opposed of Chinese Communists so battered MacArthur's proposal to blockade by the passing vehicles that they China, bomb Manchuria and u s e could hardly be recognized as hu Chinese Nationalist troops are "fol- j man beings." lowing the administration line": Bradshaw reported the task rather than expressing independent i force had rumbled across the bod- military thinking in the senatorial inquiry. i 0n tha other hand, Senator .Sparkman (D-Ala) said he doesn't ,mnk there j, iny nucstion but that president Truman's dismissal of MacArthur was justified. i ..j brieve the testimony amply shows that MacArthur could not abide by the decisions of the joint chiefs of staff, who after all were his superiors," Sparkman told re porter. "Marshall. Bradlev. Collins and Vandenberg have made a good case; in pointing nut that theirs is global resH)nsihility in contrast to MacArthur's responsibility for one theater. They have showed that they worked as a unit were in agreement on the decisions reached." Secretary of Defense Marshall, Gen. Omar N. Bradley, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, and Gen. J. Lawton Collins, army chief of ataff, all have opposed MacAr thur's program. MacArthur hat said it was his understanding that, from a military standpoint, the joint chiefs had in the past agreed with him. Supposed Corpse sks Officers For Cigaret WHITTIER, Calif. (Pi Ever have a dead man ask you for a cigaret? Reaching an automobile wreck. Patrolmen Joe Wilton and Ben Gomes found William Fryer, 35, lying ttill betide hit overturned car. They could detect no heartbeat, ne pulse. Totting a blanket over Fryer, they called far an ambu lance. Then the blanket ttirred. Fryer tat up and atked: "Any body got a cigaret?" He only had a bump en hit head. United Presbyterians Will Meet In Oregon DKS MOINES (Pi The United Presbyterian church will hold its general assembly in Ore gon next year for the first time in 57 years. Delegates voted at the closing session of this year's assembly lo t will deliver the welcome and the hold the 1952 meeting at either! Rev. Raymond Srhacfer will give Portland or Albany, Ore. ! the invocation. The Rev. Father The 1952 assembly city will be ; Edmund Hyland will give the ben designated at a July meeting of ediclion. the Columbia eynod. Oregon dele-: gates to the assembly here argued that holding the general assembly in Oregon will do much to counter act the synod's isolation. General Loses Command For Unsatisfactory Job TOKYO lP) The V. S. Far East air force says Brig. Gen. Luther W. Sweetaer has been re lieved as commanding general of me s.i-ik. iiKm nuiiiiigiiinieiii wuijt because he "was unable to achieve the maximum combat potential'' from his wing. Eddie Cantor Hospital Patient; Has Rupture NEW YORK (P Eddie Can tor haa entered Doctors hospi tal for treatmeat of a ruptured blond vessel in a vocal cord. Officials said the 58 year old Comedian woij remain in the hos p.tal abouiten days. ICE WORSE HOLLYWOOD -i-A-li Fanny Brice, 59-year-old comedienne who suffered a cerebral hemorrhage last Thursday, has taken a turn! for the worse, and physicans indi-1 rated that death might be only a I matter of hours. I Small Scale Bitter Fights Now Raging Previous 4-Day Battle Cost Chinese 18,000 Men In Two Divisions By OLEN CLEMENTS TOKYO .Pi Communist troops fighting stubbornly from their own hills today slowed the United Na tions advance into Red Korea. Two Chinese divisions w e r wiped out in a four-day battle on the central front, south of the 38th parallel. The U. S. Eighth army said the Chinese lost 18,000 men killed, wounded or cap tured in the single battle. Smaller, but equally stubborn fights raged across Korea north of 38. Allied troops were held to limited gains. Stiffest action was in the center of the peninsula where U. N. troops tried to seal off all Hwachon reservoir. South Korean troops were strung along the south bank of the res ervoir about four miles east of the damsite. U. S. marines were on the western end. American in fantrymen fighting through strong opposition gained one mile Tues day in their drive to reach its eastern end. Inje Scene Of Horror A delayed and heavily censored dispatch from AP correspondent Tom Bradshaw said a powerful U. N. task force bogged down 1 Monday northeast of Inje. 'Allied casualties in Inie itself were heavy." Bradshaw reported. Reds poured sporadic fire from the surrounding hills into the town "A leveled area of mud huti interspersed with dead Chines and horses." "The ungodly smell of dead flesh," hung oven Inje. "and along the streets of the town lay bodies : ies in the night "with dull crunch ing of human hones. Reds lining the hills northeast of the town slowed the tanks to a crawl with a series of road blocks and heavy mortar and automatic weapon fire, and finally halted it. Other armored units ran into the same trouble as they headed northwest toward Yanggu, 10 miles away on the end of Hwachon res ervoir. The Allied counterattack hid pushed the Reds back 30 to 40 inilca. U virtually wiped out gain the Communists made in two cosily spring oflcnsives. The Reds, by Eighth army estimates, paid ne."ly 150,000 casualties lor those temporary gains. The navy announced that block ading warships have killed or wounded more than 9.200 Reds in their siege of Wonsan, now in its fourth month. Naval guns also were credited with knocking out 79 ammunition and supply dumps. 615 buildings, 345 vehicles and 115 1 railroad cars. I Memorial Day Program Readied Memorial day will he observed in Roseburg Wednesday with a memorial service at the Veterans hospital grounds. After the serv ice, a parade will be conducted as far as the bridge on the grounds with the various veterans' organ izations represented among the marchers. The Rev. W. A. Mac Arthur will be the principal speaker in the service which starts at :30 a.m. Navy mothers and Spanish American war veterans will drop wreaths onto the water in mem ory nf navy dead and the group will then march to the cemetery, where Gold Star mothers will place wreaths at the tomb of tha unknown aoldier. Ray Lynes of the Disabled Amer ican Veterans is general chairman of the program which is being sponsored by a joint committee of veterans' organizations of Rose burg. "Frosty" Holmes is parade marshal and Mayor Albert G. Fle gel will be master of ceremonies for the program. In the formal service, Dr. John Hnskins of the Veterans hospital CYCLIST INJURED Samuel J. Robeson, 24. motor cycle operator from Coos Bav, was injured Sunday on highway 42 near lamas Valley when he drove into the ditch to avoid hitting a car. Robeson was traveling with I group of cyclists going to Medford. lle sustained a broken leg and was taken to Douglas Community hos pital, where his condition is re- ; poi ted tn be fairly good. , . ; LARCENY CHARGE FACED An armed couple, wanted by slate police at Roseburg in connec tion with a grand larceny easy, was aiWsted Saturday nicht by Lane county Sheriff C. A. Swarts at Eu gene. He slopped David Lee Avis, 2.1. and his wife. Kathleen. 22, as ,' j they drove into Eugene Irom the south. Levity Fact Rtfnt By L. F. Reizensteln The Iron Curtain may ulti mately havt a companion In an kjm Clftul... done In ell.