Tha OnTGCIJ STATESMAIl, Sclera, Oregon. Friday Moniing. Jcoaucry 31, 1S41 PAC3 TITUS i 5 r .: British Drive For Next Goal Strong Resistance Froni Italians ' Expectfed . on New Line :: r .'"! (Continued From Page X ) ' hare been able toward the end to ' withdraw westward, : but' of - this there ' was no -positive confirma tion. -..- ; " . ..- . . - Aa Italian bigh command re-'- port that British forces had ; been repulsed on. the northern and southern ends of the Erit rean front was coupled' with - warnings from a fascist editor lal spokesman that united. axis '', blows would strike Britain ' In - time to. make any VR aid futile. " -''The Italian and . German, ipeo : pies are resolved not. to let them selves give way to British capital ism, even If It appeals to the other side, said GlovamiUAnsaldo.ed r ltor of - Foreign . Minister Galeas- so Clano a Telegraof. In the aerial battle .of Britain, German bombers stabbed at Lon- ; don, Dover 'and . other southeast towns and the east midlands In the Eeaviest daylight raids of sev- era! weeks." '.f ! V'.'". : - German Fliers Attack ' ; Povert Balloon Barrage i Dover's balloon barrage was at- tacked by German fighters which I ehot down several of the big bags in names. Three - alarms wej . sounaea in Lonaon, wnere some bouses, shops and officers quar lera next to a hospital rpnckllh .,; Hfjuick ,tbe prevloui the German naval " bas ers next to a hospital were re- British said previous night at base of Wil- belmshaven and other northwest ern German towns. - Greek warriors, on the drive again after beating off a week of fierce Italian counter-attacks, were reported Thursday night to have wrested new positions from the fascists in the rugged Albanian mountains north of Klisura. : Military advices said the , Greeks, pausing only long; enough to pledge themselves to a fight unto death at brief front line memorial services for their dead leader. Premier General John Metaxas, lashed out with such fury that the Italians were torced to abandon their own counter-thrusts and withdraw hastily to new positions. On the home .front, the new government headed by Alexandres Korizis, began functioning while the mourning Greek populace paid tribute to General Metaxas, who died Wednesday. Thousands stood for hours Thursday In the rain in front of Athens cathedral for an opportu nity to file past the bier of the little dictator-premier. All public places will be closed .during the funeral Friday, and the government forbade, the broad ! Casting: of music until after ..the ' services. The national youth administra ; tion began the collection of funds to erect a monument honoring bim. ' BacSielpr; pomaih Razed by Flames MONMOUTH Fire of unknown erigin late Wednesday afternoon swept the bachelor domain of four .men students of Oregon College of Education. -James O'Connor, Lou Mason and Cbet Hogan, all of St. Helens, and Merrill McKefn, Mt. Vernon, lost all clothing ex cept what they were wearing, also . three radios and other possessions. ' The house belonged - to Edith Clark, local high school instructor and was Insured. Fines Levied Against Speed Violators WEST SALEM Osborn Lee Allison was fined $5 January 27 for violating the basic speed law. Elmer G. Fuson of Aumsvllle was arrested January 26 for hav- - ing defective headlights and no tall light. He was fined $1.50. Spelling Scores Made ' UNION HILL Children In the , Union Hill school who. have made 7 perrect , scores in spelling are f- Marjorle Tate, Leonard Seeley, . Donald Peters, Bertha Morley, Charles Morley. Rollin Heater, Patty Heater, Edna Morley, Guy Scott and Laurence Green. I itrr i'Hiv . . . i; i Dissenter - 1'- - 1 7 f IZanford MacNlder ' - Unsuccessful contender for the . Republican, presidential nomlna-; tion last June, Hanford MacNlder ; ' of Mason City, . la, la pictured aa he testified as an opposition wit ness to the lend-lease bOl before!" the house foreign affairs commit-j tee In Washington. MacNlder. M former assistant secretary of war, " " described the bin as 'a direct cuttllng' of our form of govern- tnent and betrayal of the Amert- ' '" " can people.'' " diioitUH'tii 1. . ... . ! , : -I i,.-.. - Union Oil Dealers Learh Proposals ft For'4X Ad 'More than 75 dealers arid thered Thursday, night Jn the Marine room of the Marion hotel to gain first hand knowledge of the proposed 1941 ad vertising schedule of the Union Oil company, stressing the "Minute Man" service.. : - ;ii.w- -:-w j- fijj , '-: District Manager C. L. Brown of Salem presented Mr. ::: ,'- ':- "'" -' ' "" 1iimisTila ' " ' ...ssnnnnnnnsanni Sen. Dorothy McCullough Lee, who will speak at the Ladles' : day luncheon of the Salem Recti- ' ty board today at the Quelle. ; "Our Legislature" is her topic Mrs. Winnie Pettyjohn, vice president of the board, will ' preside. . . " " 0 d dill oo ...in thm Nte$ SPOKANE ;-(Jpy Spokane's mo bile police force staged an immo bile, unscheduled parade recently and all because two sealous prowl car officers took a short-cut when answering a hurry call.' Their machine sank to the hubs and a second prowler sent to the rescue bogged down Just as hope lessly. A third police car dashed to the scene and Dromntlv gat in line. A city Truck rumbled out to free and merely changed it to a foursome. The biggest truck in the city service finally managed to yank out the four stuck-in-the-muds while headquarters was broad casting information that the hurry call was only a false alarm. PORTLAND-(p-A noisy, mean rnesus monkey clambered over trees and rooftops In the south east section recently defying ea ger small boys to catch him. The monkey escaped from a con signment of six to the Oregon Bio logical supply company. The com pany offered a small reward kids in the neighborhood said theyd rather hare the monk but he remained free to curse Ore gon "s chill rain. PORTLAND-jP)-A motorcyclist wun an uncontrolled desire to turn in fire alarms is sought by Portland police. Two false alarms, called, out equipment one night. The next night there were three more, each 20 minutes apart. Witnesses said they saw a mo torcyclist turn in two of them and officers estimated that it took the fellow 20 minutes to find another box. HASTINGS-ON-HUDSON, NY (JPy-A cannon-ball fired by the Redcoats in the Revolutionary war is going back to Britain with an American's request that it be modernized and "fired again in a better cause." "For the purpose of adding one more shot in the heroic fight Britain is making," said Hamil ton Cochrane in sending it to the Namesake Towns Committee. He asked that it be sent to Britain and made into a projectile or bomb. The cannon-ball had been an heirloom in Cocbrene's fsmily for generations. The British fired it In the battle of Monmouth. After the battle Jt was found lodged in tne wan oi a cnurch near Freehold. NJ.- NEW YORK-iip)-Mrs. Rachel Weinberg, 64, often wondered where her next meal would come from. She was the deserted wife of Joseph Hyman Weinberg, a beggar and scavenger ' who left her and their daughter 18 months after their marriage in 1912. Weinberg, 64, died January 2 In the unheated rear of a junk store. A candle furnished the on ly light. His body was found on a battered bed without mattress. Scattered about the room were piles of old rags, hardware and junk. Investigators1 cleaning up the place found five bank books showing total deposits of $26, 098.60. That money was turned over to Mrs. Weinberg and her married daughter after they had proved their relationship to Wein berg, Indian Chief Burial Set r MISSOULA, Mont., Jan. 30- -Chief Martin Chariot, 84-year-old head of the Selish Indians and grandson of the chief who greeted Lewis and Clark in 1804, will be buried among his ances tors in the foothills . near Arlee Friday. Chariot died at his home on the Flathead Indian reserva tion yesterday.- any rem SUSPECT CAUSE GFDlCIlilCIIES : This Old Treatment Often -. Brings Happy Relief . " Tprlih- frnhej ilm ii im lht Unrl im f their travbto Boar b tirad kidneys. vrwuo do una BKuays. Tb kidneys aro Natnra'a chief wmy of tslt- Ins thm txetmm xritU pd WMf out etth blood.' i bfybekp mot paopla paas about3 pints s day. wbea fliaordar of kidaay funetioa parmita fnaaonooa anMtcr to ram sj a la your blood. : aaay can mMgftnt bagliacha. rbaaaaab iwuia. tec .paina, aoaa of pmp and OMnry, i tinm ip Bichta, awellinc. txiffinaai mader eyaa. acadaeoaa and riniiaaaa. lYatj'jent want Manures with amartina: sod buraiac aotnatimaa abowa then is aairrnlhinf; wrosg itk your kadnrya or btmddcr. - - - .. . Dna't wmit.1 Amir iiruiiU T Pilla, oMd nmaahUy by miiuona for onr 40 r; ffcr rrwa aappr reiirf aad will kelp too raw of iuney iuw ouaa cm pmaoaoi waste froas yoamjilood, Oct, JDoaa 2'UaK service station oreratorV tn- . vjec 5erg, me, cu vision manager for . Union OIl from eattle, who presided as master of ceremonies who In J.ur$ introduced thd speak ers of the evening. ' - . fi :. ' ;; Those included on the program were' Jack : Smock, representing the Lord A Thomas " advertising agency" of 'f Los "Ang'eie'f ' w b i h handles " the Union Oil , company advertising throughout" the coast al area r Mr. T. 'Stromberger assistant advertising manager f or Union Oil from! Los Angeles; and Mr. -W. A.- Newhomm," director of sales from the Los Angeles; office.' Mr.' Stromberger 'presented a brief graphic outline of the entire forthcoming campaign :; including enlargements of all newspapers, magazine, and outdoor poster' ad vertisements. Stromberger j. point ed out that the proposed scebdule tor 1941 called, for additional ap propriations, for newspaper space over the 1940 schedule. Mr. Newhoff presented a bait hour sound motion picture entit led "Selling America" i of which the theme was based upon com parative selling In the days of Ben Franklin and the present era. Newhoff concluded the meeting with a brief address , stressing the forthcoming campaign. Musical entertainment j before and daring the 'dinner was fur- rnlshed by Jack Aronson, former pianist with Ted Lewis' orchestra. Regular 15c Coal or Dress Flowers Reduced to! C ! Cement-on rinbbcr Soles Save on Shoe Repair Hills I. AH Sizes -J&P Coats'f Ilercerized Thread; 40-SO or 60 c spool Slight ' Irregulars Rubber Gloves 'Special! r 2 Regular 20 Cent i Tubes rColgate's") Tooih Pasle (40c Vaiue)K . BOTII FOR: v Regular lOeJS. "Culex" IIaU Polishes sose-out)' yRegIar lOiv Si encgrapher X Holes I Reduced toj J (Close-out)L 59tifBirtIidayf i Is Celebrated Says Americans Happier ' ; Because "We're Slill ; - ; Free People" ..(Continued I From Page'll pier than" they would otherwise be .'because all of us are living under a' free"; peoples' .; philoso phy t -; -jr:.-i v - rit Is not only that the UghU of peace blase in -our great , . cities and slow in our towns - and : Tillages thai f laughter " Vand music still- ring lout- from r roast to .coast "-that wer will 'j i return to safe beds tonight, '.. r'flt'w'BOt tha(.w:feel no con cern for the plight of free, peo ples' elsewhere in" the world; that we do . not hope that 'i they - may Continue the freedom " Of ' their governments and their ways of life in , the days to come. . - "It is v because we believe in and insist on the right of the -helpless and the,. weak and the crippled-everywhere to play their part In life-and survive.. . - "It is -because we knbw in stinctively that : this right of the unfortunate comes under, our free peoples' philosophy from the bottom up and can never be im posed from the top down." Mr. Roosevelt, beside making the radio talks, cut one of his seven birthday cakes at the 18th annual reunion of the "Cuff Links Boys!' at the White House, while thousands from coast to coast made merry that handi capped children might be hap pier. Salem contributors the mm AY -and SATURDAY OIILY! Stamped I PILLOW CASES 'Peppereir'Brand . ! Another specinl offering of these fine quality cases for Just 2 days. Don't miss this opportunity to save! ' Full' Fashioned HOSIERY 3-thread silk chiffon with rayon pi cot top. Newest of flat tering spring shades. Lacy Hanlries Sheer comb ed lawn with V I c t o rlan lace corners. A lovely gift for a lady. Paper "Pretties" for the Valenline Pariy SO Fancy 10c Xapkins 30x36" Table Cov- f g g er and 4 Napkins X J ' Snapping Bon Bona Crepe Paper, 10 fU pkg. ... 2 for 5c 10C VALENTIIIES each for for each Pert or pretty . . cute or I "corny" . ; . we've got all the. good old. favorites; and lots and lots of new ones! Come, look 'em I over. - , : - ... : hi-;ir?oj.oiLijijA.K: 133 HO: 'mttiMLWMSi. - - -BBiif vfe : SM!S 0OEG9I? march of dimes for the Infantile paralysis fund were led Wednes day night at the armory in the grand march of the president's birthday ball by : Governor and Mrs. Charles A. Sprague. During th e: intermission ' Secretary of State' Earl Snell cut the birthday cake. ': Flare and flourishes,- usually added to by the presence of color ful ! uniforms of naval . and army officers, were held to a minimum becau se of , the - aetly e . participa tion of Salem officers in military service. However," gown's of the women were as brilliant as ever. Food Sale Slated By Junioromen ' . SILVERTON Nlta Gower . has been; made treasurer , of . the: Sli ver jon Junior ; .Woman's , club . to Replace Mrs. ' Milb 4 Grace,' who re signed when she .moved out of town, and a food . sale is planned at Alta's Beauty shop for Satur day mornings . - .. I- The . next meeting of the club is being announced for' February 10 at the home of Mrs.' I, L. Stewart. $ Club members will- model bath ing suits In the' .Women's club hobby show, set tor February 13, and: will furnish a number' for the parent-teacher . 'association . Jam boree being planned for late February. 1 British Answer Hitler NEW YORK, Jan. 30-JP)-The British Broadcasting corporation. In a German-language broadcast Thursday night, gave the "British people's answer" to Adolf Hitler's speech by predicting that the "free peoples of Britain and America will; fight this war to the bitter end.' to force the German people Vto throw off the Basis.'! Special! S0P5 Costume Slip Of rayon " panne satin wit h lace brassiere, top. Soft tea rose. - iiEcrmES C o nservative ftyles or bold, right pat terns. The tie he will like Is bere. Chocolate C " - C jj 1 HEARTS 3 for WW - I Box Valentine' 4 C I I CHOCOLATES -1 y . I Y VALENTINE CANDY ; - AngeP V ; . HEARTS 10c V Willlde Speed Schedule V I Has Good Time - Drawing . Beer nd 'Playing - i Darts With : Men LONDON,4 Jan. 3 1-1 Friday)- -Ambulance and fire stations will be studied at first hand tonight by Wendell L. Willkle, who '-came here to see for himself , how bad ly Britain needs United States aid for her war effort.-. Willkle. said he would, leave for the provinces Sunday , night or Monday, going to Coventry. Man Chester, ; Sheffield . and Birming ham if possible,, and would start for home the middle of next week. .The American said this curtail ment or his visit had nothing to do with getting borne to - testify on? the aid-to-Britain bill.' ? x When Willkle was informed that. Senator Gerald P. Mye, isola tionist leader.- had said "he : ought to be beard. Willkle said he would be) "delighted" to appear at the United '"States , senate committee hearing on the bill. . C "As -1- said before , I, left ' the United -States! am perfectly will ing to testify before the house of senate committee at any time," he. commented. "In faci Td like to." ' Willkle made an unescorted call on London's man-ln-the-street and the man-ln-the-pub Thursday, drinking and talking with "the boys" and playing a losing game of darts. Harry Phillips, proprietor of the saloon where Willkle played darts with an idle laborer,- broke out a bottle of. champagne, 1929 vin tage, to celebrate the visit. '..' The man who beat Willkle . at darts looked happy and aston 1 .v.r. Study a r m m A a M m ICS! -i i r Hi rataXPS i.. Extra Large 22x44w TURKISH BATH TOWELS Regular 10c Flowered WASH CLOTHS Only! Ixose Leaf Note Book Fillers 5c 50 sheets, marginal rnled. S by 10 U in. Two holes. Tablels 75 shct tablet, 8x10 In. . Use for pencil work. jMaybelline Ilascara ;.: aoc Complete 'with brash. Jergens Lolica 2L0c Keeps . skin soft and lovely. r Lady Either Cold Crean ,ll(Q)c : Excellent for dry --skins. -. sWaaaeSSSie W PBC" iiaHai M Mil , hi , Irresistible " Pcrfxme : 2L0C A tantalising fra grance. . t -. . - ished., -f r- - - - - "Blimey! - I'm - going all Inter-3 national," be said. : WClkJe said later his opponent ; was "too gpod.0 -.::' ; v '-; t .rAiso he anew tae ruies,! ana there's something: to that' be said. i !w,-z fi'-.j-si-:! At the first pub Willkle visited the proprietor invited bim to tome : 1 S pi ' ' ii ---. i - - s . i ; - i- - . " I . . 4 .';.. ;,l Wave 71 m t W$am aOCJGV Frequent , 'schedules and good; con nections make Greyhound the; most convenient, tune-saving wsy to ge. ave From DttlVINO CARES Relax, forget driving strain. Mule ne of Asserica's best drivers pilots your luxurious Super-Coach. aaei 3 TURI0SH TOWELS iOd Ton wont see towels of this quality at snch a low price very often I uooa sixe 3 20x40 Inches with coiorru, patterns, j YOlFLli NEED THESE d i Composition . Book i - Loose Lef Binder ft Filler, both for Blne-BIack Ink Pencils 5 for ... Fountain i Pen ....... Crayoias .10 for -4-. Pure Gum Eraser ' L Pure Gam Mucilage Pencil Sharpener Pacquins Hand Cream A non-g r e a s y cream. Lady Esther Powder 3.0c Feathery s o f t and clinging. SO a 'f 1 miim I gal W6 diers recognised WiUil and I ordered a ronnd of be. At tbtif suggestion he pullsd Uf Up tad 'served""-"!'! "i - .. '. ; 'Willkle said hats Hi bad f cussed with officials the this A most needed brBritaig but woulj not Ulk o4 this subject until bi4 retarn to the United Statss. Om Ww Trie 4 Los AAgelee f iSSSS f2S5 Fraiwlaco . 8.83 1S.OS Portlassd' 1.00 i.o Corvalls . . .75 10 Ashland J. . 4.65 &40 j ,.;r-, , J.:j(' i : DEPOT: Hotel Senator' PHONE: 4151 n-i.'. Regbtar 1.19 60x74 inch DIanlteis Double ; Bed Size ' Special! !' (0)(C) I ! r ! Regular 10c r Colored I Fwner vmos Speciil! 3-Piecp Ilixicg Bowl Seis Large Sizes '39c Value!' Crystal Glass! Beniy Bowl vSefs 7-P ece fSets Reduced! All I Leather BoyV Fancy 2 . . ". . I i T !' t .. St t , : behind the I bar. First Quality X J v ". Speciil! ' j j A Kg Valuel UoneasIIayt3n j Piiafies j Cufle siyles ! J wRejgala 5cs. CwmdyjBars f Baby Ruth ' . I ) - Bntterflnger I I Jolly Jack j 1- i -i i 1 t