McDermotts Have Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. E. V. McDermott celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary at an informal open house Thursday at the coffee shop at the state capitol building. All state house employes and friends were bidden to the af fair. ' , , Their daughters, Mrs. Roy Ish mael and Mrs. J. A. Gray, cut the cake and assisted in the serving. Bouquets of rosebuds and pansies provided the jdecor ative note. Doughton Family At Dinner ' A family party was served at s the Preston Doughton home on - Friday night, honoring Pvt. Don : aid Doiig hton who was home on furlough. At the table, centered ' by a bouquet of mixed summer flowers, were Mr. and Mrs. Don ' aid Doughton a n d children, Jackie and Charles, Mr. and Mrs. I. M. Doughton and Mr. ' and - Mrs. Preston Doughton and Nancy and Robert." Mr. and Mrs. Edmead L. Clark of Seattle are spending the holi days in Salem at the home of their son land daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Hunt Clark. The Clarks expect to return to Salem soon to make their home, .-i 'v4;j : ... Mr. and Mrs. Brazier Small will have as their holiday guests, Mr. and Mrs. Cordon Wilson and children,' Mary and Bill, of ' Portland. . Mr. and Mrs. Archibald Thom son (Miriam Swafford) of As toria are spending the holiday weekend with the; latter' sister, Mrs. Homer H. Smith, jr. v ; - ' " - t ' I ; 7, A' - Captain j and Mrs. Richard Berls are ; the parents of a son born at the Salem General hos pital Saturday morning. ' He i is stationed at Camp Adair. The OSEGOrij STATESMA1& Salem, Oregon Sunday Morning. July 2. XSS PAGE Linn Deputy Resigns Post SCIO George Stoddart, who has been county clerk at Albany for 18 months and his family plan to return soon to their farm in Richardson Gap " near Scio, be cause of his health. . Word reaches Scio that Glenn Philippi, who had been employed at Juneau,' Alaska, 'for some' time as a welder: in a war industry, was to have reported June 23 at Anchorage for army service. Phil ippi was born and reared in the Scio area and was graduated from the local high school, v John Warren and family of Eugene visited a few days ago at the Scio home of Mr. Warren's , brother, Carl Warren.- The War rens s were residents of Browns ville i and vicinity for' several years. ' . , . Overcross Farm' Sold, New Place Occupied SILVERTON Mrs. Anna Ove ro38 has sold her farm in the McLaughlin district to her son, Henry, and has moved to a new ly purchased home on Jersey street. ! Mr. Oveross has rented the farm to Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Todd who formerly lived on the Oral Egan place. ' Mrs. Brewer Mills caad dauqliter. Kay Loulse-j who nave rjeen visiting at the home 61 her parents, Mr, and Mrs. K. n. Pickens Mr. and Mrs In Salem and moved, this winteij to Marshfield. Cesten- Miner;. 1 Neuner Explains For GI Voting in Procedure lovemberl Allies; Wreck ' i 1 - i J ... Nazi Divisions In Iofmandy WITTS- THE AMERICAN FORCES IH FRANCE, July 1 (-Allied forces have killed, cap tured and wounded an equivalent of seven full German! divisions since the invasion of France 25 days ago. - - j v Givingj Field Marshall Gen. Er win Rommel's Normandy defend ers a severe mauling, j Lt Gen. Omar N. Bradley's troops alone captured, more than 38,000, killed an estimated '10,000 and wounded at least 12,000. The greater num ber of ihese iwere bagged in the swift drive oh Cherbourg. - , Figures on the casualties inflict ed on the enemy by the British have not been released yet, but the American totals run 'tnuch higher than on the British front. as the result H the Cherbourg trap being sprung The total! American catch likely will run more than 40,000 when the Cap; De; La Hague area finally is cleared out. - An American staff officer said that German division which were destroyed were the 352nd, the 709th; 343rd, 77th and 81st. Killed, captured and woundedj Germans In other! enemy units rere esti mated as equalling two additional divisions. , I . . j i The enemy's wounded were es timated Conservatively at three for every rtian killed, ; 5 ; Yank Romulus, Remus Arrive In Rome 2600 Years Late ; By KENNETH L. DIXON ; .WITH THE AEF IN ITALY, June 18-(Delayed )-(VThev're still kidding Sgt. Roamules Kyler and Staff Sgt. Reamuless Ky ler, twin negro brothers of Williston, Flav about getting their picture in.Stars and Stripes the other day. 1 ' . v v : Since the 22-year-old soldiers were named for Romulus and Remus, the lads who according to legend were suckled by the she- wou ana subsequently founded Rome some 2600 years ago, It was a cinch someone would hunt them up in Rome. i - t , , Sgt. Cyril Hopper, the army newspaper photographer, not only found .them but : also, found a bronze statue depicting the she wolf and ' the famous - twins who came to dinner. t-So he posed the Florida twins in s front of it and took their picture. -; . -y T sur Neuner: said the governor has certiffed that the official war bal lot f (r the general election, as provided by congress, 1st author ized by the Oregon laws, "but only If such individual states in his oath that prior to September 1 he made application for a state absentee ballot but, as of Octo ber li has not received if "It Itnnst nhcorvH 1 NMini declaijed (?that the certification of the governor, with reference to the usje of the official federal war ballot! applies only to members of all armed forces who are! without the United States, as all members of the armed forces within the United States will receive the ab" sentee voters ballots of the states if requested." , I : Procedure required under the federal and state laws, Ifor sol dier voting at the November election!, was explained in detail by Attorney General George Neuneijin a letter mailed here Friday to Circuit Judge Walter Toose, Multnomah county, an official of the war Jwork committee of 'the Oregon State Bar. Under a Congressional act, Neuner jsaid, the personnel of the . . . . . . i armea zorces receive post -caras not later than August 15, prior to the general election, where de livery is made outside the United States, and not later than Sep tember 15, where delivery is made within the United States. These post cards, when properly exe cuted ' and mailed to either the secretary of state or the county clerk of the home county of the applicant, will be accepted for an absentee ballot. The post card also will be ac cepted as the electors registration in case the applicant for the ab sentee ballot is not registered in his home County or has become 21 years of age while serving in the armed "forces and has not had an opportunity to register. . The post card thus received from any member of the armed forces for an absentee ballot is filed by , the county clerk and placeS' in the registration Card In dex if the - applicant for the . ab sentee ballot is not registered. The signature on the card will be compared with the signature sub scribed to the oath of the appli cant elector on the official war ballot envelope when received by the county clerk,, in case "doubt exists as to the identity of the voter. . : - Regardless' of form, if the post card, or any post card, letter or wire received by the county clerk contains Information ' showing the applicant to be eligible and legal ly entitled to vote an absentee vot ers ballot will be forwarded to the applicant, and in such case the card, letter or wire received oy ine cierx wm be placed on file. . The secretary of state, upon re ceipt of the cards, sends them to the county clerks, who will for ward the absentee ballots to the applicants as soon as the ballots are printed. - Swegle Visitors Are 1 Entertained SWEGLE-Weekend 'guests at the home of. Mr. Ernest Zielesch on Garden Road j were! Mr. . and Mrs. Joe Craig from! Portland. Craig coming down on! Sunday. Mrs. jOrace Odom : came from Bremeftpn, Wash last; Thursday to spend the weekend at the home of her jaunt,! Mrs. Walter Swingle and visit hetj mother, Mrs. Bertha Meeker,) who had the misfortune to fall; last week land jbreak her wrist. Mrs. Meeker was a house mother jon the Willamette campus this past year and planned to visit her son in the south.) This trip had to: be cancelled ' Robert Savage from Independ ence has been visiting this week at the home of his grandfather. Swegle Stores Remain Open Over Holidays 8 WEGLE Stores In this dis trict Will remain open Monday " and Tuesday as the. owners live at the stores and the filling sta tions will be opened also. X Pfc Bill Held of Chambers, Neb., and Pvt. : Norman Cassidy of De troit are still bragging about the drinking they did while In Rome without getting drunk. They met a Brooklyn-born Ital ian who asked fhem if they were thirsty. "Yep," they chorused 'and at that mom e n't they - weren't thinking of cognac, wine or any thing but water. But the thing they weren't ex pecting was 10 gallons of cold milk the first fresh milk they'd tasted since leaving the states.' So the boys sat down and toast ed the faking of Rome with glass after glass of moo juice. Upon Lake Bolsena Staff Sgt Ralph Munoz of Los Angeles was astonished; to learn there were people who didn't know you could go f 1 s h I n g with handgrenades when that's all the tackle you have. "It ; paralyzes them," the serge ant explained. All you have to do is pick up the fist and bring them back, fix them on a Coleman stove and you've got everything." The people of tiny Onano still aren't quite sure what happened Some, say it was like a tornado; Others, insist it seemed more like a whirlwind. They are the few who stayed in : Onano during the Fifth army stay while moot of the town's population ; pulled out; to the hills until we shooting ended. Giuseppe, who used to run a bicycle repair shop, is one of those who stayed Wild-haired and wild eyed, he is still groping for words to explain what happened ;The Germans were here," he said, : we remember that. A n d then, quick! The Germans are not here and the French are here in town. ! And then, quick Out they go again.", . ' : Giuseppe was not the only one who .was slightly harried. Sgt Milt Lehman of Pittsburgh, Stars and Stripes writer, told about talk ing to Lt : Robert M. Menefee, jr. of Sandusky, Ohio and Cpt Charles W, Hughes, Duncan, SC, up by Acquapendente, I - V ' The lieutenant is a forward ob server for 155 howitzers and wears the artillery crossed guns tatooed on his right arm. Hughes ' is his driver. - "Whn Ji goes this fac you've got to fire fast, Menefee said. There's no time for digging posi tions when there's a target and the gun's on the road All; you do Is haul It off to the side and fire. By then tte Target's ready to retreat" "Just hit and run," said Hughes. "We hit and then run." Returns from Portland SWEGLE-i-Emest . Sieliesch is home after .several days spent in Portland on a business trip and a visit with relatives and friends. Piiis Receives Gen. De Gaulle ROME, July l-i,?V-Pope Pius XII received Gen. Charles; De Gaulle in a private audience yes terday, after the general returned from a visit to the Italian fighting front The French here regarded the pontiffs action as virtual rec ognition of the French committee of national liberation as the gov eminent of France, despite the fact that the Vichy minister to the Vatican still Is in office. v , No great ceremony marked the visit The French committee lead er appeared wearing his customary uninform of a two -star French general, without decorations. He presented members of his staff to thepontift -. . ' -.. Afterward De Gaulle conferred with Luigi .Cardinal Maglione, Vatican secretary of State. Then he descended to the Crypt of St Pe ter's, where he prayed before the tomb of the apostle. Mrs. Watterson Plans , To TeacH in Silverton SILVERTON Mrs. Nellie Wat terson has signed a contract to teach the sixth grade in the Sil verton school this coming year; Mrs. Watterson, who taught in a rural school north of Mt Angel last whiter, lives in the Evens Valley district and is attending summer school at Monmouth. Her daughter, Joy Watterson, was among the students on the first honor roll at the dose of the spring term. This requires a load of at least 15 term hoars and a grade-point average of 3.5 or bet ter. . De-Luce Wins New Honors CHICAGO July 1-W-Daniel De Luce, Pulitzer prize-winning Associated P r e s s correspondent now with the allied troops on the war front in Italy, last night was awarded new honors as "one $f America's outstanding young men." ' The US Junior chamber of com merce saluted De Luce in the Mu- -tual network broadcast "Freedom of Opportunity," and awarded him its distinguished service medal. The gold key was presented by Robert McLean, president of the Associated Press and publisher of the Philadelphia Bulletin, who characterized De Luce as a man 1 of courage and honesty and a writ er with "a keen sense of selec tion." McLean spoke from Phila delphia.. ! : . .1 . i Robert De Luce, speaking .from Los Angeles, accepted the award for his : son. The radio program was a dramatization of the Iwar correspondent's life. Grossnickle Improved Following Accident . . SILVERTON Boyd Gross nickle, critically injured Saturday morning in a car accident near Barlow is Improved His son, Robert, who is in the service, came early I this week. At first little hope was held for Mr. Grossnickle's recovery, ' but chances are much improved, ac cording to members of the family.' He is still confined to the local hospital. 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