Now that the Fan Dancer if Off the Defense Program, the Major Task of the Onited States is an Offensive Against the J-l-G: Japan, Italy and Germany. Ail-American Call ' , TMEI?6 At? UOTS PENSIONS Congress" Is slated 10 vote to morrow on a repealer of the bill making their own members bene. Ilelaries. Forecasts favor repeul. Watch the NEWS-REVIEW for the vote IX taken. : OF IjtoVS AT CAMP RfcHEMBtf? TMi- ANP 30Y A i S STAMP' cS 1 f HED013GLASCOUrOY DAJLY VOL. XL VI 10. 269 OF ROSK. REVIEW I 'l ' 3 ROSEBURS, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1942. VOU XXX NO. 199 OF THE EVENING NEWS mm mi ' 1 7U 1 Villi mm TinVnmrm(P 'tram WW Record War Fund Measure Up To Senate House Unanimous on 32 " Billion Bill; Civilian Defense Money Okayed WASHINGTON, Feb. 18 (AP) A record-smashing $32,070,901, 900 war appropriation moved to the senate today with a 371-to-0 endorsement by the house yester day under committee warning that supplies must be ready against a supreme axis offensive this spring. House appropriations committee members, introducing the meas ure yesterday, spoke against a background of Information fur nished privately by high ranking army officials and urged quick ac tion on the bill, which includes outlavs for transDortation and other immediate items as well as lor long range production. With similarly unanimity yes terday, the senate passed by a voice vote a $163,806,854 deficien . cy measure, including $100,000, D00 for civilian defense against air raids, and returned it to the house for action on minor amend ments. "Frills" Stricken Out. . ' In that bill, the senate left in tact house restrictions against use of any part of the protection fund for "fan dancing, street shows or Dther public entertainment" or-Jor the treasury's . $80,000 Donald Duck income tax cartoon film. The-bie-wat'-fund carried -S22r 888,901,900 for the war depart ment, mostly for ordnance and expediting production, with a pro vision that half of this could go for lend-lease aid. : It also included a $5,430,000,000 specific Item for lend-lease, rais ing the total approved separately for such purpose to date to more than $17,000,000,000. Another big item was $3,852, 000,000 to carry forward the mer- (Continued on page 6) In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS NO, it was a mistake last night. The hour was a bit late and the wind a trifle chilly for down town crowds. San Francisco's streets are as lively as ever. . A UTOMOBILES are perhaps a shade less numerous. Street cars are distinctly more numerous. The rubber shortage hasn't yet begun to bite, but fore handed people are saving their tires. San Francisco is lucky to have ample street car service. Los An geles Is moaning already about what will happen when all the tires wear out. IJEARD this new one today: When is the government go ing to begin rationing rubber checks? DICKETS are slightly less pre- valent than in the past. They are distinctly less prominent. Crews have been cut down from a dozen or more to one or two. Individual pickets are no ticeably more sedate in manner. Maybe it's the war-time influ ence. Or maybe picketing is sett ling down to a regular business, with established ethics and stand ards of Its own. 1HE lower-priced eating places are displaying signs warning their patrons that If consumption doesn't decrease sugar rationing will be Imposed. The patrons are putting surplus sugar in their pockets and carry ing it off. (In Tijuana, 11-pound sacks of sugar, advertised at "half Ameri can prices," are displayed promi nently. It seems that 11 pounds is what can be carried back over the border.) The big hotels are less lavish with soap than in the past. In (Continued on page 2) Noted Writer Of Dog Stories Dies Albert Payson Terhune POMPTON LAKES, N. J., Feb. 18. (AP) Albert Payson Ter hune, whose simple stories about dogs won him international fame, died today at the age of 69. Once a robust character, six feet two inches tall and weighing 230 pounds, Terhune drove him self relentlessly until he was 64. Then he retired to an estate where he lived with the collies which he made famous. Criticized Dancer Quits Defense Job WASHINGTON, Feb. 18 (AP) The office of civilian defense announced today it had accepted the offer qf Mayris Chaney, dancer-protege of Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, to resign, her $4,600 OCD job if it felt "the best inter ests, of the; physical fitness pro-, gram" can thereby be served. Miss Chaney, whose appoint ment in charge of children's ac tivities in the OCD physical fit ness division brought criticism from congress to elminate "frills" from OCD, made her of fer in a letter to James M. Lan dis, director of OCD. Landls' office said her offer was being accepted "with no com ment." !:.-... The physical fitness division is part of the community and vol unteer participation section over which Mrs. Roosevelt, as assist ant civilian defense director, pre sides. "Because I wish no further al tercation which might cause dis unity and delay and for the same reason which prompted me to take this work originally my de sire for a strong and free Amer icaI wish to step aside if it is your will," Miss Chaney's letter said. "If you feel that the best inter ests of the physical fitness pro gram and the best interests, of the U. S. of America can be served by my resignation, then I will step aside gladly, effective at your convenience." . Berkeley Officer Here To Secure Prisoner Inspector R. W. Foreaker of the Berkeley, Calif., police de partment, arrived here Tuesday to take custody of Joseph Paul Rosseau, being held in custody In the county jail here. Inspector Foreaker, however, received a call Tuesday evening to proceed to Portland where another prison er, also wanted in Berkeley, is under arrest. He is expected to arrive tonight and will take the two prisoners back to California. Rosseau recently was picked up here by state police when he was unable to give a satisfactory ex planation of a cash register found In the car in which he was sleep ing while parked beside the high way. Inspector Foreaker report ed that Rosseau is charged with breaking into a Berkeley service station and stealing the cash register containing $12 in money and about $130 in checks. Ireland Nears Bread Ration, Announcement DUBLIN, Feb. 18 (AP) Sean Lemas9, minister of supplies, an nounced in the Dail today that Eire would ration bread In the near future. Axis U-Boat Base Believed In Caribbean Clue to Location Being Sought; Brazilian Ship Latest Torpedo Victim WASHINGTON, Feb. 18 (AP) The war came closer home to Americans today with a presiden tial warning that the country's shores could be attacked and word from the Canal Zone of a pos sible. U-boat base In the Carib bean ai-ea. But there was cheering evi dence of an eventual naval come back in the Pacific. The United States destroyer Shaw, once of ficially listed as lost in the Pearl harbor attack, arrived at a west coast port from a limping jury rigged trip under her own power and is being reconditioned for ac tive service. The vessel made the li,f'00-mlle voyage with a stub emergency bow, fitted in two months of re pairs In Hawaii. Naxy officers who disclosed the voyage said at Honolulu that the Shaw was In drydock at the time of the Decem ber 7 attack and was hit 'repeat edly by bombs, one of which ex ploded her magazines and wreck ed the forward section. Secre tary Knox on December 15 had listed the Shaw as among vessels lost In the raid. Roosevelt Cites Danger. President Roosevelt's warning of the possibility of attack came yesterday , in a press inference. He said "the enemy could .shell i New York or drop bombs on De troit under certain conditions. Asked whether he thought an attack on Alaska ; was possible, Mr. Roosevelt replied in the af firmative. To the question of whether American air and naval strength was sufficient to prevent such attacks, he replied, certainly not. Speculation over the possibility that German submarines might be operating from a hidden base in the Caribbean area arose in Balboa in the wake of the Mon day U-boat raid off Aruba. Army and navy men hoped to get a clue to the location of the base of the undersea craft within the next few days. Brazilian Ship Torpedoed. Washington meanwhile awaited official reaction from Rio de Janeiro to the torpedoing of the Brazilian steamer Barque, the (Continued on page 6) Welder is Found Bullet-Riddled TACOMA, Feb. 18 (AP) The bullet-riddled body of a Tacoma shipyard welder was found in a panel truck on the Pacific high way near Fort Lewis today. He had been shot at least five times. Coroner T. H. Long said the man was identified as Joseph T. Moraln, about 35. Long said Moraln's mother, Mrs. E. M. Jones, lived In Los Angeles, and his widow at Mt. Vernon, Wash. Moraln's body was found In the driver's seat and police said It ap peared that the truck had been suddenly stopped. The ignition was turned on, but the motor was dead. When found Moraln was still wearing his welder's helmet. Po lice said he had been shot with .45 caliber bullets. Ex-O. S. C. Football Player Is War Casualty OAKLAND, Calif.-, Feb. 18. (AP) Word of the death of her son, Captain John L. Du Frane, Jr., 33, an army pilot in the Far East, in an air engagement was received yesterday by Mrs. Mar garet Du Frane of Oakland. Captain Du Frane was grad uated from Oakland's University high school, and from Oregon State college, where he played end on the football team. He la ter became president of the Du Franc Machine and Engine Works, founded by his father. A widow, Mrs. Mercy Du Frane of Virginia Beach, Va., and two sons, four years old and 11 months old, survive. I.O. O. F. Head to Visit Roseburg JJLA ( v Elmer E. Pyne, above, grand master of the I. O. O. F. grand lodge of Oregon, will pay an official visit to the Roseburg lodge Thursday night. All lodge members are urged by the lo cal officers to be in attendance at the meeting, which will start at 7:30 p. m. Refreshments will be served during the social hour, which will follow the business session. The grand master now is on a tour of southern Oregon lodges. He has visited Canyonville and Glendale lodges and will be at Grants Pass tonight. Personal Property Tax Returns Lag; Warning Issued Only, about one-third of the 4, 000 persons to whom blanks have been mailed for the purpose of making personal property tax re turns, so far have filed their re ports, County Assessor Barton Helllwell announced today. He warned taxpayers that the returns must be filed by March 2 and that a penalty of $10 per day is provided by law for each day of delay ; beyond the established deadline. , 1 Heretofore, he states, personal property has been appraised by a field deputy, who has visited each of the taxpayers. A law passed at the last session of the legllature and effective this year for the first time, however, has abolished the former system and has substituted the system of pro viding property owners with a questlonalre upon which all per sonal property must be listed. Valuations must be estimated by the property owners, but a uni form rate of assessment will be etablished under the direction of the state tax commission. Mr. Helliwell stated today that his office Is anxious to have re turns submitted by all owners of personal property as soon as pos sible, so that none will be sub ject to the penalty. Oregon Lumber for Wood Lifeboats Being Planned SALEM, Feb. 18 (AP) Gov ernor Sprague today instructed David Eccles, state war industries coordinator, to investigate wheth er Oregon lumber manufacturers could get contracts for wood life boats for merchant ships. ; "Oregon lumber manufacturers are In a position to supply such lifeboats In knock down form for shipment to yards throughout the country," the governor said. "Such a program would be in the national interest and would be of material benefit to the for est industry of this state." He also pointed out that the program would save steel. Draftees Denied Permit To Sell Their 1942 Cars PORTLAND, Feb. 18 (API Two Multnomah county youths, about to be Inducted into the ar my, were refused permission this week to sell their new automo biles, just acquired. The reason the rationing board said regulations "freezing" 1942 model cars in present hands leaves no loopholes for disposing of cars before entering the army. I Nazi Thrust Into Turkey Held Likely Britain Reinforcing in Middle East fo Combat jHitler's Spring Plan ' V tBy the Associated Press) . A hint that Britain may . be heavily-reinforcing her armies in the Middle East, possibly to com bat a jGjrman thrust into Turkey this spring, was dropped by the London admiralty today with the disclosure that "certain convoys" had been safely escorted through the Mediterranean. The admiralty said the opera tions, apparently on a big scale, were carried out between Feb. 13 and 16 with the loss of only two merchant craft. 1 "The enemy made great efforts to inflict serious loss and publish ed the usual exaggerated claims," an admiralty communique said. The point of reinforcement wns not. specified. An Italian com munique asscr'ed Monday that a nltlsh destroyer and seven mer chant ships had been sunk out of a! big convoy en rout? from Alex andria, - Egypt, to the bomb-bat-tor island of Malta, about mid way between the toe of the Itali an boot and Libya, north Africa. Malta May Serve As Base This may have been a move ment to relieve the long-suffering Malta garrison or to bolster Its defenses against anaxis attempt to capture that keyisland. i iThere was also the oosslbllity that-"Malta might serve; "as","jlj:. oase lor a tsritisn invasion oi Sicily or Italy itself. On Saturday, a German com munique said nazi planes sank a British destroyer and a 10,000 ton merchantman in a convoy north of'Tobruk, Libya. Recent dispatches from the Bal kans have told of large numbers of German troops massing In Bul garia, Greece and Greek islands all potential springboard for a German Invasion of Turkey, the "land bridge" between Europe and the middle east. Malta, under Increasingly vio lent assault by German and Itali an planes in recent weeks, would be a sharp thorn on the flank of any axis drive into Turkey or across ' the Mediterranean to Egypt and the Levant states. Red Thrust Extended While the Mediterranean stir red with new activity, bolstering forecasts that the Middle East would become a major theater of (Continued on page 6) New Director For Municipal Band Of Roseburg Engaged The Roseburg Municipal band, following its regular weekly re hearsal last night, announced to day the employment of Ford Reed, a recent arrival In Rose burg, to serve as director of the musical organization. Mr. Reed, a World war veter an, has been active in band work for the greafcr part of his life. He played with an army band during the World war. and for many years has been a member of the trumpet section of the Manahan post, American Legion, band of Dodge City, Iowa, one of the best known and largest bands In the nation. The band Is under the direction of the widely known Carl King. Mr. Reed also has served as assistant director of the Shriner band at Sioux City, Iowa, and has had 15 years of experi ence wtih school bands. He succeeds J. D. (Snap) Gill more, director of the local band for the last 10 years, who left last week to work in the Port land shipyards. The school hoard has announced that the direction of the school bands and orches tras for the remainder of the school year will be placed In the hands of Leonard Riley, who for : three years prior to the arrival here of Mr. Glllmore, directed the junior high school orchestra. Employment of a full-time direc tor and instructor for the work in the schools is not planned un til the beginning of the fall term, City Superintendent W. M. Campbell reported. Omit Washington's Birthday Holiday, Remain on Production, Nelson Urges; Says United States "Fights for Life" WASHINGTON, Feb. 18 (AP) War Production Director Don ald M. Nelson told the nation to day it could not afford a Wash ington's birthday shutdown "any where on the production line.", He asked every plant to cancel this holiday on Monday, Febru ary 23, if It had scheduled one and settle the labor terms later. "The United States Is fighting for its life," Nelson said. "I mean that. We're on the spot. We're paying heavily for our compla cency, for our selfishness, for our failure to peel off our shirts and do a job. 'A lot of good American boys right now are face to face with a grim, determined, well-equipped enemy. They're taking punish ment taking it with courage and in the spirit that has always ani mated American troops. But those boys can't stop planes and tanks with their bare hands. They can't get where they have got to go without what it takes to get there. Only we can give it to them. i No Time to Waste "You and I, everyone of us here at homo, must realize now, today; that we can give those boys the weapons they neec1 only by going the limit In producing them. We can not let any consid eration whatsoever interfere with the job of production. "In this battle of production on which the actual, physical bat- tie witn tno enemy depends we can waste neither time, men nor machinery. We can not win un less we make the most effective Auto Looter Gets One-Year Sentence Asentenco of one year In the state penitentiary was imposed here Tuesday by Circuit Judge Carl E. Wlmborly upon William Hasher, 26, Billings, Mont., who pleaded guilty to a charge of lar ceny from an automobile. Hasher and Kenneth Anderson, 17, the lat ter also from Billings, were ac cused of taking a suitcase, con taining wearing apparel, from an automobile belonging to W. A. Karcher o( Dlxonvllle. Judge Wlmberly postponed passing of sentence on Anderson, indicating that a parole would be granted In the event the youth could be returned to the custody of his parents, with assurance of future good behavior. District Attorney J. V. Long told the court that Hasher had previously been in trouble, and consequently, the court refused to grant leniency. Kenneth Evan McLaughlin, for merly a member of the South Umpqua Falls CCC lamp, who pleaded guilty to taking an auto mobile without authority, but without Intent to steal, was given a parole from a sentence of six months in the county Jail, and was granted permission to return to his home in California. Plane Crash Kills 500 Chickens, Pilot Unhurt EVERETT, Wash., Feb. 18 (AP) An army plane crashed Into a chicken house and burned south of here last night, killing over 500 chickens. The pilot para chuted to safety. Field officers declined to Iden tify the pilot. Residents said the plane crash ed into the chicken house of A. J. Lieberschal after cutting a swath through a stand of trees. It narrowly missed two residenc es. U. S. Officer Feared in Crash Victims' List LONDON, Feb. 18 (AP) A senior American officer is believ ed to have been killed In the crash of a British aircraft in the sea en route to the United King dom. The plane was reported to have crashed off the southeast coast of England and it was feared that all passengers and crew, in cluding the American officer and the British personnel, were lost. use possible of all three. And i we lose the battle of production we lose the war. "The most effective way to honor George Washington's mem ory this year is to work full time so that the nation to which he gave Independence can make that Independence stick." $1.a-Year Men Shorn Nelson yesterday luld down regulations covering service of dollar-a-year men today and pro hibited any person serving "with out compensation" from holding any administrative jobs in the WPB. The regulations, which Nelson recently told the senate defense Investigating committee would be drafted, provide for machin ery within the WPB to investi gate all dollar-a-year men now In the organization and qualifica tions of those who may be ap pointed, i Nelson named Sidney J. Wein berg, one of his assistants, to head up the machinery. All WPB division heads were ordered to examine the lists of dollar-a-year men under their Jurisdiction and "terminate the appointments of all who do not qualify" within 30 days, I . The procedure covering "with out compensation" personnel pro vides that such appointees may servo as government consultants but that no person working on such a basis may "assume any administrative responsibility or exorcise any authority over,, or direction of the work of, execu tives or employes of the war pro duction board." . . Capture Follows Orgy of Arsonist SACRAMENTO, Feb. 18. (AP) Police Detective Captain M. W. Llncecum said a 33-year-old tran sient was being held In police custody after he admitted setting four fires last night, one of which caused an estimated $75,000 dam age at the Cupltol Lumber com pany yards. . Linceum said James Conklln was arrested after a woman re ported to police she had seen a man attempting to light a fire along the Western Pacific rail road tracks. . Conklln admitted setting blazes at the lumber company premises, a cannery, fuel company and a feed company, Captain Llncecum said. The last three were extln gulshed before causing serious damage. Police Detective A. M. Babay co said Conklln told him he was arrested in Oakland 15 years ago for similar offenses and he had spent time In state institutions. Conklln told police ho had been "mad" ever since he was picked up In Portland, Ore., for question ing by police last June. Long Strike Against S. F. Department Stores Ends SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 18. (AP) A six-month strike of AFL retail clerks, elevator operators and janitors against three major San Francisco department stores has ended. The strike began September 26, 11)41, with picketing of the Em porium. Sears, Roebuck and com' pany was picketed November 14, and J. C. Penney company No vember 26. Wage demands arc to be nego tiated for 30 dnys, and then will be arbitrated If an agreement cannot be reached. The retail clerks struck for a flat $4 a week Increase. Their scales ranged from $16 to 120. Youths Held Here On Charge of Auto Theft - Harold Dudley, alias Reed, 19, and Robert Wurster, 20, both of Seattle, were In custody here to day awaiting the arrival of Wash ington authorities bearing war rants charging them with auto mobile theft. Anthony J. Modaf fare, 18, arrested with Dudley and Wurster, was held on & vag rancy charge. The arrests were made by state police here on in formation from Seattle. U. Si, Dutch Fliers Blast Ships, Barges Chinese Troops Strike in Thailand; Japs Open Big Assault on MacArthur . ;By the Associated Press) Eye-witness accounts of fight ing in lower Sumatra reported to day that fierce native soldiers or. the Dutch Indies, armed only with pistols and swords, were In flicting heavy casualties on tne Japanese and proving more, than a match for the invaders armed with submachine-guns in bloody hand-to-hand fighting. The defenders were reported battling desperately to block the Japanese drive toward Sunda ., strait, the narrow waterway Be tween Sumatra .and Java. Native warriors fought witH their "klewangs" swords liko ' the Malay krls or Filipino bolo In their right hands and pistols in the left., ; ; Japan's Invasion hordes stilt held off from a direct assault on Java, densely-populated heart o the Indies, four days after strik ing into nearby lower Sumatra with parachute troops and seai borne reinforcements. . . American Planes In Action Seizing the initiative, American fighter planes helped keep the in vaders at bay. ( ' : United nations headquarters said American pilots aiding in the defense of Java attacked a Japanese-held airdrome iii lower Sumatra and shot down four ene- my planes without loss to them' selves. Dutch bombers shot dawn' two more. . Five Japanese: bombers wero shot down In an attack on th-; big allied naval base at Soora baja, Java, this morning, it was announced. - ' A combined America-Dutch bumber fo'-ce sailk a larg: Japan i to transport, scored hits on two others and rained havoc on a fleet ot iroop-laden barges. . N, E. 1. headquarters said Dutch troops were still; fighting grimly against Japanese forces in Borneo Just above Java, but ac knowledged that "fighting has al most come to an end" on the Japanese-overrun Minahassa penin sula in northeast Celebes island, MaoArthur Hard Pressed In the Philippines, a bulletin from Gen. Douglas MacArthur's headquarters Indicated that Jap anese troops had started their long-expected assault in force against American and Filipino de fenders of Bataan peninsula. The communique reported in creased enemy r.ctlvlty with heavier Japanese artillery fire and the landing of Japanese re inforcements in Sublc bay, just north of Bataan. "New enemy air units are ap pearing over our lines, bombing (Continued on page 6) U-Boats Dive Off Aruba When U. S. Bombers Appear WILLEMSTAD, Curacao, Dutch West Indies, Feb. 18. (AP) Submarines appeared off the coast of Aruba today but were driven off by United States bombing planes, the Aneta agency announcad. The submarines were sighted both from land and sea watch ing posts, alert to prevent any repetition of the attack of Monday, when three tankers were sunk just off this oil port and the shore installations of Standard Oil shelled. As soon as the bombers ap peared the submarines dived, making it impossible for tho planes to carry out a concen trated attack. WASHINGTON, Fab. 18. (API The navy department announced today that the tan ker E. H. Blum ''was damagad" off the Atlantic coast Monday, February 16. Tha navy gave no Information at to how tha damage was in flicted nor Its extent.